- Established: 1869, as a construction camp by Central Pacific Railroad, during construction of original transcontinental railroad
- Origin of Name:
- Miles from San Francisco: 739.1
- Used by Railroad: 1902- 1907
- Railroad Function: Railroad siding, but apparently uninhabited; constructed in early 1900s to support increased traffic; freighting services are suspected here, but are unverified
- National Parks Signpost: Answers the question of how the railroad was built: first by explorers and surveyors, who laid out the best pathway; workers blasted and removed rubble to back-fill ravines and crevices, mostly by pick, shovel, spade and hand labor; then workiing crews built trestles, tunnels, bridges as grades were built, elevated above lowlands and graded to exacting standards before ties and rails could be laid; crews adjusted the grades and set ties, then finally laid down rails before spikes were driven to keep rails secure and rail ends bolted splice bars together; though construction was done quite rapidly, tracks must conform to exacting standards
- Location: 2.5 miles west of Seco
- No Population estimates for this abandoned Northern Utah construction camp

