Jump to content

Sunbeam (passenger train)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sunbeam
Overview
Service typeInter-city rail
StatusDiscontinued
LocaleTexas
First service1925
Last service1957
SuccessorDallas-Houston section of Texas Eagle (Amtrak)
Former operator(s)Texas and New Orleans Railroad
(Southern Pacific)
Route
TerminiHouston, Texas
StopsDallas, Texas
Distance travelled264 miles (425 km)
Service frequencyDaily
Train number(s)Southbound: 13
Northbound: 14
On-board services
Seating arrangementsChair cars
Catering facilitiesDiner-lounge-observation car (1952)
Observation facilitiesLounge car (1952)
Technical
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Route map
Dallas
Ennis
Corsicana
Mexia
College Station
Houston
The streamlined train c. 1937

The Sunbeam was a named passenger train between Houston and Dallas on the Texas and New Orleans Railroad (T&NO), a subsidiary of the Southern Pacific Railroad (SP).[1][2] The train carried number 13 northbound and number 14 southbound.

The Sunbeam began in 1925 as a heavyweight train. In June 1926 it took 6+12 hours each way, leaving Houston at noon and Dallas at 1:25 p.m.; in August 1937 it scheduled fifteen regular and flag stops in the 6+12-hour run. The Sunbeam was re-equipped on September 19, 1937, as a streamlined train in the Daylight paint scheme. The T&NO streamlined three P-14 class 4-6-2 Pacific locomotives and painted them with their Vanderbilt tenders in Daylight colors.

The initial streamliner schedule over the 264 miles (425 km) was 4 hours 45 minutes. Beginning June 1, 1938, the train made no passenger stops between the two largest cities in Texas, and the schedule was trimmed by twenty minutes to 4 hours 25 minutes (265 minutes) each way. The schedule was intended to match the competition, the Burlington-Rock Island's Texas Rocket and Sam Houston Zephyr, which ran 249.6 miles (401.7 km) between Houston and Dallas in 250 minutes.

The Sunbeam (trains 13 and 14) operated in tandem with its slower sibling, the Hustler (trains 15 and 16) using primarily the same equipment. In August 1938 the streamlined Hustlers left Houston and Dallas at 8 a.m. and arrived at their destinations at 2 p.m., having made most local stops along the way. Each consist was then turned and returned as the Sunbeam, leaving Houston at 4:45 and Dallas at 5:00. By 1941 flag stops at Ennis and College Station had been added to the Sunbeam's schedule, but the 265-minute schedule continued into the 1950s. Both the Sunbeam and the Hustler would meet their respective counterparts at Kosse, near the mid-point of the run.

The Sunbeam had an overnight counterpart in the Southern Pacific's Owl (#17 northbound, and #18 southbound). This night train consisted of coaches, and in the sleeping cars, open sections and bedrooms.[3]

With the advent of T&NO/SP's Diesel locomotive fleet after World War II, ALCO PAs were often assigned to the Sunbeam.[4] The Hustler was discontinued on August 11, 1954, and the Sunbeam received a new schedule that allowed it to depart Houston's Grand Central Station in the morning and return from Dallas in the afternoon, now using just one set of equipment instead of two. The new schedule lasted only thirteen months, and the Sunbeam made its final round trip on September 11, 1955.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "A Brief History of Railroads in Dallas". Dallas Railroad Museum. Archived from the original on 2008-05-14. Retrieved 2008-08-18.
  2. ^ "The Argonaut". The Louisiana Rail Site. Retrieved 2008-08-18.
  3. ^ Southern Pacific Railroad timetable, April 27, 1952, page 17.
  4. ^ Solomon, Brian (1999). Southern Pacific Railroad. MBI Publishing. p. 115. ISBN 0-7603-0614-1.
[edit]

Photographs

[edit]