Buckeye Road is an approximately three-mile rural highway corridor located in the Sierra Nevada foothills of Mariposa County. Buckeye Road begins at Ben Hur Road and extends west to the intersection of Old Highway/Yaqui Gulch Road near the ghost town of Bridgeport. Buckeye Road is named after Buckeye Creek and the Buckeye Mining District. The roadway was constructed in 1947 along with the current bridge over Mariposa Creek. Buckeye Road functionally acts as a continuation of the far older corridors of Yaqui Gulch Road and Agua Fria Road. Part 1; the history of Buckeye Road Buckeye Road is named after Buckeye Creek and the larger Buckeye Mining District. Said district originally began being worked during the 1860s near the communities of Bridgeport and Guadalupe. The district was originally accessible via the road to the original Mariposa County seat of Aqua Fria (now Agua Fria Road and Yaqui Gulch Road). Buckeye Creek appears south o...
Unlike most railroads in the Hawaiian Islands the former right-of-way of the Ahukini Terminal Railway is fairly easy spot. Much of the 2-foot, 6-inch narrow gauge line has had repurposed right-of-way and bridges. The Ahukini Terminal Railway opened in 1920 and serviced the numerous sugar cane fields of the Lihue Plantation. The main line of the railway system ran north/south from Ahukini Landing near what is now Lihue Airport to Anahola Bay. The main line was extended south to Nawiliwili Bay in 1931, and numerous branch lines existed throughout eastern Kauai. The last train on the Ahukini Terminal Railway ran in 1959. This blog serves as a brief historical overview of the Ahukini Terminal Railway and a spotlight of numerous structures from the line which still exist. The blog cover is facing towards two remaining railway bridges at Moikeha Canal in Kapaa. This page is part of the Gribblenation Hawaii Roads series. A compellation of all Hawaii-related media from both Gribblen...