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A lot of us have Santa Fe equipment on our layouts but maybe have not spent much time reading about some of the HISTORY of it's passenger service. I found this a very intresting summary of some of the HISTORU  of THE CHIEF. ENJOY!!

 

Here is a nice Video about the Super Chief http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uXfKeJdBVkQ

 

Here is another Video called the "PASSENGER TRAIN" You might want to click on the S K I P the ad and go to the Passenger Train http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Eh_vhIdYJtQ

 

Another Video Santa Fe Railroad 1954 the challange for tomorrow http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v5vEiqLwmq8

 

Another Video "Santa Fe Railroad-Pay Day: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nlzTqPfHrAI

 

Another Video " Santa Fe Odyssey" http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g6Cn7CY78O8

 

 


 

 

Super Chief

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A view of the Super Chief being serviced at the Albuquerque, New Mexico depot in March 1943. A headlight "blackout shield" was a wartime Civil Defense requirement as the train operated to the Pacific Coast.

The Super Chief was one of the named passenger trains and the flagship of the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway. It claimed to be "The Train of the Stars" because of the many celebrities it carried between Chicago, Illinois, and Los Angeles, California.

The Super Chief (Nos. 17 & 18) was the first Diesel-powered, all-Pullman sleeping car train in America, and it eclipsed the Chief as Santa Fe's standard bearer. The extra-fare ($10) Super Chief left Dearborn Station in Chicago for its first trip on May 12, 1936. Before starting scheduled service in May 1937, the lightweight version of the Super Chief ran 2,227 miles (3,584 km) from Los Angeles over recently upgraded tracks in 36 hours and 49 minutes, averaging 60 mph (97 km/h) overall, and often reaching 100 mph (160 km/h).

The Super Chief set a new standard for rail travel in America. With one set of equipment, the train initially operated once a week from both Chicago and Los Angeles. After more cars had been delivered the Super Chief ran twice weekly, and daily after 1948. Adding to the train's mystique were its gourmet meals and Hollywood clientele.

Competitors to the Super Chief were the City of Los Angeles, a streamlined passenger train on the Chicago and North Western Railway and the Union Pacific Railroad, and (to a lesser extent) the Golden State, a streamlined passenger train on the Rock Island and Southern Pacific railroads. The Santa Fe Super Chief was one of the last passenger trains in the United States to carry an all-Pullman consist; only the Pennsylvania Railroad's Broadway Limited and the Illinois Central's Panama Limited survived longer. The train maintained its legendary high level of service until the end of Santa Fe passenger operations on May 1, 1971.

When Amtrak took over operation of the nation's passenger service on May 1, 1971, the 35-year run of the Super Chief on the Santa Fe ended, though Amtrak would continue to use the name on the same route for three years. In 1974 the Santa Fe withdrew permission to use the name due to a perceived decline in service, so Amtrak renamed it Southwest Limited. Following the delivery of new Superliner equipment, the Santa Fe allowed Amtrak to call it the Southwest Chief in 1984.

Contents

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Route[edit]

Santa Fe's marketing advantage for the Super Chief lay in the geography of the route as well as its ownership. The Santa Fe began as a rail line along the old Santa Fe and Spanish Trails, from the confluence of the Missouri and Kansas rivers (at Atchison and Topeka, Kansas) to the Pecos River and Rio Grande in New Mexico. This initial route was eventually extended to Los Angeles.

The convenience of traveling "Santa Fe All The Way" was superior to anything that the competing jointly operated railroads could provide on their routes to the west coast. A single traffic and operating department ruled all the divisions and districts of the Santa Fe route from Chicago to Los Angeles. Dining cars, the commissary supply chains, the on-board service crews and their management; all worked together (as they were working for a single company) from Chicago to Los Angeles.

The Super Chief ran through Kansas City, Missouri; Newton, Kansas; Dodge City, Kansas; La Junta, Colorado; Raton, New Mexico; Las Vegas, New Mexico; Albuquerque, New Mexico; Gallup, New Mexico; Winslow, Arizona; Seligman, Arizona; Needles, California; Barstow, California; San Bernardino, California; and Pasadena, California.[1] During the pre-war years the Super Chief did not allow passengers to board or disembark at any point between Kansas City and Barstow; all intermediate stops were operating stops only, to change crews or to service the train.[2] During the war the rules were relaxed to carry passengers to and from Albuquerque and La Junta, but only when unsold space was available at train time.[3] It was not until the postwar era that passengers could travel to intermediate stations on the Super Chief.

History[edit]

  • August 1935: General Motors Electro-Motive Corporation (EMC) delivers two blunt-nosed diesel-electric units Nos. 1 and 1A, intended to pull the Super Chief.
  • September 9, 1935: Nos. 1 and 1A make their first test run with eight heavyweight passenger cars and a dynamometer car.
  • May 12, 1936: The Santa Fe inaugurates the diesel powered Super Chief-1. Eleanor Powell, Hollywood's legendary dancer, christens it "The Train of the Stars."
  • May 10, 1937: The last of four "preview" runs of the Super Chief-2, with an improved 3,600 hp (2.7 MW), two-unit, streamlined diesel locomotive set built by EMC, concludes as the train pulls into Los Angeles. All heavyweight cars used on the Super Chief are replaced with lightweight stainless steel cars. The public is invited to tour the new train at Santa Fe's La Grande Station on May 11 and 12.
  • May 15, 1937: The Super Chief departs Los Angeles at 7:30 p.m. PST. The train reaches Chicago in 36 hours and 49 minutes (2 hours and 56 minutes ahead of schedule), setting a record. Both of the new E1 units suffered mechanical damage during the trip east and were taken out of service for repairs.
  • May 18, 1937: The lightweight Super Chief starts its first regular run, led by Unit 1A and EMC demonstrator Unit 512 (a.k.a. AT&SF Unit 1C) from Chicago's Dearborn Station. The passenger list includes ventriloquist Edgar Bergen and his "sidekick" Charlie McCarthy. (The first pair of E1s were delivered in June.)
  • January 1938: E1 Units 3 and 3A are placed in service on the Super Chief.
  • February 26, 1938: Due to production delays, a "borrowed" six-car Chief consist begins running as the Super Chief to allow twice-weekly trips.
  • July 2, 1938: A lightweight trainset built by Pullman-Standard enters service replacing the Chief cars. Until 1946 each trainset makes a weekly round trip between Chicago and Los Angeles, averaging 636 miles per day.
  • 1941: The Santa Fe takes delivery of its only 2,000 hp (1.5 MW) ALCO DL-107/108 model locomotives, units 50 and 50A.
  • July 7, 1942: The Super Chief goes on a wartime schedule of 41 hours, 45 minutes. Consist expands to 12 cars.
  • June 2, 1946: The train reverts to its prewar schedule of 39 hours and 45 minutes.
  • September 29, 1946: The Super Chief begins running every other day, leaving each terminal on even days of the month.
Santa Fe #19L, leading the Super Chief, after smashing through a concrete barrier at Los Angeles Union Station in January 1948
  • January 25, 1948: Locomotive #19L, leading the Super Chief, loses brakes at Los Angeles' Union Passenger Terminal (LAUPT). The train crashes through a steel bumper post and a concrete wall and comes to rest with the front half of the locomotive 20 feet above Aliso Street. No injuries, but the engineer loses his job over the incident.
  • February 29, 1948: The AT&SF receives its first post-War order from Pullman-Standard and places these into service on the Super Chief. The railroad now has five Super Chief trainsets, enough to operate daily.
  • December 29, 1949: Train No. 17, led by locomotive set #37L/A/B/C, collides with a tanker truck in Azusa, California. All four locomotives, baggage car #3409, and railway post office #88 are damaged by fire.
  • 1950–1951: The Super Chief is reequipped with new streamlined sleeping cars built by the Budd Company and the American Car and Foundry Company (ACF), and dining cars from Pullman-Standard. Santa Fe also adds the Pullman-built "Pleasure Dome"-Lounge car (one of the most luxurious ever made for any train) to its Super Chief consists, billing it as the "...only dome car between Chicago and Los Angeles." A speedometer in the front of the car showed the train's velocity.
  • June 1952: The Super Chief is featured in the Warner Bros. film Three for Bedroom "C" starring Gloria Swanson.
  • 1954: The General Tire and Rubber Company uses the Super Chief as the centerpiece of a print advertisement for its new "Nygen Cord" tire, in which the train is towed by an AT&SF switcher using one of the tires as a connecting link.
  • January 10, 1954: The $15.00 extra-fare charge is reduced to $7.50; the barbershop and shower-bath are discontinued. The Super Chief started carrying the coast-to-coast Pullmans (which ran through to New York on the Broadway Limited or the 20th Century Limited); the transcon sleepers had formerly been carried by the Chief.
  • 1956: Round-end observation cars are removed from the Super Chief, converted to blunt-ended cars at Pullman's Calumet, Illinois shops, and returned to train Nos. 17 and 18. In early 1958 they are permanently removed.
  • January 12, 1958: The Super Chief and El Capitan are combined during the off-peak season on a 39½-hour schedule.
  • 1958: All five Super Chief trainsets are refurbished and redecorated.
  • August 21, 1964: A rail from a passing train "spears" coach #2804 in Kingman, Arizona.
  • January 6, 1969: Locomotives #46L, #39C, #310B, #45B, and #44A derail due to unknown causes in Holcomb, Kansas. Cars #2924, #2866, #1563, #539, #713, #714, #650, #578, #712, #716, #707, and #526 leave the tracks as well.
  • May 1, 1971: Amtrak takes over operation of the nation's passenger service, thus ending 35 years of the Santa Fe Super Chief. Amtrak retains the use of the Super Chief / El Cap names, with the Santa Fe's concurrence.
  • 1973: Amtrak drops the El Capitan designation.
  • March 7, 1974: The Santa Fe directs Amtrak to discontinue use of the names Super Chief (which then becomes the Southwest Limited) and Texas Chief (which is renamed the Lone Star) due to a perceived reduction in the quality of service.
  • November 30, 1980: Amtrak's Superliners replace the "Pleasure Dome" and "Hi-Level" cars on the Southwest Limited.
  • October 28, 1984: Due to improvements in service, the Santa Fe allows Amtrak to change the name of the Southwest Limited to the Southwest Chief.
  • August 26, 1999: The United States Postal Service issues 33-cent All Aboard! 20th Century American Trains commemorative stamps featuring five American passenger trains from the 1930s and 1940s. One of the five stamps features an image of EMC E1 Unit No. 6 painted in the Super Chief's "warbonnet" livery.

Equipment used[edit]

The first motive power set on Super Chief-1 consisted of a pair of blunt-nosed, diesel-electric units (EMC 1800 hp B-B) designated as Nos. 1 and 1A. Santa Fe employees quickly hung the nicknames "One-Spot Twins" and "Amos & Andy" (from the popular radio show of the day) on the units, which were always paired and ran back-to-back. In a little over a year the EMC E1, a new and improved 3,600 hp (2.7 MW) streamlined diesel-electric locomotive set (one 1800 hp hood unit and the other a cabless booster unit also making 1800 hp) would be pulling Super Chief consists.

A variety of state-of-the-art locomotives (including ALCO PAs, EMD E6s, FTs, F3s, F7s, and FP45s, along with Santa Fe's only ALCO DL-107/108s and FM Erie-built units) would make their appearances on the line in the succeeding years. All wore the now-familiar Warbonnet paint scheme devised by Leland Knickerbocker of the GM "Art and Color Section" that debuted on the Super Chief-2.

The Super Chief-1's mostly-heavyweight original consist included:

  • EMC "Boxcab" Diesel Locomotive #1
  • EMC "Boxcab" Diesel Locomotive #1A
  • Baggage-Club-Lounge #1301 Chief Yellow Bear (also included a barber shop)
  • Sleeper (lightweight)Forward (8 sections, 2 compartments, 2 double bedrooms) (see NOTE immediately below)
  • Lounge General Hancock (10 sections)
  • Fred Harvey Company Diner #1468 (30 seats)
  • Sleeper Glen Frazer (6 compartments, 3 drawing rooms)
  • Sleeper Clover Knoll (8 sections, 5 double bedrooms)
  • Lounge-Observation Crystal View (3 compartments, 2 drawing rooms)

NOTE: Lightweight sleeper Forward was built in the summer of 1936 as the first Pullman sleeping car utilizing the "alloy-steel truss frame" method. This car was an addition to the first (heavyweight) Super Chief consist in November 1936 (after early diesel units 1-A, 1-B and leased 1-C [the "One Spot Twins"] had proved their ability to maintain the rigorous schedule). It was built unpainted with fluted sides but was painted dark grey with black and gold striping for use on the Santa Fe. Forward was built in the same period as the articulated set Advance and Progress (constructed in August 1936), which were later used on the early C&NW/UP/SP Chicago-San Francisco "Forty-Niner" which used semi-streamlined heavyweight dining, lounge and sleeping cars with the articulated set on the rear renamed Bear Flag and California Republic. See Joe Welsh, Travel by Pullman, MBI Publishing, 2004.

In May 1937, the heavyweight equipment used on the Super Chief was replaced with all lightweight stainless steel cars built by the Budd Company (the heavyweight cars were placed back in service with the Chief). For the new lightweight train (the Super Chief-2), the equipment used was as follows:

The sleeping cars in this consist were operated by Pullman but were owned by the Santa Fe. The car names were chosen to commemorate the Native American tribes, pueblos, and cities found along the railroad's route.

On February 26, 1938 the consist was modified somewhat:

  • EMC E1A Locomotive #2
  • EMC E1B Locomotive #2A
  • Baggage-Dormitory-Buffet Lounge #1386 San Clemente
  • Sleeper Tuba (17 roomettes)
  • Sleeper Isleta (8 sections, 2 compartments, 1 drawing room)
  • Sleeper Taos (2 compartments, 2 drawing rooms, 6 double bedrooms)
  • Dormitory-Lounge #1370 Acoma (also included a barber shop)
  • Fred Harvey Company Diner #1474 Cochiti (36 seats)
  • Sleeper Oraibi (2 compartments, 2 drawing rooms, 6 double bedrooms)
  • Sleeper Laguna (8 sections, 2 compartments, 1 drawing room)
  • Sleeper-Lounge-Observation Navajo (3 compartments, 2 drawing rooms, 1 double bedroom)

The railroad also added another trainset (the Super Chief-2½) utilizing sleeping cars borrowed from the Chief in order to handle the high demand for passage aboard the train. Its original consist was as follows:

  • EMC E1A Locomotive #3
  • EMC E1B Locomotive #3A
  • Baggage-Dormitory-Buffet Lounge car #1387 San Acacia
  • Sleeper Chinle (17 roomettes)
  • Sleeper Wupatki (8 sections, 2 compartments, 2 double bedrooms)
  • Sleeper Klethla (4 compartments, 2 drawing rooms, 4 double bedrooms)
  • Dormitory-Lounge #1377 Agathla (also included a barber shop)
  • Fred Harvey Company Diner #1485 Awatobi (36 seats)
  • Sleeper Polacca (4 compartments, 2 drawing rooms, 4 double bedrooms)
  • Sleeper Yampai (8 sections, 2 compartments, 2 double bedrooms)
  • Sleeper-Lounge-Observation Chaistla (4 drawing rooms, 1 double bedroom)

On July 2 of that year the permanent Super Chief-3 consist was established:

  • EMC E1A Locomotive #3
  • EMC E1B Locomotive #3A
  • Baggage-Dormitory-Buffet-Lounge #1387 San Acacia
  • Sleeper Chimayo (17 roomettes)
  • Sleeper Talwiwi (8 sections, 2 compartments, 2 double bedrooms)
  • Sleeper Tchirge (4 compartments, 2 drawing rooms, 4 double bedrooms)
  • Dormitory-Lounge #1377 Agathla (also included a barber shop)
  • Fred Harvey Company Diner #1485 Awatobi (36 seats)
  • Sleeper Tsankawi (4 compartments, 2 drawing rooms, 4 double bedrooms)
  • Sleeper Tyuonyi (8 sections, 2 compartments, 2 double bedrooms)
  • Sleeper-Lounge-Observation Puye (4 drawing rooms, 1 double bedroom)

Beginning in 1947, a typical Super Chief consist:

One of the dining cars in 1947
The observation car's lounge
  • EMD FTA Locomotive #163L
  • EMD FTB Locomotive #163A
  • EMD FTB Locomotive #163B
  • EMD FTA Locomotive #163C
  • Baggage-Buffet-Lounge #1384 San Ignacio (also included a barber shop)
  • Sleeper Toroweap (8 sections, 2 compartments, 2 double bedrooms)
  • Sleeper Tonto (17 roomettes)
  • Sleeper Moencopi (4 compartments, 2 drawing rooms, 4 double bedrooms)
  • Sleeper Jadito (4 compartments, 2 drawing rooms, 4 double bedrooms)
  • Dormitory-Club-Lounge #1375 Moencopi
  • Fred Harvey Company Diner (36 seats) #1484
  • Sleeper Kietsiel (4 compartments, 2 drawing rooms, 4 double bedrooms)
  • Sleeper Hualapai (4 compartments, 2 drawing rooms, 4 double bedrooms)
  • Sleeper Segatoa (8 sections, 2 compartments, 2 double bedrooms)
  • Sleeper-Lounge-Observation Coconino (4 drawing rooms, 1 double bedroom)

A typical Super Chief consist from 1948 to 1951:

  • EMD F3A Locomotive #17L
  • EMD F3B Locomotive #17A
  • EMD F3B Locomotive #17B
  • EMD F3A Locomotive #17C
  • Baggage #3446
  • Baggage-Buffet-Lounge #1383 San Simon (also included a barber shop)
  • Sleeper Blue Grove (10 roomettes, 2 compartments, 3 double bedrooms)*
  • Sleeper Blue Point (10 roomettes, 2 compartments, 3 double bedrooms)*
  • Sleeper Regal Town (4 compartments, 2 drawing rooms, 4 double bedrooms)
  • Dormitory-Club-Lounge #1392
  • Fred Harvey Company Diner (36 seats) #1493
  • Sleeper Regal Pass (4 compartments, 2 drawing rooms, 4 double bedrooms)
  • Sleeper Regal Center (4 compartments, 2 drawing rooms, 4 double bedrooms)
  • Sleeper Blue Springs (10 roomettes, 2 compartments, 3 double bedrooms)*
  • Lounge-Observation Vista Canyon (4 drawing rooms, 1 double bedroom)
<dl><dd>*NOTE: The nineteen "10-2-3" sleepers in the Blue series had a floorplan configuration unique to the Santa Fe.</dd></dl>

In the 1940s and into the 1950s, the Super Chief occasionally interchanged sleepers with other railroads in order to provide "coast-to-coast" sleeping car service. In those instances, sleepers from eastern connections would take the place of Regal– or Pine–series cars:

A typical Super Chief consist from 1951 to 1956:

The Pleasure Dome observation car in 1952
  • EMD F7A Locomotive #38L
  • EMD F7B Locomotive #38A
  • EMD F7B Locomotive #38B
  • EMD F7A Locomotive #38C
  • Baggage #3415
  • Railway Post Office #83
  • Baggage-Buffet-Lounge (also included a barber shop) #1385 San Pascal
  • Sleeper Palm Top (10 roomettes, 6 double bedrooms)
  • Sleeper Pine Arroyo (10 roomettes, 6 double bedrooms)
  • Sleeper Regal Corps (4 compartments, 2 drawing rooms, 4 double bedrooms)
  • "Turquoise Room"-"Pleasure Dome"-Lounge #502
  • Fred Harvey Company Diner (48 seats) #605
  • Dormitory-Club-Lounge Car #1343
  • Sleeper Regal Hunt (4 compartments, 2 drawing rooms, 4 double bedrooms)
  • Sleeper Regal Manor (4 compartments, 2 drawing rooms, 4 double bedrooms)
  • Sleeper Palm Lore (10 roomettes, 6 double bedrooms)
  • Sleeper-Lounge-Observation Vista Club (4 drawing rooms, 1 double bedroom)

A typical Super Chief consist from the early 1960s (all-Pullman section):

  • EMD F7A Locomotive #303L
  • EMD F7B Locomotive #303A
  • EMD F7B Locomotive #19A
  • EMD F7A Locomotive #44L
  • Baggage #3544
  • Sleeper Palm Summit (10 roomettes, 6 double bedrooms)
  • Sleeper Pine Lodge (10 Roomettes, 6 double bedrooms)
  • Sleeper Indian Drum (11 double bedrooms)
  • Sleeper Regal Isle (4 compartments, 2 drawing rooms, 4 double bedrooms)
  • "Turquoise Room"-"Pleasure Dome"-Lounge #501
  • Fred Harvey Company Diner (48 seats) #606
  • Sleeper Regal Crest (4 compartments, 2 drawing rooms, 4 double bedrooms)
  • Sleeper Indian Pony (11 double bedrooms)
  • Sleeper Palm Leaf (10 roomettes, 6 double bedrooms)
  • Sleeper Pine Range (10 roomettes, 6 double bedrooms)

A typical Super Chief consist from the late 1960s (combined with El Capitan):

  • EMD FP45 Locomotive #104
  • EMD FP45 Locomotive #101
The combined Super Chief / El Capitan, led by locomotive #44C (an EMD F7 sporting Santa Fe's classic Warbonnet paint scheme) pulls into Track 10 at Los Angeles' Union Passenger Terminal (LAUPT) on September 24, 1966.
  • Baggage #3671
  • Baggage #3553
  • Baggage-Dormitory "Transition Car" #3478
  • Hi-Level "Chair car" / Coach (68 Seats) #549
  • Hi-Level "Chair car" / Coach (72 Seats) #731
  • Hi-Level Diner (80 seats) #654
  • Hi-Level Lounge (88 seats) #575
  • Hi-Level "Chair car" / Coach (72 Seats) #725
  • Hi-Level "Chair car" / Coach (68 Seats) #542
  • Sleeper Pine Cove (10 roomettes, 6 double bedrooms)
  • Sleeper Indian Mesa (11 double bedrooms)
  • "Turquoise Room"-"Pleasure Dome"-Lounge #504
  • Fred Harvey Company Diner (48 seats) #600
  • Sleeper Indian Flute (11 double bedrooms)
  • Sleeper Palm Leaf (10 roomettes, 6 double bedrooms)

The "Hollywood mystique"[edit]

The world-famous Super Chief was an almost-instant success among travelers who appreciated its modern, air conditioned cars, private bedrooms, high amenity levels, and smooth ride, all of which lent the train a certain "snob appeal."[4] The train was staffed with top-of-the-line crews who were ingrained with the best traditions of the railroad, and not only drew passengers from competing railroads but from other Santa Fe trains such as the Chief as well. Patrons took pleasure in the ability to "...Travel Santa Fe — all the way" to their destinations without the need to change trains, or at least railroads, en route.

The Super Chief quickly became "the" train to ride between Chicago and Los Angeles, much as New York Central's 20th Century Limited was the favored travel option of the time for the East Coast-bound. To acquaint passengers with the various points-of-interest located along the route, Santa Fe constructed a series of seven signs marking such notable features as the Continental Divide and Raton Pass.

In the mid-1940s, company president Fred G. Gurley went to great lengths to solicit business from California's motion picture industry. To that end, a passenger agent was located in Hollywood specifically for the purpose of maintaining close contact with the movie studios. Furthermore, the train stopped at the Pasadena station solely for the purpose of allowing celebrities the opportunity to board or disembark away from the "hustle and bustle" of Los Angeles' Union Passenger Terminal (LAUPT). When the Santa Fe was notified that a particular celebrity was going to be traveling on board the Super Chief, a press release was issued to allow the media the opportunity to interview and photograph the star.

In time, the passenger list would resemble a veritable "who's who" of Hollywood stars: Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor, Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall, Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis, Desi Arnaz and Lucille Ball, James Cagney, Judy Garland, and Bing Crosby (to name but a few) all rode the Super Chief. The train's appeal was not limited to those in the entertainment industry, though, as it also played host to Ronald Reagan, former presidents Harry S. Truman and Dwight D. Eisenhower, and their wives.

Three for Bedroom "C"[edit]

In June 1952, Warner Bros. Pictures released Three for Bedroom "C", a romantic comedy starring Gloria Swanson, James Warren, Fred Clark, Hans Conried, and Steve Brodie. In the film, an aging movie star (Swanson) hides out in a compartment during a cross-country journey from New York to Los Angeles aboard the Super Chief.

Swanson's first color film also bears the distinction of being one of very few to be shot entirely aboard actual railroad equipment. Santa Fe transported actual passenger cars from the Super Chief to the production company's studio lot for filming. The film met with lukewarm reviews and was not, as had been hoped, a financial success. It did, however, nicely showcase the many features of the Super Chief, which many train buffs feel is the real star of the motion picture.

The Funny Company[edit]

The cartoon The Funny Company featured an Indian by the name of Super Chief who could only make the sound of a diesel train horn that would be translated.

Honeymoon and Murder on the Super Chief[edit]

Is a short story by Woodrow W. Walker, in which former movie stuntman turned private detective Buck Ames marries his stuntwoman girlfriend Helen Davis. They board the Super Chief for their honeymoon and find a murder.

Super[edit]

Jim Lehrer's novel Super (2010), a mystery deliberately reminiscent of Agatha Christie's Murder on the Orient Express, tells the story of a Santa Fe Railroad Police detective who must try to solve two unrelated murders on the Super Chief, one on the way from Chicago to Los Angeles, the second on the return trip, while simultaneously dealing with the foibles of a number of celebrities riding the train on those trips, including Former President Harry S Truman and movie star Clark Gable.

The Return Of The Santa Fe Super Chief[edit]

In Douglas Folsom's novel, "The Return Of The Santa Fe Super Chief" (2013), a mysterious stranger challenges successful ad executive Roger Storm to restore the original famous luxury train for one final run from Chicago to Los Angeles. Roger has to decide if he wants to risk everything to find a happiness that he never knew was lost. Containing elements of mystery and spirituality, the plot centers on the list of passengers the mysterious stranger directs Roger to invite for the trip with a few twists at the end. The novel also shows the forgotten romance of luxury train travel. With themes of forgiveness, love, and second chances, the story is reminiscent of "Field Of Dreams" and "An Affair to Remember".

Dining aboard the Super Chief[edit]

The pantry aboard former Santa Fe dining car #1474, the Cochiti. Over a million meals were served in the car, which remained in service through the late 1960s.

Most railroads began offering some form of meal service on their trains as an alternate to the poor fare typically found at trackside establishments even before the completion of the First Transcontinental Railroad. By the mid-1880s, dedicated dining cars were a normal part of all long-distance train consists departing from Chicago for points west, save for those of the Santa Fe, who relied on America's first interstate network of restaurants to feed its passengers en route. The legendary "Harvey Houses," located strategically along the line, served top-quality meals to railroad patrons during water stops and other planned layovers and were favored over in-transit facilities for all trains operating west of Kansas City.

The Super Chief included dining cars, staffed by Fred Harvey Company personnel, as part of its standard consist from the outset. In general, the Super Chief operated 36-seat dining cars, although most of them were convertible to 48-seat dining cars with a flip-top (or change of) table and addition of chairs. Dining cars almost always operated with a lounge car coupled to them for bar-lounge service and a waiting area when the dining car was full. Unlike the Union Pacific "City" trains, the Super Chief and other Santa Fe trains did not use the "twin-unit" dining cars. Santa Fe, in general, ran somewhat shorter trains that could be serviced with a single dining car (although the heavyweight trains frequently operated in several sections, the streamlined trains generally did not). The height of Super Chief lounge and dining facilities came in 1951 with the new 600-series Dining Cars bracketed by the 500 series Pleasure Domes in front and a bar-lounge-dormitory unit in back (moved from the front of the trains). The train still operated with the Vista-series 4 Drawing Room, 1 double bedroom observation cars on the rear, albeit without any bar or buffet service.

The Turquoise Room in 1955

The bar-lounge cars next to the diner always included dormitory space for the train crew (a staff of 3-4 cooks and 6-7 stewards) required for the two-night and one day trip. The eight Pullmans on the train had a capacity of between 150 and 200 passengers when full but often ran with single occupancy rooms, making the passenger load less.

When Santa Fe rolled out its new "Pleasure Dome"-Lounge cars in 1951, the railroad introduced the traveling public to the Turquoise Room, promoted as "The only private dining room in the world on rails." The room accommodated 12 guests, and could be reserved anytime for private dinner or cocktail parties, or other special functions.[5] The room was often used by celebrities and dignitaries traveling on the Super Chief. As was the case on other railroads, dining car service proved to be a losing proposition financially. Santa Fe, more than any of its competitors, took the concept of using onboard meal service as a "loss leader" to the highest level to attract and retain customers. Consequently, the name Super Chief became synonymous with the finest fare available on wheels.

Menu[edit]

A map depicting the "Grand Canyon Route" of the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway c. 1901

The Continental cuisine offered aboard the Super Chief went beyond the typical American fare found on other trains, and often rivaled that served in many five-star restaurants, befitting the train's upscale clientele. A "Wake-Up Cup" of coffee was brought to one's private bedroom each morning, on request, a service exclusive to the Super Chief. Breakfast and lunch were served À la carte, while dinner could be ordered either À la carte or table d'hÔte.

The elaborate dinner offerings generally included caviar and other delicacies, cold salads, grilled and sauteéd fish, sirloin steaks and filet mignon, lamb chops, and the like. For discerning palates, elegant champagne dinners were an option. One of the Super Chief's most popular signature dishes was the AT&SF version of pain perdu, simply and appropriately named "Santa Fe French Toast".[6]

MimbreÑo china[edit]

The decor, linens, and other dining car accoutrements reflected the same Southwestern flair that was prevalent throughout the rest of the train. Mary Colter (architect, Indian art expert, and 35-year veteran of the Fred Harvey Company) designed the china and silverware used on the Super Chief. Colter, who also designed the interiors of Fred Harvey’s opulent La Fonda, La Posada, and El Tovar hotels, based her dinnerware motif on the Native American pictographs of animals and geometric patterns left behind on clay pots by the ancient inhabitants of the Rio Mimbres Valley in southwestern New Mexico, around 1100 AD.

The "MimbreÑo" pattern was produced between 1936 and 1970 by the Onondaga Pottery Co. of Syracuse, New York under its better-known trade name, Syracuse China. The bottoms carried the inscription "Made expressly for Santa Fe Dining Car Service." These distinctive pieces made their debut on the dining car Cochiti in 1937. Used on the Super Chief and other named trains until the end of Santa Fe passenger service in 1971, original MimbreÑo dinnerware can still be found today in service on BNSF Railway business cars.[7]

MimbreÑo has been dubbed "the oldest of all railroad china" as its design concept dates back nearly ten centuries. Demand for surviving original pieces has created a substantial collector's market, and led to the issuance of authorized reproductions in recent years.[7]

See also[edit]

Footnotes[edit]

  1. ^ http://www.streamlinerschedule...uperchief193809.html
  2. ^ "Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Ry. Timetables". The Official Guide of the Railways (New York: National Railway Publication Co.) 74 (7): 918–955. December 1941. 
  3. ^ "Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Ry. Timetables". The Official Guide of the Railways (New York: National Railway Publication Co.) 78 (3): 868–901. August 1945. 
  4. ^ Carlos Arnaldo Schwantes, Going Places: Transportation Redefines the American West. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, 2003; pg. 41.
  5. ^ Turquoise Room Invitation ad. Life Magazine. 19 March 1951. p. 79. Retrieved 3 March 2012. 
  6. ^ http://www.qstation.org/info/atsftoast.html
  7. ^ a b "MimbreÑo China". Pipestone China Company. Retrieved 4 March 2012. 

References[edit]

  • Brasher, Larry E. (2005). "Crafting the Lightweight Super Chief." Streamliner Pioneers 20-28.
  • Brown, James A. et al. (2004). "The Santa Fe at War." The Warbonnet 10 (4) 5-23.
  • Duke, Donald (1997). Santa Fe...The Railroad Gateway to the American West, Volume 2. Golden West Books, San Marino, CA. ISBN 0-87095-110-6. 
  • Foster, George H. and Peter C. Weiglin (1992). The Harvey House Cookbook: Memories of Dining along the Santa Fe Railroad. Longstreet Press, Atlanta, GA. ISBN 1-56352-357-4. 
  • Frailey, Fred W. (1974). A Quarter Century of Santa Fe Consists. RPC Publications, Godfrey, IL. 
  • Luckin, Richard W. (1994). Mimbres to MimbreÑo: A Study of Santa Fe's Famous China Pattern. RK Publishing, Golden, CO. ISBN 0-9626362-1-5. 
  • Luckin, Richard W., dir. (DVD) (2003). Super Chief: Speed-Style-Service. RK Publishing, Golden, CO. 
  • Porterfield, James D. (1993). Dining by Rail: The History and Recipes of America's Golden Age of Railroad Cuisine. St. Martin's Press, New York, NY. ISBN 0-312-18711-4. 
  • Repp, Stan (1980). Super Chief: Train of the Stars. Golden West Books, San Marino, CA. ISBN 0-87095-081-9. 
  • Strein, Robert, et al. (2001). Santa Fe: The Chief Way. New Mexico Magazine. ISBN 0-937206-71-7. 
  • Wayner, Robert J., ed. (1972). Car Names, Numbers and Consists. Wayner Publications, New York, NY. 
  • Zimmerman, Karl (1987). Santa Fe Streamliners: The Chiefs and Their Tribesman. Quadrant Press, Inc., New York, NY. ISBN 0-915276-41-0. 

External links[edit]

Original Post

Replies sorted oldest to newest

Good morning Bill:

 

I sure found this to be interesting. I will have to dig it out, but I found a book at a train show a long time ago that was authored by a reporter who rode the maiden trip from LA to Chicago. It details the crew setting a speed record to Chicago and all of the notables aboard and what a great trip it was.

 

To me, the Super Chief is the iconic passenger train.

I learned something!!!!! I have ridden the Southwest Chief in the recent past and will do so again later in the year. I learned that everyone smoked on the Super Chief in the 50's and I am so happy Amtrak has banned smoking on trains today!!!  Amtrak's 'fresh air stops', smoke breaks, are fun to watch as the smokers stampede to get off and smoke almost until the train starts rolling again! Fun to watch!

Thank you, Popsrr.  You must have put a tremendous amount of work into that collection.

 

I rode AMTRAK's Southwest Chief for the first time three years ago.  I loved the trip overall, of course, but was a little let down by the scenery as it unfolded.  Guess I was sucked in by all the Santa Fe ads back in the fifties!

Tiffany this is what I found about the California Limited.

  • October 1892: The Pullman Company delivers five six-car trainsets for California Limited service.
  • November 27, 1892: The Santa Fe inaugurates the California Limited on an 83 hour 50 minute schedule from Chicago to Los Angeles. Locomotives and crews were changed fifteen times en route.
  • December 1, 1892: The first eastbound California Limited arrives in Chicago.
  • 1893: The train receives four new dining cars designed by Barney & Smith.
  • May 4, 1896: service suspended.
  • November 1896: Regular service resumes.
  • November 1898: westward schedule drops to 67 hr 50 min, about as good as it ever did until it dropped to 63 hours in June 1929.
  • 1899: The Limited is reduced to four trains per week.
  • 1902: The train resumes daily service on a 68-hour schedule.
  • 1910: The train is re-equipped with new locomotives and cars.
  • December 12, 1911: The Limited is overshadowed by the Santa Fe's weekly de Luxe.
  • November 14, 1926: The Limited is overshadowed by Santa Fe's daily all-Pullman, extra-fare Chief.
  • April 1, 1938: The Limited is suspended.
  • May 22, 1938: Regular service resumes.
  • September 4, 1945: The second section of Train No. 4 enters a siding near milepost 126 in the City of Santa Anita[isambiguation_needed/editintro&client=Templaten" rel="nofollow">disambiguation needed] at excessive speed and derails. Some 200 people are injured, five fatally. One cleanup worker dies the following day in a freak accident.
  • June 15, 1954: The California Limited is withdrawn.

Hello Popsrr....

 

Thank you for the very interesting information about the California Limited as I didn't know it does far back as Oct 1892 .  I saw a black and white photo of the engine #5021 Texan pulling the 8 car Pullman of the California Limited out of Colorado in 1947.

 

the woman who loves the S.F.5011,623

Tiffany 

I rode on the Super Chief twice in the '50s. I recall being very concerned because the four loco units were different colors - all warbonnet red, but different amounts of fading and dirt.  I was only about 7 or 8 but it really bothered me at the time. It was a big adventure to travel in a sleeper, etc.

 

I have three Super Chief trains now, two Lionel and one MTH.  Love them - they bring back memories

Alex thank you for your comments.

 

Brian

That would be quite a read to het the reportes feelings about that first ride. It looks like the progress of the ATSF over time by changing engines and lighter cars basically cut the transit time in half for the Chicago to LA run. I do like the Super Chief and the EL CAPITAN with those Hi Level cars. I never got to ride either of them. I did ride the Tennesseen between Memphis and Knoxville several times. Thanks Brian for sharing your thoughts with us.

 

Matt maybe Scott Mann will building them before Mth or Liobel.Matt have you started looking for work in the Lone Star yet? Good Luck with your search. Please keep us posted.

Originally Posted by Popsrr:

 

Santa Fe #19L, leading the Super Chief, after smashing through a concrete barrier at Los Angeles Union Station in January 1948
  • January 25, 1948: Locomotive #19L, leading the Super Chief, loses brakes at Los Angeles' Union Passenger Terminal (LAUPT). The train crashes through a steel bumper post and a concrete wall and comes to rest with the front half of the locomotive 20 feet above Aliso Street. No injuries, but the engineer loses his job over the incident.

This is one of those stories that have come from the railfan press and have been perpetuated by repeating them.  

 

Just for the record, however, there was nothing wrong with the brakes on rednose diesel number 19.  The accident happened because the Engineer and Fireman were trying to save time getting out of the Union Station escape track and get the engine to the roundhouse at Redondo Jct.  The Fireman went to the rear cab unit, while the Engineer remained on the front one.  When the Carman separated the steam line and uncoupled the engine from the train, the engine started forward toward the end of the track. They were intending to change ends by cutting out the air brakes on the front engine and cutting them in on the rear unit while the engine was rolling away from the train.  They failed to accomplish this and thus had all brake valves cut out (thus preventing them from applying the brakes by use of the independent brake valve. Neither of them thought to put the automatic brake valve in Emergency, which still would have worked even with the brake valve cut out, or to use the Fireman's side emergency brake valve.) and ran over the bumping post, across the sidewalk, through the railing, and stopped with the number 1 truck in mid-air as pictured.

 

Both the Engineer and the Fireman were dismissed, but later rehired on a leniency basis.

 

Just to keep things accurate, it was improper use of the air brakes -- not loss of brakes -- that caused this incident.

 

This was not the first time the 19 had its photo in the news.  Early in 1947, when the engine was only a couple of months old and still had the three-porthole and no Mars light configuration (as delivered), it turned onto its right side after hitting a broken frog on a switch at Kincaid while pulling No. 20, the Chief.

Last edited by Number 90

Tom

Thanks for helping us to know the REAL STORY behind the picture. I had severa; pictures of boxcars sticking through a brick wall at one of our plants where there would be a slight screw up that would make the papers in a certain "UP CITY" that had a LOT os STOCK YARDS IN THE DOWNTOWN AREA.  Today I call it "BUFFET" LAND

 

David1

I like the Super Chief as well! I also like the El Capitan with all the Hi Level Cars. One of these days I will have to run a combined Super Chief and El Capitan. I have been looking at the car como's that people have used on the combo and I think I want to run it with a double set of Transiotion cars. Maybe a couple of bagage cars and the the Transition and step down Hi Level and a few more Hi Level cars and then the 2nd Transition car and then the Gome Vista cars.Bill

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OGR Publishing, Inc., 1310 Eastside Centre Ct, Suite 6, Mountain Home, AR 72653
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