Hagerman Tunnel

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Hagerman Tunnel was a a pair of,161 foot (659 m) tunnel crossing the watershed in Colorado at associate degree altitude of eleven,528 ft (3,514 m). Created in 1887 by the Colorado Midland Railroad and named for Midland officer James John Hagerman, it had been replaced by the Busk-Ivanhoe Tunnel in 1893. There was a one,084 foot (330 m) wood trestle designed on the japanese approach to the tunnel. At the time of its construction it had been one among the very best tunnels ever designed.
Following Colorado Midland’s 1897 bankruptcy, the tunnel saw use once more, however traffic came back to the Busk-Ivanhoe tunnel some years later.

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