Deggesty Southern's TT of 9/30/17 shows a Greensboro-Raleigh sleeper, which, at 81 miles, takes the trick. The same TT shows a Washington-San Francisco sleeper line via Montgomery, of 3,368 miles--which outstrips any other New York-Los Angeles line. This one, however, may have required a change of cars in New Orleans, since another table in the same TT shows only NY/Washington-New Orleans cars (1,368 miles).
Southern's TT of 9/30/17 shows a Greensboro-Raleigh sleeper, which, at 81 miles, takes the trick.
The same TT shows a Washington-San Francisco sleeper line via Montgomery, of 3,368 miles--which outstrips any other New York-Los Angeles line. This one, however, may have required a change of cars in New Orleans, since another table in the same TT shows only NY/Washington-New Orleans cars (1,368 miles).
Johnny, although Ed hasn't responded, you are obviously the winner of this question so go ahead and post another one.
Mark
Johnny
NP Eddie Rob, Dave, and All: What was the longest sleeping car line operated and what was the shortest sleeping car line operated? Ed Burns Here's the mileage of all the sleeping car lines that have been mentioned as possibly being the shortest: Louisville - Nashville (L&N) 187 mi. Peoria - St. Louis (ITC) 171.9 mi. Portland - Eugene (Oregon Electric) 142.8 mi Indianapolis - Louisville (Indiana RR {PSCI}) 117 mi. Ed, it was your question so please declare a winner so we can get this tread moving again. Mark
Rob, Dave, and All:
What was the longest sleeping car line operated and what was the shortest sleeping car line operated?
Ed Burns
Here's the mileage of all the sleeping car lines that have been mentioned as possibly being the shortest:
Louisville - Nashville (L&N) 187 mi.
Peoria - St. Louis (ITC) 171.9 mi.
Portland - Eugene (Oregon Electric) 142.8 mi
Indianapolis - Louisville (Indiana RR {PSCI}) 117 mi.
Ed, it was your question so please declare a winner so we can get this tread moving again.
For a period in the late 1950s (my example from August 1957 OG) at least one of the transcontinental sleepers was carried westbound only on the Wolverine via Detroit. The MC route is 6.3 miles longer than the ex-LS&MS line via Cleveland.
Rob:
The "Crescent" derailment happened on December 3, 1978. One of the employees killed was a chef that was pictured in a Southern ad. That ad said that he had been making muffins since 1943 or so.
The "National Transportation Library" website has a plethora of information, including ICC investigated railroad accidents from 1911 to 1993. I assume that the NTSB began in 1994.
The PRR-SOU-SP service was started in 1970 at the same time the Sunset was reduced to tri-weekly, as was the Southern Crescent south of Atlanta. This was part of the same group of ICC decisions that ended WP's participation in the California Zephyr and allowed SP to cut the City of SF to tri-weekly. It continued until just before the Sunset was re-equipped with Superliners, ending when the Crescent was converted to HEP at the time of the Amtrak takeover. At least one set of the Crescent's cars were provided by Amtrak for a couple of months before the takeover after a horrible derailment in late 1978 or early 1979.
daveklepperWas not there a break in the servuce vis New Orleans at the time of Amtrak startup or just before until it was reinstated?
Was not there a break in the servuce vis New Orleans at the time of Amtrak startup or just before until it was reinstated?
Johnny:
Thanks for the information as I thought it continued to about 1960 or so.
Johnny or Dave:
I can't find my original post about post WWII transcontinental sleepers, so I will ask when was that service discontinued. I suspect it was about 1960 or so.
In the early days of Amtrak, not right at the beginning, but during the time that the Sourthern still operated the Southern Crescent, and before the Superliner era, there was a NY - LA through sleeper via the NEC (Amtrak), Southern, and SP (Amtrak). Not quite 50 years ago, however.
NP Eddie Rob, Dave, and All: What was the longest sleeping car line operated and what was the shortest sleeping car line operated? Was there ever a sleeping car line between Louisville and Nashville? Ed Burns
Was there ever a sleeping car line between Louisville and Nashville?
What is the status of this question? Its been two weeks since the last response.
this kind of precooling need not have ruled out regular ice air-conditioning once the train is in motion and the battery can be charged by the axle generators. but i suspect precooling was available long before ice air-conditioning.
ice air-conditioning was strictly a heavyweight car technology. once lightweights began being constructed, some type of mechanical air-conditioning was employed and many ice pullmans were converted to mechanical later. santa fe converted their few ice heavyweight coaches to mechanical steam-ejector and applied steam-ejector to all heavyweights in transcontinental service.
"Steam, Steel, and Limited's", page 16, has a paragraph regarding pre-cooling sleeping cars. A machine was moved from car to car and cooled the car via a canvas that blew cool air through an open window. Once the train was in motion the passengers "were on their own".
The reference to regular A/C verses precooled cars is in a 1936 OG--under the L&N listing. The L&N is the only one I recall as having that distinction in consist description.
How about St. Louis to Peoria on the Illinois Terminal?
by 1936, all pullman 1st class sleepers, not including tourist class sleepers that i believe operated on the up and possibly several other western railroads, had ice air-conditioning, with ice containers under the car and the air for the ventilation system directed across the ice for cooling. the lower berth and upper birth had individual air outlets, black, with an adjustable flap that allowed the passenger to control the amount of cooling by controlling the air quantity. many railroads had equipped dining cars with the same type of cooling, and a few railroads, like the chessie and b-and-o had coaches with this type of cooling. by pre-cooled, i presume that the air-intake for the cooling system of the car was connected to an ice air-cooling plant or the sleeping car battery was connected to a charger allowing the fan to operate to cool the car via its ice without running down the battery, either would have worked.
some contenders for shortest sleeper runs might include indianapolis - louisville on the interstate interurban then the indiana rr, providence - ny on the new haven, and did not the nyc in the 1920 decade have a ny - albany sleeper?
Ed, I do not know the mechanics of pre-cooling, but it may have been blowing air across ice and into the sleeper. I do not recall reading about pre-cooling in Steam, Steel and Limiteds; it seems to me that once the setout sleeper was picked up there was no way to keep the interior cool except for the motion of the car. I have the impression that these cars had no air conditioning mechanism, and relied entirely upon the pre-cooling.
I read an 1936 OG that stated that the Louisville-Nashville sleeper was pre-cooled. What did that entail?
Through sleepers had A/C, but local ones were not converted yet.
"Steam, Steel, and Limiteds" makes reference to pre-cooler sleepers, stating that once the train got moving, the car would finally be cool.
Ed, the L&N did operate overnight setout sleepers between Louisville and Nashville.
the limousine service did continue until the amtrak reroute was in effect. but toward the end arriving on sp at ogden, as i did, one had to contact the sp agent when he came on duty, and he would arrange the cab to pick one or more, because often there were no passengers and the cab did not run. i presume this was true in reverse. the one time i was ticketed through westbound, at the last minute a arrangement was made with potential clients for my firm who wished to meet me, to pick me up at provo, their location, and drive me to ogden, so we could discuss their concerns without my making a special trip to see them so i never experienced the van-service westbound, only eastbound. after the thistle mudslide, the rgz was cut back to grand junction, with a bus substituting between gj and slc. on the official switchover to amtrak daily service, the cz still ran via cheyenne, and an amtrak bus handled the rgz stops runnng as a bus all the way denver - ogden, until the thistle tunnel was opened and the cz finally rerouted to the moffat-line. then of course the pioneer did run through ogden to seattle while the cz itself may have run directly west from slc. you can check on this and ask the next question
When I worked afternoons at old Northtown I saw the NCL and WPG Limited. The overnight shift saw the NCL and WPG Limited coming east.
daveklepperthe 3rd train leaving chicago may not be in the august 1970 guide but should be in may and june
Trains 5 and 6, to Quincy, split off at Galesburg. 11 and 12 had been the Nebraska Zephyr.
The RGZ's extension to Ogden was replaced by Limousine service during 1971, a service in turn replaced in 1977 by Amtrak's Pioneer from Salt Lake City to Portland.
The Thistle slide in 1983 came after Amtrak and D&RGW had agreed to the handover. The last WB RGZ before the slide on April 15 ended through service until the Amtrak CZ came east on July 16. (The RGZ may have run between the tunnel opening and July 16. I can't find anything that says it did.)
and rc, if you answer any of the above additional or repeated questions, you get to ask the next one
and the 3rd train leaving chicago may not be in the august 1970 guide but should be in may and june
rubber to robber? well, gm did buy ny railways in 1926 with the obvious intention of converting the system to bus as soon as a reliable transit-like vehicle was developed. was the 1935 gm yellow coach the first reliable local transit bus that was not a hood-in-front vehicle like today's school-buses? they also included the nycentral's ny and harlem streetcar lines, 4th and madison and 86 st crosstown, as part of their system and bought those lines outright in 1934. in december 1935 the conversion process began with the 4th and madison, symbolic, because it included north america's first street railway, with its tracks south of 42nd st hosting mixture of horse cars and steam trains before conduit electrification, steam first banned south of 29th st. then south of 42nd st, and then banned altogether in manhattan.
rc has his facts straight, except that leaving chicago there was another train also combined. what was it and where did it split and to where did it go? also, the rio grande zephyr, that coexisting with amtrak for a while, did not always run to ogden. it was actually cut back twice. what were the reasons and what substituted in each case? when amtrak took over the service, on start-up, did they actually reroute their now renamed train, san francisco zephyr to california zephyr, to the moffat line, or did it continue for a few months to continue to run via cheyenne and sherman hill? with an amtrak bus serving the rgz stations?
Sorry Dave, I would have answered but I haven't had time. I'm interested in what is quoted below:
daveklepperBut there was another stretch, even longer, of conduit Manhattan streetcar trackage, on the surface, that was private right-of-way. It was paved, and in an emergency robber-tired vehicles could easily use it.
Freudian slip?
We're drifting into the 1970s... For the record, the current cutoff date for the quiz forums is October 9, 1964...
From the August 1970 Official Guide:
The "California Zephyr Service" operated tri-weekly combined with unnamed trains 11 and 12 (Dinette-Coach and Chair Cars), Westbound MoWeFr, arriving in Chicago EB MoWeSa. From Omaha to Denver it operated as an Extra, with no public train number, though it seems to have remained as 17 and 18 in the Employee Timetable.
Chicago- Denver
Chuck Wagon
Chicago-Salt Lake City
4 room Vista-Dome Observation Lounge
Chicago and Ogden
46-seat Vista-Dome Coach
10 Roomette-6 Bedroom Sleeper
D&RGW added a dining car Denver-Salt Lake City
SP had coaches, sleepers, a diner and a home-built dome-lounge on the tri-weekly City of San Francisco, the cross-platform connection at Ogden.
The "California Zephyr Service" lasted until Amtrak (which initially expected to operate via the D&RGW),
with the D&RGW operating the Denver-Ogden service (minus the 10-6) until 1983.
OL New York transit trivia doesn't seem very popular with posters these days, so we will move on.
Between Western Pacific's ending passenger service and the consequent end of the real California Zephyr, and the start of Amtrak, for little over a year, the CB&Q and D&RGW were required to provide a three-times-a-week "California Service" connecting with SP at Ogden.
On the CB&Q the train was combined with two others in and out of Chicago, with the timetable showing it combined officially with one of the two. What were the other two trains and their destinations, and where did combining take place? What equipment actually ran through from Chicago to Ogden, and where did the other equipment leaving Chicago terminate? Was any equipment and what was it that was picked up on the way to Ogden and dropped on the return? Did this service in truth continue to operate to Ogden until Amtrak, and if not, what happend and why?
A New York Railways, Green Lines subsidiary, was the Eighth and Ninth Avenue Railway, with streetcars approximating today's M10 and M11 bus routes. Between 59th St and 110th St. the double conduit tracks were on the extreme east side of Central Park West, with auto traffic directed to the remaining lanes, leaving the streetcar track paved (cobblestone) right-of-way for streetcars only. Converted to bus early 1936 with street completely repaved.
question has been unsanwered for too long
Church Avenue on the F Line was opened with A train service via fulton and chambers st manhattan, then the E replaced it via Essex and houston sts in manhattan, with the A going to the temporary terminal at Fulon (Brooklyn) and Rockaway, then the F replaced the E with the opening of the 6th Avenue subway in 1940, then the postwar Ditmas connection brought the D replacing the F, the Christie St. Connection moved to the D to the Brighton line and the manhattan bridge, with the F restored, and then the f experimental rush hour express service saw the G running to Church and removed, with the F remaining,
Southern terminal for the D was initially Hudson Terminal renamed World Trade Center, then it was moved to the Houston and Essex route and the culver to coney Island, then Chrystie St, connection moved it to the Manhattan Bridge and the Brighton Line to Brighton Beach, weekends and nights to Coney island, now moved to the West End to Coney Island. North end has remained to East 205th Street via The bronx concourse.
The Park Avenue Vehicular tunnel was originally used by steam trains and horse cars, then by conduit powered electric streetcars, until the first of the GM-owned Green Lines was converted to buses on the surface in December 1935. But there was another stretch, even longer, of conduit Manhattan streetcar trackage, on the surface, that was private right-of-way. It was paved, and in an emergency robber-tired vehicles could easily use it. The line was converted to bus early in 1936. I remember seeing the tracks but don't have a memory of riding the cars, although I am certain I did with parents or other adults, and I rode the replacement bus many times. All signs of it being a separate ROW were quickly removed after bus conversion.
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