Lone Star (Amtrak train)

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Texas Chief
Overview
Type Inter-city rail
System Amtrak
Termini Chicago, Illinois
Houston, Texas
Operation
Opened May 1, 1971
Closed March 15, 1974
Owner AT&SF (track)
Operator(s) Amtrak
Technical
Line length 1,368 mi (2,201.58 km)
Track gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in)
Lone Star

A southbound Lone Star between Guthrie and Norman, Oklahoma, in 1974.
Overview
Type Inter-city rail
System Amtrak
Termini Chicago, Illinois
Houston, Texas
Dallas, Texas
Operation
Opened June 1, 1974
Closed October 29, 1979
Owner AT&SF (track)
Operator(s) Amtrak
Technical
Line length 1,368 mi (2,201.58 km)
Track gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in)
Route map
Head station
0 mi (0 km) Chicago
Stop on track
37 mi (60 km) Joliet
Stop on track
89 mi (140 km) Streator
Stop on track
130 mi (210 km) Chillicothe
Stop on track
177 mi (280 km) Galesburg
Unrestricted border on track
Illinois/Iowa border
Stop on track
234 mi (380 km) Fort Madison
Unrestricted border on track
Iowa/Missouri border
Stop on track
312 mi (500 km) La Plata
Stop on track
347 mi (560 km) Marceline
Stop on track
386 mi (620 km) Carrollton
Station on track
451 mi (730 km) Kansas City
Unrestricted border on track
Missouri/Kansas border
Stop on track
490 mi (790 km) Lawrence
Station on track
516 mi (830 km) Topeka
Stop on track
578 mi (930 km) Emporia
Stop on track
651 mi (1,000 km) Newton
Stop on track
677 mi (1,100 km) Wichita
Stop on track
728 mi (1,200 km) Arkansas City
Unrestricted border on track
Kansas/Oklahoma border
Stop on track
753 mi (1,200 km) Ponca City
Stop on track
786 mi (1,300 km) Perry
Stop on track
818 mi (1,300 km) Guthrie
Station on track
848 mi (1,400 km) Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
Stop on track
866 mi (1,400 km) Norman
Stop on track
881 mi (1,400 km) Purcell
Stop on track
903 mi (1,500 km) Pauls Valley(F)
Stop on track
948 mi (1,500 km) Ardmore
Unrestricted border on track
Oklahoma/Texas border
Stop on track
988 mi (1,600 km) Gainesville
Right side of cross-platform interchange Left side head station of cross-platform interchange
1,053 mi (1,700 km) Fort Worth
Straight track End station
1,084 mi (1,700 km) Dallas
Stop on track
1,081 mi (1,700 km) Cleburne
Stop on track
1,155 mi (1,900 km) McGregor
Station on track
1,181 mi (1,900 km) Temple
Stop on track
1,273 mi (2,000 km) Brenham
Stop on track
1,333 mi (2,100 km) Rosenberg(F)
End station
1,368 mi (2,200 km) Houston

The Lone Star was an Amtrak passenger train serving Chicago, Kansas City, Oklahoma City, Fort Worth, Houston and intermediate points. From Amtrak's inception in 1971 until March 1974,[1] the train was known as the Texas Chief, as it had been under the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway. The name change was prompted by the AT&SF's determination that Amtrak's trains no longer met its service standards and so required Amtrak to stop using the Chief name. The Lone Star name was first used by the St. Louis Southwestern Railway for a passenger train operating between St. Louis, Memphis and Dallas. The original Lone Star was discontinued in 1952.

Contents

[edit] Route

The original Texas Chief's route ran from Chicago, Illinois, to Galveston, Texas via Kansas City, Wichita, Oklahoma City, Fort Worth, and Houston until early 1967, when the train's run was truncated in Houston. From 1955 until 1968 a section would cut off at Gainesville, Texas to serve Denton, Texas and Dallas. Initially Amtrak ran the Texas Chief as a Chicago-Kansas City-Fort Worth-Houston service; Amtrak considered a Dallas routing but rejected it because of concerns over the Dallas station. While a Dallas routing remained a priority, Amtrak was unable to add that service until July 1, 1975, after the train had become the Lone Star. Between October 1976 and February 15, 1977, the Lone Star was combined with the Southwest Limited (Chicago-Los Angeles) between Chicago and Kansas City, temporarily eliminating the Dallas through cars.[2]

[edit] History

The original Texas Chief was inaugurated as a coach and Pullman train on April 3, 1948.[3]

At Amtrak's inception, the Texas Chief operated Chicago-Houston. It inherited the Hi-level (bilevel) chair cars from the former San Francisco Chief, which had been discontinued at that same time.[4] The train operated separately from the Super Chief (renamed the Southwest Limited in 1974 and now known as the Southwest Chief) along their shared route from Chicago to Newton, Kansas.

A number of colleges and universities along the route—including the University of Kansas, University of Missouri-Kansas City, Wichita State University, University of Oklahoma -- provided students looking for economical transportation.

[edit] Amtrak cutbacks of 1979

Due to cuts ordered by the US Department of Transportation, Amtrak's Lone Star was discontinued on October 9, 1979. At the time of its discontinuance, the train was ranked as Amtrak's 7th most popular long-distance train.[5]

Chicago-Houston service continued in the form of a section of the Chicago-Laredo Inter-American that split from the train in Temple, Texas. This left Oklahoma without passenger rail service until 1999.

[edit] Current status of route

In 1999, the Oklahoma Department of Transportation contracted with Amtrak to run the Oklahoma City to Fort Worth Heartland Flyer. The train provides connecting service at Fort Worth to Amtrak's Texas Eagle.

Of the original Texas Chief/Lone Star route, only sections from Newton, Kansas, to Oklahoma City, and Temple, Texas to Houston and Galveston remain without passenger train service in 2009.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Morgan, David P (June 1974). "That Jinx Again". Trains 34 (8): 3. 
  2. ^ Goldberg (1981), 60-61.
  3. ^ Bryant, Jr., Keith L. (1974). History of the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway. University of Nebraska Press (Reprint). p. 350. ISBN 0803260660. 
  4. ^ "Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Timetables". The Official Guide of the Railways (New York, N.Y.: National Railway Publication Company) 104 (1): 428–440. June 1971. 
  5. ^ Passenger Train Journal (Nov. 1979).

[edit] References

  • Goldberg, Bruce (1981). Amtrak: The First Decade. Silver Spring, MD: Alan Books. 
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