Track
8 - The West and Southwest
This page takes in one of the broadest
swaths of the
United States, including most of the territory west of the
Kansas-Colorado state line. (There are exceptions; through trains to
and from the Pacific Northwest are included in Track 7 and anything
south of the Santa Fe's "Transcon" line through Amarillo and Belen will
be found on Track 9.)
The Trains:
The California Limited
Santa Fe's first
true luxury train was launched on November 27, 1892, and would continue
in operation for the next sixty years (with a brief hiatus in
1896-1897) connecting Chicago, Kansas City and Los Angeles via
Albuquerque.
California Express -
January, 1889
California
Limited - December, 1952
The
Chief
This train was the progenitor of one of if not the
most successful luxury name train franchises in history. "Extra fast,
extra fine, extra fare," it served Chicago, Kansas City and Los Angeles
via Albuquerque and the Raton Pass route.
The Chief
- January, 1927
The City of
Denver
Operated by Union Pacific and its
partner railroads (C. & N. W./Milwaukee) between Chicago and
Denver, this train was a direct competitor to the Denver Zephyr.
City of
Denver - December, 1940
The City of San
Francisco
Throughout the streamliner
era, this was the premier train on the Overland Route between Chicago
and San Francisco via Omaha and Ogden. Operated jointly by Chicago
& North Western/The Milwaukee Road, Union Pacific, and Southern
Pacific.
City of
San
Francisco - June, 1969
The Colorado
Eagle
Missouri Pacific's entry into the
streamliner market between St. Louis, Kansas City, and Denver, with a
little help from partner Denver & Rio Grande Western west of Pueblo.
Colorado
Eagle - August, 1944
The
Denver Zephyr
The original streamliner service on the Chicago-Omaha-Denver run, operated all the way by the Burlington.
Denver
Zephyr - September, 1938
El Capitan
Santa Fe's all-coach speedster matched the Super Chief's schedule minute-for-minute between Chicago, Kansas City and Los Angeles via Raton Pass and Albuquerque.
El Capitan
- September, 1938
El Capitan
- July, 1956
The Overland
Limited
The original name train on the Overland Route was eclipsed by the City of San Francisco
during the streamliner era, but still provided fine service in its
secondary role. Operated by Chicago & North Western, Union Pacific,
and Southern Pacific between Chicago and San Francisco via Omaha and
Ogden.
Overland
Limited - July, 1954
The Rocky
Mountain
Rocket
Rock Island's westernmost
Rocket provided the only direct through service between Chicago and
Colorado Springs, with sections to Denver and from Kansas City.
Rocky
Mountain Rocket - June, 1941
The San
Francisco Chief
Santa Fe's final member of
the Chief franchise connected Chicago and San Francisco via a
roundabout routing through Wichita, Amarillo, Belen and Tehachapi.
San
Francisco Chief - July, 1954
San
Francisco Chief - June, 1965
The
San Juan Express
Passenger service over Denver & Rio
Grande's narrow-gauge empire between Denver, Alamosa, and Durango, with
connections for Santa Fe and Silverton.
San
Juan Express
- June, 1941
See
Also:
Track 5: The California
Zephyr, City of Los Angeles and the Super Chief
Track 12: The Chili
Line, the Silverton
and the Steptoe Valley Flyer
All
comments, original material and page design copyright ©2006-2008 by
Eric H.
Bowen. Page created 10/25/07. Modified 2/6/08.