In June of this year (2025), a new mural was painted over the old mural on our outside wall, by artist, Don Nutt, and his assistant Emma Buchanan.

The old mural was painted July, 1996, by Ron McGaughey.

The Tram mural and tower on the south wall of the Douglas County Museum is a glowing tribute to the pioneer spirit.

‘And this mankind over matter worked to overcome
the obstacles nature threw down in their pathway.’

We honor this heritage!

Watch the video below to see the transformation!

The “Waterville Tramway”

Wheat at top waiting for Tramway
Tramway wheat loaded on Columbia River boat.
Tramway Kids
Tramway at work 1910.

Waterville Aerial Tramway

Modern-day tribute at Tramway site.

The aerial tram was operated from late 1902 until 1910.

The Columbia Tram Company
let the contract for building the double cable 9200 foot tram to
R.C. Riblett from Spokane.
 
The tram was built three miles north of Orondo on a bluff west of Waterville.
 
Elevation at the top was 2400 feet down to 700 feet at river level.

It extended two miles from the top to bottom across two deep canyons.
 
A moving cable supported on wooden towers carried large steel buckets.
 
 
 
The buckets were shaped like a bread loaf pan, nearly four feet long, three feet wide and two feet deep.

Thirty-two buckets held five sacks of grain each for the trip down.

Coal, lumber, and merchandise were hauled up.

It is unclear when open carriers were added.
 
The original idea was that the weight of the downward bound loads would operate the tram.

Apparently, this was not satisfactory because an engine and drum were installed at the top of the terminus.

W.E. Stevens was the operator.

Why an Aerial Tramway in 1902?

Before the tramway, Homesteaders near Waterville found it nearly impossible to get their crops to market, mainly the large amount of dryland wheat produced.

Local famous post card photo

Imagine growing a 23-pound cabbage?

How about thick, tall wheat with heavy heads bowing in the inter-mountain winds?

Douglas County Pioneers were doing this in the early days of staking land claims.

The volcanic soil, rich with the microbes of untamed land, produced so much wheat that getting that wheat to market proved an unforgiving task.

32-horse drawn combine harvester

The Domrese family wrote in their journal how they drove heavy wagon loads of wheat 40 miles to the Coulee City rail head.

A four-day trip to Coulee City and a two, or three-day trip back.  Getting the rich crops of grain off the Waterville Plateau was a difficult and time-consuming task. 

For a brief time a flume was tried to take the wheat down to Columbia River docks on the west side of the Plateau. It seemed like a solid, workable plan, but the tube overheated and caught fire.

Thus, the birth of Waterville’s “Aerial Tramway” came out of the huge demand to get the Homesteader’s wheat to market via the Columbia River in 1902.

Death to the short-lived ingenious tramway system of transportation came in 1910 with the arrival of the railroad.

Lots of work getting the high-quality wheat of Douglas County to the world at the turn of the 20th Century.