IIRC, Mark's screen name is VerMontanan.
The last hope for at least a segment of the PCE, was traffic from the coal mines that were under consideration in the Roundup area. Two strikes against it were the deferred maintenance on the line and the 30% severance tax Montana imposed on coal shipped out of state. The Milw line from Roundup to Miles City/Terry was shorter than the BNSF line built recently, as well as having better grades.
A more recent devlopment that would have benefitted from the PCE being saved is a mine planned for the White Sulphur Springs area.
As for a combined NP/Milw, perhaps the best way to have bypassed Bozeman pass would have been extending NP's Shield River branch to close to Ringling on the Milwaukee mainline west of the summit.
Convicted One I was particularly tickled to see them quoting Michael Sol in the article. I always enjoyed his contributions. I know there were some here who made it their gameplan to not get along with him, but I never had that problem.
I was particularly tickled to see them quoting Michael Sol in the article. I always enjoyed his contributions. I know there were some here who made it their gameplan to not get along with him, but I never had that problem.
Thanks to Chris / CopCarSS for my avatar.
Fred M CainTo reiterate just a bit what happened and go back over this according to Ploss, the ICC firmly insisted and mandated that the Milwaukee had to have a future and remain in business in order to provide fair and adequate competition to the Northwest. That was included in the terms of the Burlington Northern merger. But then the ICC later changed course and reversed their decision allowing for the abandonment of the PCE and partial takeover of some the MILW trackage by the BN.
I think that the way to have saved competition in the corridor, would have been for the ICC to have kept the NP out of the BN. NP then may have looked at a merger with MILW to provide a Chicago outlet. Most of the PCE probably would have been rationalized, with the exception of Snoqualime Pass, and maybe the line over the Belt Mountains as an alternative to Bozeman Pass.
MP173 The railroad was a mess at the end. No doubt about it. Was it the right decision to abandon it? I think so. The revenue was not there to support the high cost of service. Ed
The railroad was a mess at the end. No doubt about it. Was it the right decision to abandon it? I think so. The revenue was not there to support the high cost of service.
Ed
The MILW captured business from opening gateways as a condition of the BN merger. But couldn't hold onto it as the already deferred maintenance track further disintegrated under it. No matter what promise it may have had, there was no money to rebuild it. (Would anyone loan money to a company that had let it's physical plant deteriorate so much?) No one else needed it so abandonment is the only option.
Forget the cost of relaying track, etc. Just think of the uproar from the NIMBY and BANANA element, not to mention the trail advocates out in Washington state. Much of the line may have been in remote locations, but there would be someone who would object to that idea. The cost of environmental impact reports alone would probably be astronomical. Many lawyers would get rich before a single tie was placed.
Jeff
Ed,
Thanks ever so much for the link to that photo gallery. I hadn’t found that before. If you scroll down through the comments section to #23 written by a Frenchman, he pretty well sums up my own feelings. I can only add that I have always felt this was a national tragedy that could’ve and should’ve been avoided.
Regards
Fred M. Cain
This thread brings back great memories of the forum 10-12 years ago when there was very intense discussions of all things rail. Michael Sol's mention in the article was warrented. He was passionate about the PCE and seemed to be a wealth of information about not only that route but the industry in general. Sadly, he and others were pushed off the forum.
Now, for those who wish to take a trip on the line, go to the following link:http://newwww.weedroute.com/?p=8.
Somehow, a couple of young men purchased a speeder and rolled west from Miles City, Mt to Cedar Falls, Wa....on the railroad after it had been abandoned but prior to liquidation. How in the world did they do that?!?
Photos are not the highest quality - they had mechanical issues with their camera, but the documentation is stunning.
I attempted to find the photo location on page 35 of Clear Creek Trestle on St. Paul Pass using Google Maps and the above mentioned web site but couldnt locate it. The photos on pages 38-39 (near Adair, Id) were located. Tracing the route thru the pass was fascinating.
Re-open today? Wow...what an investment that would require.
If I could take the time machine back to the mid to late 70s I would stop in St. Paul Pass and probably Huntington, In to watch the EL in its last year. Cant do it. Should have gone there while I had the chance.
Overmod,
Regards,
Fred M CainHere is a challenge to our group: Try and see how many reasons you can come up with for rebuilding the PCE and how many benefits such a rebuilding would produce. Please don’t mention the problems with it. There is no need to mention the obstacles or reasons not to rebuild it ‘cause we already know what they are. So how ‘bout it, group? What can you come up with? If we could get a comprehensive list and plan put together, I might just consider doing a website on this similar to my site about bringing back U.S. Route 66. “REBUILD THE MILWAUKEE”!
It's not possible to take this up without considering the elephant in the room: the PCE as built was massively incompetent as a modern railroad, and a 'rebuilt' PCE would have vast problems by comparison even with existing competing lines.
Paradoxically one of its historical 'disadvantages' -- bypassing cities and significant-in-1915 traffic sources -- would work to its advantage now as a bridge line. But the number of curves and relatively rickety construction make it worthless for the 'alternative' use as a high-speed rail route (with freight operation conducted within high-speed planning as in Europe).
Restoring the line to operation would be expensive, but even with the somewhat limited number of functional TLMs available in the United States could probably be done in a reasonable time, with much of the necessary regrading, curve elimination, etc. done as part of the 'new track construction' continuously. Perhaps at the required scale, many of the fixed costs typically associated with mechanized tracklaying could be minimized -- although probably not to the point the states would want to assist 'for HrSR or whatever'. Problem with going the route of state/Federal financing is that you have to overcome the sense of 'interfering with private business' and I don't see anything generating profitable traffic streams that would not do that. As a long shot you could offer a rebuilt double-track PCE as a 'high speed corridor' for premier trains of other roads, or for the kind of Z train that UPS tested using Genesis locomotives a couple of decades ago. In essence this recreates the 'classical' ATSF operation, 90+ operation basically one-speed with slower traffic only accommodated via holding sidings and only if necessary. You'd design the 'east end' to interconnect with carriers compatible with such a model; it's a pity neither the Erie nor the high-speed parts of the Lackawanna still exist as a potential freight alternative.
Some parts of the grade might be compatible with, and reduce the cost of, a true HSR line at some meaningful average speed capability between, say, the Chicago area and the Pacific Northwest. When you determine what that speed needs to be to be competitive 'enough' to justify all the expenses, and then use that information to determine what your ROW standards and hence physical routing would be, you'll at least have a numbers-populated plan for what "restoring the alternative line" would involve. This would include the choice of power, and how quickly 'rollout' of electrified sections into first regions and then, presumably, the whole schmear would be possible.
Doubt you would rebuild any electrified section at 3000V. Either 25kV or, with the larger available clearances even for potential stack trains, 50kV. Likely constant-tension even if that requires additional copper/aluminum in construction. Even existing 'wayside' technology gets rid of the train-balancing problem with regeneration, and modern AC power can be built to have inherent regeneration at road-variable power-factor sensing and correction, with adequate control in poor weather or to prevent excess pan or railhead damage.
Much more distance between 'multiple tracks' than pre-WWI standards. Although it would be possible to operate the line for freight as a single-track main with long sidings, wouldn't it make "better" sense (these things being kept relative, you understand) to implement the second main with multiple cutoffs, each compensated-grade-optimized for a particular direction, then operate with crossovers/flyovers as necessary to give progressive directional running? (Serves more areas, too, if you have precision scheduling control of initial 'wrong way' moves).
Doubt you would rebuild any electrified section at 3000V. Either 25kV or, with the larger available clearances even for potential stack trains, 50kV. Likely constant-tension even if that requires additional copper/aluminum in construction. Even existing 'wayside' technology gets rid of the train-balancing problem with regeneration, and modern AC power has inherent regeneration at road-variable power-factor sensing and correction.
Doubt you would rebuild any electrified section at 3000V. Either 25kV or, with the larger available clearances even for potential stack trains, 50kV. Likely constant-tension even if that requires additional copper/aluminum in construction.
Convicted One Well, I think that it's important to maintain context with what else was going on in the RR world at the time. <SNIP>
Well, I think that it's important to maintain context with what else was going on in the RR world at the time. <SNIP>
Dear "Convicted One".
Electroliner 1935 Fred, What traffic exists (or is possible) that would use such a new route to generate the revenue to justify the investment?
Fred, What traffic exists (or is possible) that would use such a new route to generate the revenue to justify the investment?
Fred M CainHowever, the disagreement tends to stem from whether or not the PCE should’ve been allowed to be abandoned in the first place. I sense from some of the responses that some think it was logical and “O.K.”. I strongly disagree with that assessment
Well, I think that it's important to maintain context with what else was going on in the RR world at the time. The Penn-Central failure was still s fresh memory back then, and holding economic responsibility for rail lines that were underproductive was widely seen as kryptonite.
Rationalization appeared to many to be salvation, while sacred cows (frequently) were feared to eat one out of house and home.
So I'm gueesing their mindset at the time was one of "cutting our losses" more likely than any shame over abandoning "what might have been"* .
I really regret the failure of the Wabash Pittsburgh Terminal RR as well.....feel that it should have been given another chance....but the PRR made certain that woukld never happen
I also have this musty fantasy that a merger between Milwaukee Rd and the Erie could have had some potential to save both.
* that "oh want might have been" philosophy is much easier to brew from the comfort of our armchairs 40 years later, than it would be for anyone having to deal with the survival of the railroad in real time.
Fred, What traffic exists (or is possible) that would use such a new route to generate the revenue to justify the investment? The "BUILD IT AND THEY WILL COME" does not play for todays venture capitalist market.
There again, there are those few who don’t like Ploss, either. So, I guess at the end of the day all we can do is agree to disagree. This harkens back to another thing I said in my first post that Americans have trouble reaching a consensus on things anymore. Without any kind of consensus on rebuilding the PCE, it’s dead. That’s for sure
BNSF is essentially largely double-track or paired-main lines from Galesburg, IL to Williston, ND on the east end of the Northern Transcon and is basically paired-main lines from Spokane, WA to Seattle, WA on the west end of the Northern Transcon. Granted the former GN, former NP, and former SP&S are widely separated in Washington, but they provide three separate routes in to and out of the Seattle-Tacoma metroplex for various types of traffic. couple that infrastructure with Montana Rail Link as an overflow option through Montana to the former GN, the BNSF seems to have significant capacity for the Northern Transcon for quite some time, it would appear.
MidlandMike CMStPnP NorthWest it would've been picked up by someone else I still do not think BNSF has enough traffic to pay for two seperate rail routes across the former GN. Wasn't aware they bought the former Milwaukee Right of Way but they also could have done that to block future competitors. They picked up the MILW Snoqualmie Pass route because it was 500' lower than their NP Stampede Pass route.
CMStPnP NorthWest it would've been picked up by someone else I still do not think BNSF has enough traffic to pay for two seperate rail routes across the former GN. Wasn't aware they bought the former Milwaukee Right of Way but they also could have done that to block future competitors.
NorthWest it would've been picked up by someone else
I still do not think BNSF has enough traffic to pay for two seperate rail routes across the former GN. Wasn't aware they bought the former Milwaukee Right of Way but they also could have done that to block future competitors.
They picked up the MILW Snoqualmie Pass route because it was 500' lower than their NP Stampede Pass route.
For export coal that didn't develop. One of the large trestles lost a pier and the line was abandoned. It's now a trail, the damaged trestle repaired for trail use.
Fred M CainThis is admittedly an old thread that nonetheless might warrant resurrection in light of the recent article on the Pacific Coast Extension (PCE) in TRAINS Magazine.
Ya beat me to it!!! I just last night finally got around to reading that article in the June issue, and planned to come here this evening and look up this old thread.
As far as resurrecting the Milwaukee Roads pacific extension.....I know there is a lot of emotional tie-in to this issue.....but personally I seriously doubt it would ever happen. The railroads are too preoccupied cutting everything to the bone to maximize stockholder return..... to even consider being far sighted again.
On a side note having now read all of the pAst several issues, I have enjoyed the brief histories of all the western US transcons .....but don't recall reading the UP history in any of the issues. Did Trains not provide a brief history of UP in the May issue?
NorthWestit would've been picked up by someone else
The death of the PCE seems to be brought up at least once a year.
The point remains that the PCE was an inferior route. If it wasn't, it would've been picked up by someone else (see BN's purchase of the Snoqualamie Pass alignment it ultimately didn't use) or the Milwaukee wouldn't have gone bankrupt.
The other routes require less capital to operate. Investment should be concentrated there.
Fred M CainMany tunnels would need work but most would probably be O.K.
Actually, I think they would all need significant work to carry double stack container trains. The Milwaukee only enlarged the tunnels for tri-level auto-rack cars. Further, I would also tend to suspect the roadbed would need work or shoring up in areas as the previous roadbed was taken out of service before the dramatic increase in car weights. As mentioned in the TRAINS article the track had issues with 100 ton covered hoppers. Definitely some of the rail bridges would need work also to handle the heavier weights.
Economies of scale and labor being what they are. In my view it would be less expensive to double or triple track an existing line than it would be to reactivate an abandoned line that had not seen service in a while. Because with a new seperate line in a different geographic area your going to need to split your operations and maintence labor between the two geographically seperate lines. I would also tend to think signaling costs would be higher as well. Not an expert on this though..... just guessing.
Milwaukee made a LOT of bad decisions PCE wasn't the only one it was just the biggest. The Milwaukee thought the St. Lawerence Seaway would be a boon to Great Lakes ports and upgraded the Southwestern with heavier rail and steel bridges and nothing happened.........most of that money was wasted as well.
Turning GE down on their all expenses paid (or subsidized) offer to upgrade their electrical system and close the gap on the PCE, another stupid decision. Imagine how that would have changed history. Sitting on their hands and not actively developing more of a business relationship with CB&Q and or CNW to consolidate or share lines, probably hurt them as well.
As for light traffic on the PCE. I believe that was the reason GN, NP and SP&S merged. Independently they all had light traffic, it wasn't just a Milwaukee problem. Though you would never know that from the TRAINS article. BN had better traffic because it merged three railroads together and only incidently because they got to the market first..........in my view. BN apparently did not have enough traffic to keep the NP open all the way from the Pacific and that is why we have Montana Rail link.
AnonymousSPandS-fan, Here's the 64 million dollar question: What would it take today to ressurect the ex-Milwaukee line over Snoqualmie? The ex-MIlwaukee line is now a recreational trail, parts of some trestles were washed out a while back, and the city of Seattle watershed folks have restricted any access along the upper reaches of the Cedar River along the old right of way. That being said, with the State of Washington now actively engaged in supporting rail reinvestment, why not? <SNIP>
Fred M.Cain
OOPS!
I made a serious typo error made in me post James J Hill ended up controlling the NP(not UP).
After a long fight between Harriman (UP), and James J Hill for control of Northern Pacific
that saw NP stocks exceed $1000 a share, Mr. Hill ended up controlling the UP, plus the
SP&S,and GN RRs. Those three RRs controlled three of the four trans-Washington
routes.
Great Northern crossed the Cascade Mountains through a tunnel located
at Stevens Pass. Northern Pacific RR crossed the Cascade Mountains through
a tunnel at Stampede Pass. The Spokane, Portland, and Seattle RR opted for
a flatter route that followed the Columbia River as it had cut a natural passthrough the
Cascades between Washington and Oregon as it did not require any long tunnels
or steep grades.
Snoqualmie Pass ended up being the logical choice when the Milwaukee
RR was seeking a route across the Cascade Range to western Washington.
The Milwaukee tunnel, and the earliest of the two Great Northern tunnel are now
part of the hiking/biking trails in the Washington Cascades. The Milwaukee RR
Cascade route was lucrative because of the freight traffic, but it was not enough
to make up for the loses incurred in the mid-west operations.
Northern Pacific had considered The Columbia River route, Snoqualmie Pass,
and lastly Stampede Pass. Stampede Pass won out at that time because of
the cost analysis perform by the engineering staff at NP to get to the Puget
Sound region.
The Spokane, Portland and Seattle RR included Seattle in its name to
confuse the competition as their true goal was actually the port city of Portland,
Oregon. From what I have found in my research there were never
any plans to proceed north from Portland to Seattle for the SP&S RR.
Thanks for your kind words...
Actually, I started the site back in 2003 hosted at TrainWeb.org with the Milwaukee Road Electrification publication, and it reached #2 on the Google search for the string "Milwaukee Road History" --shameless self-promotion -- but I wanted to get serious with my own ad banner-free domain as I start some of my own research for my O-gauge layout theme "Vignettes of the Milwaukee Road."
I am working on posting some of the wonderful, colorful vintage advertisements from the Milwaukee Road (because the remaining "historical" documents are getting too expen$ive for my small collection). I will probably look for forum members' help in dating some of the ads...
Good site, and I am happy that I am one of the first to see it.
Haven't been on the forums lately (working up some new content for my Milwaukee Road History site at www.oldmilwaukeeroad.com) but the thread here reminds me of the passion some of us feel for this lost jewel... that is what originally inspired me to start a web site to share some of the glorious history of the St. Paul, er the Milwaukee !
Now reading Stan Johnson's latest on the Western Extension, I was inspired to (finally) upload the beautiful photos from 1912's The Trail of the Olympian (link above). Check it out and let me know what you think !
MichaelSol wrote: During the 1970s, Milwaukee reduced its overall employee numbers at a rate marginally slower than the industry as a whole, and its Operating Ratio began its fatal turn for the worse.
Well, this comment leaves an inaccurate impression. It is also true that, as Forbes Magazine and other business magazines noted in 1973, that the Milwaukee was the "fastest growing Class I railroad in the country" in terms of revenue. No doubt, employees added to handle the Louisville, Portland, and Gateways traffic obscured productivity gains in employee numbers elsewhere on the system and made the Milwaukee only "appear" to be reducing employees more slowly than the industry average, but because it was increasing its traffic that much and one needs to look elsewhere for an explanation of the deterioration in Operating Ratio.
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