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Goumaz (also, Goumez) is a former rail station and settlement in
Lassen County Lassen County () is a county in the northeastern portion of the U.S. state of California. As of the 2020 census, the population was 32,730. The county seat and only incorporated city is Susanville. Lassen County comprises the Susanville, Calif ...
,
California California is a state in the Western United States, located along the Pacific Coast. With nearly 39.2million residents across a total area of approximately , it is the most populous U.S. state and the 3rd largest by area. It is also the m ...
where a campground is now located. It was located on the Southern Pacific Railroad northeast of Westwood, at an elevation of 5203 feet (1586 m). It is likely named for Philip J. Goumaz, who came to California and Lassen County in the 1860s.Gudde, Erin G
California Place Names
p. 125 (1960)
The Fernley and Lassen Railway line along which the Goumaz station was located was built in 1912–14. The Goumaz station was completed as a water stop in 1913.National Register of Historic Places, Registration Form, Fernley and Lassen Railway Depot
p. 13 ("Goumaz, a water station, completed in 1913"), p. 22 (Goumaz was abandoned in 1957) (2005)
In July 1917, a train car body was used as a living quarters for railroad employees assigned to Goumaz. By the next summer, seven railroad owned structures were on site. Two more tie houses were added in 1923, when a fence was also added around the section house because of the young families with children now living there. The buildings were taken down in 1957 after the local section forces stopped being used by the railroad.Myrick, David. F
Railroads of Nevada and Eastern California
p. 127 (2016)
The Fernley and Lassen Railway was abandoned in 1978, and the section along which the Goumaz station was located is now part of the Bizz Johnson rail trail. The Goumaz campground is now located there within the
Lassen National Forest Lassen National Forest is a United States national forest of 1,700 square miles (4,300 km2) in northeastern California. It is named after pioneer Peter Lassen, who mined, ranched and promoted the area to emigrant parties in the 1850s. Wildl ...
.Goumaz
US Forest Service, Retrieved 14 July 2020

''High on Adventure'' (September 2016)


References

Former settlements in Lassen County, California Former populated places in California {{LassenCountyCA-geo-stub