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Classic Railroad Quiz (at least 50 years old).

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Posted by wanswheel on Tuesday, September 29, 2009 12:41 AM

Southern Pacific? 1937 timetable shows through sleepers on YVRR.

http://www.rrpicturearchives.net/showPicture.aspx?id=47907

SP definitely did have an El Capitan. It sank.

http://webbie1.sfpl.org/multimedia/sfphotos/aah-0202.jpg

http://webbie1.sfpl.org/multimedia/sfphotos/aah-0204.jpg

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Posted by ZephyrOverland on Monday, September 28, 2009 3:47 PM

 Ill give this one more day before I give the answer.

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Posted by KCSfan on Sunday, September 27, 2009 9:59 PM

ZephyrOverland

I'm not familiar with the El Capitan operated by the Yosemite Valley RR.  When did they use this name?

I should have qualified my reply as being a wild guess because of the YV's proximity to the famous El Capitan rock formation in the national park. Actually I doubt if the YVRR ever ran any named trains.

Mark

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Posted by ZephyrOverland on Sunday, September 27, 2009 8:44 PM

KCSfan

Yosemite Valley RR - Merced to El Portal

Mark

 

Mark,

I'm not familiar with the El Capitan operated by the Yosemite Valley RR.  When did they use this name?

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Posted by KCSfan on Friday, September 25, 2009 5:29 PM

Yosemite Valley RR - Merced to El Portal

Mark

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Posted by ZephyrOverland on Thursday, September 24, 2009 4:52 PM

daveklepper

National de Mexicano, Mexico City to ???   Monteray?   Vera Cruse?

Dim memory of such a train, using ex USA sleepers.

 

Nope - it was a domestic train....

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Posted by daveklepper on Thursday, September 24, 2009 3:26 PM

National de Mexicano, Mexico City to ???   Monteray?   Vera Cruse?

Dim memory of such a train, using ex USA sleepers.

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Posted by ZephyrOverland on Wednesday, September 23, 2009 3:00 PM

KCSfan

Right on Zephyr. Light yourself up one and ask the next question.

Mark

 Ok - here's the question.

We all know about the Santa Fe Chicago-Los Angeles El Capitan.  Another railroad also operated an El Capitan.  Name the railroad and endpoints.
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Posted by passengerfan on Wednesday, September 23, 2009 9:56 AM

 

Just wanted to addone more to the trains that are no longer running on there own track. The SP&S between Pasco and Spokane went the way of the wind. The tracks were removed and it is now a trail. The Portland sections of the Empire Builder and Western Star both once operated over this route.

Al - in - Stockton.

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Posted by wanswheel on Tuesday, September 22, 2009 2:32 PM

Never heard of Cigar Valley?  Me neither.  It's real though.

http://www.tobaccohistsoc.org/about.htm

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Posted by KCSfan on Tuesday, September 22, 2009 11:46 AM

Right on Zephyr. Light yourself up one and ask the next question.

Mark

 

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Posted by ZephyrOverland on Tuesday, September 22, 2009 10:34 AM

 

KCSfan

Thanks Johnny. Here goes.

If you were so inclined you might enjoy an after dinner snifter of brandy and a good             . Part of what trains name fills in the blank, what was its route and the railroad over which it ran?

Mark

The Cigar Valley Express - NH/BM - New York-White River Junction

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Posted by KCSfan on Tuesday, September 22, 2009 7:01 AM

Sorry Dave but it's not port or either of the Portland trains that I had in mind. 1932 was certainly a vintage year. I'll also be 77 on the 30th of this month but fortunately my doctors have placed no restrictions on my intake of alcohol. I suggest you find another doctor and in the meantime think some more about the answer to this question.

Mark

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Posted by Great Western on Tuesday, September 22, 2009 6:48 AM

 Greetings Dave,

I wonder where that church was?  As I move in ecclesiastical circles most days I am curious.

Regarding port.  Yes. often to be encountered in rarified places: personally I prefer sherry, but of course it must be genuine a Spanish one.  Reasonable sized British railway station usually have a bar and many named passenger trains also did. (May still do).  When I joined the RAF (a long while ago) I traveled on a train with a bar. I was only 17½  at the time and the legal age limit was 18 or above.  I was served however. Blindfold

There is no British accent.  It is either English, Welsh, Scottish, Irish (Ulster) which all have regional variations.  It is surprising how many variations there are.  In this County alone a cognizant hearer would identify at least four variations of the local dialect, Smile,Wink, & Grin

Alan, Oliver & North Fork Railroad

https://www.buckfast.org.uk/

If you don't know where you are going, any road will take you there. Lewis Carroll English author & recreational mathematician (1832 - 1898)

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Posted by daveklepper on Tuesday, September 22, 2009 3:56 AM

Well, some elegant types might follow up with a glass of Port.   A British tradition I believe, and observed when I did some acoustics consulting for a traditionally oriented and very musical High Anglican church (Episcopalian with British accent).   Everything about the place was absolutely first class and the entire congregation could sing at the Metropolitan Opera.  Worship services as fine as concerts.   1st class pipe organ and organist, also.  So, we have the UP (and C&NW) Portland Rose, Chi and KC to Portland and UP-C&NW City of Portland.   Doctors have told me to stay off alchohol completely.   At 77.   What pity.

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Posted by KCSfan on Tuesday, September 22, 2009 1:00 AM

Thanks Johnny. Here goes.

If you were so inclined you might enjoy an after dinner snifter of brandy and a good             . Part of what trains name fills in the blank, what was its route and the railroad over which it ran?

Mark

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Posted by Deggesty on Monday, September 21, 2009 9:46 PM

Deggesty
Can you come up with more before tomorrow evening?

It looks as though no one can list more than the 15 good ones that Mark listed.

Comments on some of his listings. Yes, you can't go through Butte now as you could (and I did on 4-14-71) on the NP. There is another section of track, in Georgia, which was used by the IC's trains to Jacksonville and such; a large part of the ACL's line between Albany and Lang is not there now, so the City of Miami is grounded in Miami-Dade county, and the Florida State University's athletic teams are permanently benched (yet the 'Noles really shocked Utahns Saturday evening). Much of the SAL's line between Atlanta and Birmingham is gone, so the Silver Comet has left the sky, and the Cotton Blossom has been picked. In its last months of operation, the Silver Comet was a Washington-Atlanta train, but the abandonment of track between Collier and Raleigh took care of the train altogether.

There was  another stretch of track in Georgia, between Raymond and a point north of Columbus, which put Man O' War out to pasture permanently.

I had thought to ask for these three stretches of track in Georgia, with their trains, but decided to stretch the horizon somewhat.

Dave, I think you meant the Northern Central and not the Baltimore Northern. Two of its components were the Baltimore & Susquehanna and the  York & Cumberland.

No one mentioned the B&O's line across West Virginia to Parkersburg and on into Ohio; this took such trains as the National Limited and Diplomat out.

There was also a stretch of track in S. C., which carried the Southern's Skyland Special (Asheville-Jacksonville/Miami); I believe that almost all of the track between Columbia and Hardeeville (I rode over this on my first rail trip, when I was two years old) is now gone. The Southern had trackage rights on in to Jacksonville.

Yes, none of the PRR's trains from Pittsburgh to Indianapolis and on to Terre Haute could run now--Spirit of St. Louis, Penn Texas, and American, among others.

The merger of Erie and DL&W really changed many trains, as the better track of each road was used here and there, and now, as has been mentioned, many segments necessary to the merged road's trains have been been abandoned by Conrail.

Given time, we could come up with more stretches of track that once had well-patronized passenger service, but we will let it rest for now and give Mark the opportunity to ask his next question, which I am sure he will fire off as soon as he reads this.

It's been good hunting.

Johnny

Johnny

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Posted by wanswheel on Monday, September 21, 2009 6:04 PM

The Louisville Night Express, a new train reviving Pullman service to French Lick in 1946, was renamed the Bluegrass in 1948 and was discontinued in 1949.  Meanwhile the Louisville Day Express, also new in 1946, was renamed the Thoroughbred and ran relatively forever.

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Posted by ZephyrOverland on Monday, September 21, 2009 3:43 PM

KCSfan

ZephyrOverland

The Blue Grass  or Bluegrass (what Mike described in his submission) was a Chicago-Louisville Monon train running around 1948.  The Blue Grass Special was a PRR Chicago-Louisville train operating in the early 1950's

I think it was in 1947 or '48 when the Monon streamlined their three train passenger fleet. The daytime Chi - Louisville train was the Thoroughbred. I vaguely recall there had been an overnight train on this route as well and wonder if this was the Bluegrass or if the Blugrass was a daytime predecessor of the Thoroughbred.  I think the Monon discontinued the overnight train around the time they put the streamliners in service.

Mark

 

The Bluegrass was the overnight train.

 

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Posted by KCSfan on Monday, September 21, 2009 10:41 AM

Ignore the P.S. I added to my last reply. I just remembered that the T&P accessed El Paso over the SP's Sunset Route from Sierra Blanca which makes the entire former T&P route between FtW and El Paso still in service.

Mark

 

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Posted by KCSfan on Monday, September 21, 2009 4:07 AM

Many thanks for the corrections on the abandoned segments of the routes that I mentioned. I should have done some research instead of just posting top of the head guesses on these. I had one of those "oldtimers" moments when it came to the the Silver Comet. I knew good and well it ran to Birmingham not Montgomery. I'll add a few more midwestern trains to the list.

The Hoosier and Tippecanoe - Monon - abandoned Monon to Indianapolis

The Green Diamond, Daylight and Night Diamond - IC - parts of their route have been abandoned but I can't tell you which specific segments.

The James Whitcomb Riley - NYC - I believe the KB&S still operates between Kankakee and Lafayette but I think Lafayette to Indianapolis is abandoned and some if not all of the Indy to Cincy line.

I wish I could lay my hands on the recent issue of Trains which had the map of the Rock Island lines. I'm fairly certain that the segments of the former routes of the Choctaw, Texas, Twin Star and Zephyr Rockets and Golden State Ltd have been abandoned.

Mark 

P.S. I was surprised to learn that only the last 90 or so miles of the T&P into El Paso had been abandoned. I thought much more of the line south of FtW had been torn up.

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Posted by daveklepper on Monday, September 21, 2009 4:03 AM

All the various PRR trains that used the Baltimore Northern route betweeb Baltimore and Harrsiburg, including the Liberty Limited Wash DC - Chi, the Washington section of the General and the Red Arrow, Buffalo Day Express.

Then of course the Electroliners of the North Shore, or doesn;t that count as a name train?

 

Other interurban trains including the Hoosierland, Indianpolis - Fort Wayne, the Dixie Limited, Indianapolis - Louisville, and the Ben Hur, Indianapolis - Crawfordsville.

 

The Allouette, Red Wing, and Boston section of the Ambassador, all Boton -Montral, with necessary B&M trackage abandoned in New Hampshire.   The CV, CP, and CN trackage still exists along with Guildford-Pan Am south of Concord, NH.

 

Are the PRR Pittsburgh - Chicago and Pittsburgh - St Louis tracks all still in, used in part by short lines, or had part been removed?

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Posted by KCSfan on Monday, September 21, 2009 3:23 AM

ZephyrOverland

The Blue Grass  or Bluegrass (what Mike described in his submission) was a Chicago-Louisville Monon train running around 1948.  The Blue Grass Special was a PRR Chicago-Louisville train operating in the early 1950's

I think it was in 1947 or '48 when the Monon streamlined their three train passenger fleet. The daytime Chi - Louisville train was the Thoroughbred. I vaguely recall there had been an overnight train on this route as well and wonder if this was the Bluegrass or if the Blugrass was a daytime predecessor of the Thoroughbred.  I think the Monon discontinued the overnight train around the time they put the streamliners in service.

Mark

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Posted by Deggesty on Sunday, September 20, 2009 6:57 PM

This does look interesting. Mark jumped in and named seventeen routes--but unless the UP has made a great change recently, it is still possible to take the T&P between Ft. Worth and Sierra Blanca.

Also, the Silver Comet did not go to Montgomery, unless it was detoured after Champion Davis started supplying power for the former ACL headquarters in Jacksonville (after the ACL and SAL became the SCL). Its route is no longer intact west of Atlanta, though. Mark, were you thinking of the SAL's line across South Georgia?

The IC gained entrance to Birmingham by using the Southern from Haleyville to Jasper (still there), and the SLSF from Jasper to Birmingham (still there).

So far as I know, the Big 4 line from Indianapolis to Terre Haute is still in use.

Thanks, TZ, for your notes. I would expect a short line to be willing to allow a passenger train to run on its track--if it does not have to pay for any upgrade or for the additional maintenance.

Can you come up with more before tomorrow evening?

Johnny

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Posted by ZephyrOverland on Sunday, September 20, 2009 1:36 PM

KCSfan

 One minor correction; The Bluegrass Spcl was a PRR not a Monon train.

The Blue Grass  or Bluegrass (what Mike described in his submission) was a Chicago-Louisville Monon train running around 1948.  The Blue Grass Special was a PRR Chicago-Louisville train operating in the early 1950's

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Posted by henry6 on Saturday, September 19, 2009 6:18 PM

Deggesty

KCSfan

LIght up your stogie and shoot us another question, Johnny.

Mark

We think of the many passenger trains that criss-crossed the nation, and wish they could be running again. But--some could not be operated now, because the tracks are no longer there!

Name them, the roads that ran them, and the approximate locations of the abandoned tracks. Some of these lines had more than one train; the name of one is sufficient, but go ahead and name all you know that ran on the same now-gone tracks.

Johnny

 

This is a tall order, and probably also virtually endless.  There is a good stab already posted but it also underscores the problem of answering:  you did not restrict the question to "famous named trains" or "premier train of a given road".  Thus each road has lots of trains, and like in the case of the PRR or NYC or SF, for instance, many many trains and many full and partial routes.

I'll tackle the DL&W where you had the east and westbound Phoebe Snow (formerly the Lackawanna Limited) Hoboken to Buffalo.  Today the original main line, the Cut Off in NJ, is gone as is the track west of Willow Point in Vestal, NY.  There is some switching track in Elmira off the present NS yard.  The main line west from Elmira Heights is gone, was gone, but was a new line built on the right of way from west of Big Flats through Gibson and into Corning where the Erie line is reassumed.  West (north) of Painted Post the line reemerges and is in to Wayland.  Other stretches of track exist in spots as sidings, spurs, and industrial tracks from Mt. Morris to East Buffalo.  In addition to Miss Phoebe, these tracks hosted westbound trains  #5 The Twilight, #7 The Westerner, and  #15 the Owl; eastabound trains were #8 The New Yorker, #10 The New York Mail, and #4 The Pocono Express. There was a Binghamton Hoboken milk round trip dialy, eastbound #44, and westbound #47, and the Scranton pair, #26 east as The Merchants Express and #11 west as the Scrantonian.  The Syracuse branch is exant Binghamton to the CSX (nee CR, nee PC, nee NYC0 connections in Syracuse but cut off to the State Fair Grounds where the track is in place almost into Oswego.  The Utica Branch is gone from Chenango Forks to Norwich due to washouts, and is out of service on to Sherburn but intact into Utica; the Richfield Springs Branch isd long ripped up.  The Bloom is in in many places in the Scranton-Wilkes Barre corridor but not beyond Nanticoke to Berwick where there is a shortline operating on to Northumberland (a Pittsburg train used this line).

So if all named trains and their former routes were described, we'd have a lot of research done for some kind of book!  But I am anxious to read the stories....

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Posted by Texas Zepher on Saturday, September 19, 2009 4:43 PM

KCSfan
Rocky Mountain Rocket CRI&P - abandoned KC to Denver & Colorado Springs

There is still a short line (KYLE?) that uses the track from Limon east.  In fact I hear a rumor the UP was thinking about leasing it from Limon to Colby to short circuit their Kansas & Pacific line that drops way south through that stretch. 

From Limon west to Colorado Springs the old RI was the Cadillac and Lake City short line for a while. Is that truly abandon now? I know the owner had a heart attack back in the late 1980s and couldn't keep up with it.   The Big Sur Waterbeds manufacturing plant depended on it.

KCSfan
Colorado Eagle - MoPac - abandoned Denver to KC

Mopac went to Pueblo then used the joint line north.  The track and right away from Pueblo to the Colorado boarder is not officially abandon.  The State of Colorado is holding it. 

Royal Gorge - D&RGW - abandoned Canon City to Dotsero
Likewise track is not officially abandon. In fact the track itself isn't in too bad of condition. I drove it a few years ago (see photo below)  I don't know if the State of Colorado is holding it (as the old Mopac) or if the UP just has it as idle, but definitely not abandon.

 

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Posted by KCSfan on Saturday, September 19, 2009 3:53 PM

Johnny,

I'll take a stab at a few of them but I'm not at all sure where the tracks are abandoned. Some may still be in place and are today a short line railroad or  a secondary of one of the big Class I's.

North Coast Ltd. - NP - parts of mainline between Minneapolis and Pacific Northwest abandoned

Olympian Hiawatha - CMStP&P - abandoned west of Minneapolis

Rocky Mountain Rocket CRI&P - abandoned KC to Denver & Colorado Springs

Colorado Eagle - MoPac - abandoned Denver to KC

Texas Eagle - T&P - abandoned Ft.W to El Paso

Katy Flyer - MKT - abandoned Parstons - StL

City of Miami - IC - abandoned Jackson, TN to B'ham

Silver Meteor - SAL -  parts of "S" line abandoned between Richmond and Jax

Silver Comet SAL - abandoned Atl to Montgomery (maybe Atl- Hamlet as well)

City of Memphis - NC&StL - abandoned Memphis to Bruceton

The Georgian/Humming Bird - L&N - abandoned StL to Evansville

The Westerner - NKP - abandoned StL to Frankfort

 Erie Ltd - Erie - abandoned Chi to ?

North Shore Ltd. - NYC - CASO abandoned Buffalo to Detroit

Southwestern Ltd - NYC - abandoned Indy to StL

Phoebe Snow - DL&W - abandoned ?

Jonh Wilkes - LV - abandoned ?

Royal Gorge - D&RGW - abandoned Canon City to Dotsero

Mark

 

 

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Posted by Deggesty on Saturday, September 19, 2009 10:28 AM

KCSfan

LIght up your stogie and shoot us another question, Johnny.

Mark

We think of the many passenger trains that criss-crossed the nation, and wish they could be running again. But--some could not be operated now, because the tracks are no longer there!

Name them, the roads that ran them, and the approximate locations of the abandoned tracks. Some of these lines had more than one train; the name of one is sufficient, but go ahead and name all you know that ran on the same now-gone tracks.

Johnny

Johnny

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Posted by KCSfan on Saturday, September 19, 2009 6:49 AM

Boy you guys are good. Johnny is our winner having identified 15 trains and Mike is a close second with 8. The only train that I had on my list which you failed to mention was the NH's Nutmeg running between Boston and Waterbury (Yes, Nutmeg is the name of a tree which provides us with the spice of the same name.) One minor correction; The Bluegrass Spcl was a PRR not a Monon train.

LIght up your stogie and shoot us another question, Johnny.

Mark

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