User:Pi.1415926535/A-Day trains
Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe
[edit]The Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad operated eighteen daily trains, of which ten were continued by Amtrak.
https://streamlinermemories.info/SF/SF69-6TT.pdf
Number | Name | Routing | Frequency | Status on May 1, 1971 | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1, 2 | San Francisco Chief | Chicago–San Francisco via Amarillo | Daily | Discontinued | |
15, 16 | Texas Chief | Chicago–Houston | Daily | Amtrak operated | Renamed Lone Star in 1974 and discontinued in 1979 |
17, 18 | Super Chief/El Capitan | Chicago–Los Angeles via La Junta | Daily | Amtrak operated | Renamed Southwest Limited in 1974 and Southwest Chief in 1983 |
23, 24 | ex-Grand Canyon | Chicago–Los Angeles via La Junta | Daily | Discontinued | |
73–78 | San Diegan | Los Angeles–San Diego | 3x daily | Amtrak operated | One round trip became part of the Coast Daylight/Starlight until 1972. The service was renamed Pacific Surfliner in 2000. |
191-190, 201-200 | – | Denver–La Junta | Daily | Discontinued | Denver connection for the eastbound Super Chief/El Capitan |
211, 212 | Tulsan | Kansas City–Tulsa | Daily | Discontinued |
Baltimore and Ohio
[edit]The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad operated ten daily trains, none of which were continued by Amtrak. Amtrak service over the B&O began later in 1971 with the West Virginian.
https://streamlinermemories.info/Eastern/C&OB&O67TT.pdf
Number | Name | Routing | Frequency | Status on May 1, 1971 | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1, 2 | George Washington | Cincinnati–St. Louis | Daily | Discontinued | Formerly part of the National Limited. Washington, D.C.–St. Louis train jointly operated with the C&O. |
5, 6 | Capitol Limited | Washington, D.C.–Chicago | Daily | Discontinued | |
7, 8 | Shenandoah | Washington, D.C.–Akron | Daily | Discontinued | |
11, 12 | Metropolitan | Washington, D.C.–Cincinnati | Daily | Discontinued | |
53, 54 | Cincinnatian | Cincinnati–Detroit | Daily | Discontinued |
Burlington Northern
[edit]The Burlington Northern Railroad (a 1970 merger of the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad, Great Northern Railway, Spokane, Portland and Seattle Railway, and Northern Pacific Railway), operated 40 daily trains, of which eight were continued by Amtrak. One additional pair (one round trip) was operated by BN for ten days until a lawsuit was settled.
https://streamlinermemories.info/Zephyr/BN70-4TT.pdf
Number | Name | Routing | Frequency | Status on May 1, 1971 | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1, 2 | Denver Zephyr | Chicago–Denver | Daily | Amtrak operated | Combined with the San Francisco Zephyr in 1972, which was renamed California Zephyr in 1983 |
5, 6 | "Quincy Local" (ex-Kansas City Zephyr) | Chicago–Quincy | Daily | Privately operated | Operated by BN until May 10, when a lawsuit was settled. Amtrak begin operating the Illinois Zephyr over the route later in 1971. |
7, 8 | Morning Zephyr | Chicago–Minneapolis | Daily | Discontinued | Eastbound #8 ran combined with the Empire Builder and North Coast Limited |
9, 10 | Afternoon Zephyr | Chicago–Minneapolis | Daily | Discontinued | Westbound #9 ran combined with the Empire Builder and North Coast Limited five days a week, and ran separately on Fridays and Sundays |
11, 12 | ex-Nebraska Zephyr | Chicago–Omaha | Daily | Discontinued | |
19, 20 | American Royal Zephyr | Chicago–North Kansas City | Daily | Discontinued | |
21, 22 | Empire Builder (Portland section) | Spokane–Portland | Daily | Discontinued | |
23, 24 | Western Star (Portland section) | Spokane–Portland | Daily | Discontinued | |
25, 26 | North Coast Limited | Chicago–Seattle via Butte | Daily | Discontinued | Amtrak restored service over much of the route in June 1971 as the North Coast Hiawatha |
27, 28 | Western Star | St. Paul–Seattle via Havre | Daily | Discontinued | |
29, 30 | Mainstreeter | St. Paul–Seattle via Helena | Daily | Discontinued | |
31, 32 | Empire Builder | Chicago–Seattle via Havre | Daily | Amtrak operated | Amtrak began operating the train over a different BN routing between Fargo and Minneapolis, and over the Milwaukee Road east of Minneapolis. |
33, 34 | – | Great Falls–Havre | Daily | Discontinued | |
35, 36 | – | North Kansas City–Omaha | Daily | Discontinued | |
40, 53 | Gopher and Badger | St. Paul–Superior | Daily | Discontinued | |
47, 48 | ex-Winnipeg Limited | Grand Forks–Winnipeg | Daily | Discontinued | |
102, 103, 105 | – | Wishram–Bend | Daily | Discontinued | Mixed trains |
193, 194 | International | Seattle–Vancouver | Daily | Discontinued | |
195, 196, 198, 199 | – | Seattle–Portland | 2x daily | Amtrak operated | Part of BN/UP pool service. Eventually part of Cascades service |
Central of Georgia
[edit]The Central of Georgia Railway operated four trains (one pair of which operated every other day), none of which were continued by Amtrak. The railroad never hosted Amtrak service. Its parent company, the Southern Railway, did not join Amtrak until 1979.
Number | Name | Routing | Frequency | Status on May 1, 1971 | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
7, 8 | Nancy Hanks II | Atlanta–Savannah | Daily | Discontinued | |
13, 14 | City of Miami | Birmingham–Albany | Every other day | Discontinued | Chicago–Florida train jointly operated with the IC and SAL |
Chesapeake and Ohio
[edit]The Chesapeake and Ohio Railway operated 16 daily trains, of which four were continued by Amtrak.
Number | Name | Routing | Frequency | Status on May 1, 1971 | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1, 2 | George Washington | Cincinnati–Washington, D.C. | Daily | Amtrak operated | Washington, D.C.–St. Louis train jointly operated with the B&O. |
8, 9, 13 | Pere Marquette | Chicago–Grand Rapids | Daily | Discontinued | |
11, 12, 14, 15 | Pere Marquette | Grand Rapids–Detroit | 2x daily | Discontinued | |
21, 22 | George Washington (Louisville section) | Louisville–Ashland | Daily | Discontinued | |
41, 42 | George Washington (Newport News section) | Charlottesville–Newport News | Daily | Amtrak operated | |
46, 47 | George Washington (Detroit section) | Ashland–Detroit | Daily | Discontinued | Weekends only |
206, 208 | Pere Marquette (Muskegon section) | Muskegon–Holland | Daily | Discontinued |
Chicago and North Western
[edit]The Chicago and North Western Railway operated 12 trains (some of which did not operate every day, for a total of 10 daily trains), none of which were continued by Amtrak. The company never hosted Amtrak service.
https://wx4.org/to/foam/maps/2-Perry/012/a/1970-06-22C%26NW_systemPTT-Perry.pdf
Number | Name | Routing | Frequency | Status on May 1, 1971 | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1, 2, 11, 12 | ex-Kate Shelley 400 | Chicago–Clinton | Daily | Discontinued | |
121, 160, 164X | ex-Streamliner 400 | Chicago–Milwaukee | Daily | Discontinued | |
149, 152 | ex-Commuter 400 | Chicago–Milwaukee | 6x weekly | Discontinued | Did not operate on Sundays |
153, 216 | ex-Flambeau 400 | Chicago–Green Bay via Appleton | Daily | Discontinued | Operated through to Ashland summers and around winter holidays; last service to Ashland was in early January 1971 |
206, 209 | ex-Peninsula 400 | Chicago–Green Bay via Appleton | Daily | Discontinued | |
168, 239 | ex-Shoreland 400 | Chicago–Green Bay via Sheboygan | Weekly | Discontinued | Operated Sundays only |
Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad
[edit]The Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad (Milwaukee Road) operated 15 trains, of which eight were continued by Amtrak.
https://streamlinermemories.info/Milw/Milw70TT.pdf
Number | Name | Routing | Frequency | Status on May 1, 1971 | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
5, 6 | Morning Hiawatha | Chicago–Minneapolis | Daily | Amtrak operated | Became part of the Empire Builder |
11, 22 | Sioux | Chicago–Madison | Daily | Discontinued | |
9, 12 | – | Chicago–Milwaukee | Daily | Amtrak operated | Eventually part of Hiawatha Service |
23, 24 | – | Chicago–Milwaukee | Daily | Amtrak operated | Eventually part of Hiawatha Service |
27, 46 | – | Chicago–Milwaukee | Daily | Amtrak operated | Eventually part of Hiawatha Service |
56 | Fast Mail | Minneapolis to Chicago | Daily | Discontinued | Southbound only |
103, 104 | City of Los Angeles/City of San Francisco/City of Portland/City of Denver/Challenger | Chicago–Omaha | Daily | Discontinued | Jointly operated with the Union Pacific and the Southern Pacific |
117, 118 | Varsity | Chicago–Madison | 3x weekly | Operated Fridays through Sundays |
Delaware and Hudson
[edit]The Delaware and Hudson Railway operated four daily trains, none of which were continued by Amtrak. Amtrak service over the Delaware and Hudson began with the Adirondack in 1974.
https://wx4.org/to/foam/maps/2-Perry/016/d-c/1970-06-14D%26H_systemPTT-Perry.pdf
Number | Name | Routing | Frequency | Status on May 1, 1971 | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
9, 10 | Montreal Limited | Rensselaer–Montreal | Daily | Discontinued | New York City–Montreal train jointly operated with Penn Central |
34, 35 | Laurentian | Rensselaer–Montreal | Daily | Discontinued | New York City–Montreal train jointly operated with Penn Central |
Denver and Rio Grande Western
[edit]The Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad (D&RGW) operated a thrice-weekly round trip (the remains of the California Zephyr. The D&RGW opted to continued running its own service, fearing that Amtrak might increase frequency and cause congestion on its single-track mainline. Not until 1983 did the D&RGW discontinue its own service and allow Amtrak's California Zephyr to use its line.
Number | Name | Routing | Frequency | Status on May 1, 1971 | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
17, 18 | Rio Grande Zephyr | Denver–Ogden | 3x weekly | Privately operated |
Union Pacific
[edit]The Union Pacific Railroad ran 18 daily trains and eight tri-weekly trains. Only one pair of trains was directly continued by Amtrak, albeit at a reduced frequency. The Amtrak iteration of the City of San Francisco also operated over the UP tri-weekly between Denver and Ogden, combining portions of the former City of San Francisco and City of Kansas City routings.
https://streamlinermemories.info/UP/UP69-9TT.pdf
Number | Name | Routing | Frequency | Status on May 1, 1971 | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
9, 10 | City of Kansas City | Kansas City–Cheyenne | Daily | Discontinued | Through cars were run between Kansas City and Los Angeles via the City of Los Angeles, Oakland via the City of San Francisco, and Portland via the City of Portland |
17, 18 | Portland Rose | Denver–Portland | Daily | Discontinued | |
19, 20 | ex-Spokane | Hinkle–Spokane | Daily | Discontinued | |
35, 36 | Butte Special | Salt Lake City–Butte | 3x weekly | Discontinued | |
79,80 | – | Columbus–Spalding | 3x weekly | Discontinued | Mixed train |
81, 82 | – | Columbus–Albion | 3x weekly | Discontinued | Mixed train |
93, 94 | ex-Platte Valley Express | North Platte–South Torrington | Daily | Discontinued | |
95, 96 | – | Kearney–Stapleton | 3x weekly | Discontinued | Mixed train |
103, 104 | City of Los Angeles/Challenger | Omaha–Los Angeles | Daily | Discontinued | Combined with the City of San Francisco between Omaha and Ogden, the City of Portland between Omaha and Green River, and the City of Denver between Omaha and North Platte. Jointly operated with the Milwaukee Road as a Chicago–Los Angeles train. |
105, 106 | City of Portland | Omaha–Portland | Daily | Discontinued | Combined with the City of Los Angeles between Omaha and Green River. Jointly operated with the Milwaukee Road as a Chicago–Portland train. |
111, 112 | City of Denver | Omaha-Denver | Daily | Discontinued | Combined with the City of Los Angeles between Omaha and North Platte. Jointly operated with the Milwaukee Road as a Chicago–Denver train. |
117, 118 | ex-Portland Rose | Kansas City–Denver | Daily | Discontinued | Mixed train |
457, 458 | – | Portland–Seattle | Daily | Amtrak operated | Part of BN/UP pool service. Amtrak operated the train only tri-weekly as part of the Coast Starlight/Daylight. |
Other railroads
[edit]Several services were outside the scope of Amtrak:
- The Alaska Railroad operated a twice-weekly mixed train (daily during the summer months) between Anchorage and Fairbanks.[1][2] Although the Rail Passenger Service Act explicitly included Alaska as a possible service area, the railroad was geographically separated from the national network and already owned by the federal government, and it has continued to operate separately from Amtrak.[3]: 1329
- A Canadian National Railway Winnipeg–Thunder Bay local service, which crossed part of northern Minnesota, was considered a Canada-centric service not relevant to Amtrak. It ran until 1977.[4]
- The Canadian Pacific Railway (CP) Atlantic Limited, which crossed northern Maine, was also not relevant to Amtrak. It was taken over by Via Rail in 1978 and ran until 1994. CP, Toronto, Hamilton and Buffalo Railway, and Penn Central also jointly operated a Buffalo–Toronto service that connected with the Empire Service at Buffalo. This service ran until 1981, when it was replaced by the Maple Leaf.
- The Chicago South Shore and South Bend Railroad, though allowed to join Amtrak, determined that its South Shore Line was an ineligible commuter service.[5]: 9 Local public funding for its trains began in 1977, with the Northern Indiana Commuter Transportation District fully taking over the service in 1989.[6]
References
[edit]- ^ "The Alaska Railroad Announce Winter Schedule for Passenger Trains". Tundra Times. September 2, 1970. p. 8 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "The Alaska Railroad Announce Summer Schedule for Passenger Trains". Tundra Times. May 27, 1970. p. 5 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "An Act to provide financial assistance for and establishment of a national rail passenger system, to provide for the modernization of railroad passenger equipment, to authorize the prescribing of minimum standards for railroad passenger service, to amend section 13a of the Interstate Commerce Act, and for other purposes. [Rail Passenger Service Act of 1970]" (PDF). United States Statutes at Large, Volume 84, 91st Congress, 2nd Session. U.S. Government Publishing Office. 1970. pp. 1327–1342.
- ^ Thoms, William E. (1979). "VIA Rail: A Canadian Amtrak". North Dakota Law Review. 55 (1): 61–76.
- ^ Sanders, Craig (2006). Amtrak in the Heartland. Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0-253-34705-3.
- ^ "Annual Report" (PDF). Northern Indiana Commuter Transportation District. December 31, 2010. p. 15. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 3, 2017. Retrieved January 31, 2017.