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ex-Milwaukee Road line to Bellevue and Woodinville

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ex-Milwaukee Road line to Bellevue and Woodinville
Posted by Anonymous on Wednesday, September 25, 2002 9:50 PM
Does anyone know anything about BNSF's ex-MILW line into Woodinville, WA via Bellevue? I live very close to it, and just about the only thing I know about it is the Spirit of Washington Dinner Train runs over the line, and that a couple of freight trains a day run on it too. There are several warehouses on the line near downtown Bellevue, but the tracks are gated and look quite overgrown..., also, from the distance I can tell, the freights carry odd-shaped loads on odd-looking cars. What DO they carry? What locos run on the branchline? Also, the line connects with BNSF's line to Stevens Pass in Monroe, WA, and w/ BNSF at Renton. Can anyone fill me in? Thanx.
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Posted by Anonymous on Friday, September 27, 2002 9:00 PM
Hello,

It's neither an ex-Milwaukee Road branch or main line -- it's the former Northern Pacific Sumas Line from Renton to Woodinville, then north to Sedro Woolley and on to Sumas at the Canadian border. The only railroad to serve Woodinville was the NP, with one route coming east that traveled around the northern edge of Lake Washington from Interbay Yard, and the Sumas Line from the north and south.

The Milwaukee Road came into Renton from Cedar Falls and then to Black River Junction, from where it could access Union Station in Tacoma and Union Station in Seattle via rails it shared with the Union Pacific.

The Milwaukee Road did operate a series of branch lines out of Bellingham. Before the BN merger in 1970, the Milwaukee had to move cars between Seattle and Bellingham via car floats. After the merger, it gained trackage rights from Monroe to Bellingham on the former NP route. Milwaukee Road trains traveled on their own rails between Monroe and Cedar Falls, passing through Snoqualmie and Duvall.

The odd-looking cars you see are probably brown-colored, shed-shaped objects. They carry fuselage components for Boeing's plants in Renton and Everett.

Most locomotives on the Wilburton line (the large trestle just east of Interstate 405 is the Wilburton Trestle) now are probably GP38s, GP39Ms, or GP39Es.

Years ago, when Bellevue was a just small town on the eastern shore of Lake Washington, the trestle was sort of in the middle of nowhere.

The "Spirit of Washington" began operating on the line in 1992, if I recall.

Hope this helps,

Paul Schmidt
Contributing Editor
Trains.com
  • Member since
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Posted by Anonymous on Monday, September 30, 2002 1:55 PM
The line that runs through Bellevue goes to kirkland,redmond, renton, and snohomish. THere are two differrent trains that work the line. From Everett the Boeing job comes down and works Woodinville and picks up the boeing cars. I beleive that they don't clear a bridge in the Seattle area. This train also works in woodinville and redmond.This train is called the Kirkland Turn. Another train comes from the South (Renton)and works bellevue and Kirkland and is called the Woodinville turn. Hopes this helps.

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