Use Microsoft Terraserver at www.terraserver.com type in Friant for the community and CA for the state. The website will take you to the Friant Dam. Scroll southwest and follow Friant Road through town.
You can start in Friant, in which case the abandoned roadbed is barely visible in places as it parallels Friant Road on the south side of the road. A couple of miles north of Gordon, the road turns to the left and the 1979 topographical map view shows an in service railroad with a spur going to a gravel quarry. Follow the railroad to the right and this remnant of the Friant Branch will take you into Clovis and then to a connection with the SP main in Fresno proper.
The branch served small farm industries and there was a nice little facility in Clovis proper, as well as Friant, however the remnants of the facility in Friant are no longer shown on any aerial photo or topo maps that are older than 1968 or so.
I looked at my copy of the SPH&TS book again. Like almost all SPH&TS publications, it focuses mainly on the 1950s. Most of the photographs are from the mid 1950s. There is some history of the branch, as well as some information on the branch up to about the publication time. There are also some diagrams of certain areas that show what industries were there in the 1950s.
"No soup for you!" - Yev Kassem (from Seinfeld)
Some years ago, VideoRails produced a 3-volume set of Southern Pacific Steam. I don't know whether or not they're still available, but vol. 3 had about five or six minutes worth of footage on the Friant Branch, with one of their 'Valley Mallet' 2-6-0's working a short freight between Fresno and Friant, including the manual turntable near the Friant Dam. You might check your LHS to see if the series is still available.
Tom
Tom View my layout photos! http://s299.photobucket.com/albums/mm310/TWhite-014/Rio%20Grande%20Yuba%20River%20Sub One can NEVER have too many Articulateds!
They had switched to a GP9 for power by the 1980s. San Joaquin Valley Railroad took over in 1992. They started out with GP9s and GP20s. All of the GP9s have left, except one that I was told was leased to a customer, as well some of the GP20s. Most SJVR locomotives are GP38s (some rebuilt), along with GP15-1s, and all three BL20-2s.
When I lived in Fresno (mid to late '70's) the branch ran a daily local with an SW1500 for power. Never saw anything else.
The Southern Pacific Historical and Technical Society published a book about it (http://www.sphtsstore.org/servlet/the-41/Serving-the-Golden-Empire/Detail). It covers up to the early 1950s. I do not know of any websites with photographs of the branch.
What era are you interested in? Many of the buildings that it served in latter years are still around, as is part of the branch. If you are interested in more recent times, you can try http://maps.live.com/ and use the Birds' Eye View to look at the buildings.
Jason
Modeling the Fort Worth & Denver of the early 1970's in N scale