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Southwest Limited

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47-698: (Redirected from Southwestern Limited ) Southwest Limited or Southwestern Limited refers to several American passenger trains: Southwest Limited (Amtrak train) (1974–1984), a Chicago–Los Angeles train now known as the Southwest Chief Southwest Limited (Milwaukee Road train) (1903–1958), a Milwaukee Road train between Chicago and Kansas City Southwestern Limited (IC train) (1934–1967), an Illinois Central train between Meridian, Mississippi, and Shreveport, Louisiana Southwestern Limited (New York Central train) (1889–1966),

94-593: A 13.5% increase from FY2022. However, this is a 25% decrease from its pre-COVID-19 pandemic ridership of 338,180 passengers in FY2019. The route grossed US$ 43,184,176 in revenue during FY 2016, a 3.8% decrease from FY 2017. The Southwest Chief is the successor to the Super Chief , which was inaugurated in 1936 as the flagship train of the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway . For most of its existence, it

141-569: A baggage car, three or four sleeper cars, a dining car, sightseer lounge and three coach cars. If demand warrants, a fourth coach is added between Chicago and Kansas City. Private cars or deadhead cars also sometimes ride along. As is already happening on all its long-distance routes, Amtrak will replace the P42DCs with modern Siemens ALC-42 locomotives by 2027, and the Superliner cars with new long-distance cars by 2032. The portion of

188-660: A coach train, it pioneered such features as "RideMaster" seats optimized for sleeping. On its inaugural run the El Capitan left the main line at Williams and traveled up the Grand Canyon Railway to Grand Canyon Depot . In regular operation passengers bound for the Grand Canyon would connect at Williams. In its first year and a half the El Capitan ran at 80% capacity, superior to similar services. Reservations had to be made weeks in advance. In 1942

235-402: A hill and struck the tracks after its owners failed to secure the parking brake. On June 27, 2022, the eastbound Southwest Chief derailed after striking a dump truck at a level crossing near Mendon, Missouri . Of 12 crew and 275 passengers, 3 deaths and 150 injuries have been reported; the driver of the truck also died. The Southwest Chief runs up to 90 mph (145 km/h) along

282-408: A lunch counter-dining car, and coach- observation car . The baggage-dormitory-coach had a small baggage area forward, followed by bunks for the train's crew and 32 coach seats. Both coaches seated 52 and featured men's and women's restrooms at opposite ends. In the observation car the restrooms were located forward, followed by 50 coach seats. During periods of high demand additional cars were added from

329-709: A narrative between La Junta, Colorado , and Albuquerque, New Mexico. Beginning in May 2013, Trails and Rails volunteers also boarded to provide narration between Chicago and La Plata, Missouri . From June through August, the Southwest Chief is used by Scouts traveling to and from Philmont Scout Ranch via the Raton station . During those months, Raton station is staffed by Amtrak employees and handles checked baggage. The Southwest Chief runs Superliner train sets. Trains typically consist of two P40 or P42 locomotives ,

376-601: A perceived reduction in the quality of services, after the Amtrak takeover. In October 1980 the Limited began running with the new coaches Superliner I built by Pullman-Standard , being the fourth of Amtrak's western long-distance trains to be equipped with the new coaches (already running with such cars were the San Francisco Zephyr , Desert Wind and Empire Builder ). On November 30, 1981, Amtrak replaced

423-619: A route shared with the California Zephyr , Illinois Zephyr and Carl Sandburg . Southwest Chief service to Joliet, Streator and Chillicothe was dropped as part of the realignment, although Joliet continues to see Amtrak service from other trains. The Chief realignment through the Cameron Connector to the Mendota Sub tracks caused Amtrak to concentrate all of its Galesburg operations in the present station , and

470-677: A significant portion of its route, made possible by automatic train stop systems originally installed by the Santa Fe Railway. Of Amtrak's long-distance routes, only the Texas Eagle runs faster (with a maximum speed of 100 mph (161 km/h) through much of Illinois). During the spring and summer, volunteer rangers with the Trails and Rails program from the National Park Service travel on board and provide

517-499: A train between New York City and St. Louis Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Southwest Limited . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Southwest_Limited&oldid=1253045944 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description

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564-576: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Southwest Limited (Amtrak train) The Southwest Chief (formerly the Southwest Limited and Super Chief ) is a long-distance passenger train operated by Amtrak on a 2,265-mile (3,645 km) route between Chicago and Los Angeles through the Midwest and Southwest via Kansas City , Albuquerque , and Flagstaff mostly on

611-511: The Scout ' s pool. The Santa Fe also employed its experimental pendulum car . Between 1946 and 1948 the Santa Fe increased the length of the El Capitan and added new cars built during and after World War II . The new El Capitan included a storage mail car, baggage-dormitory, eight 44-seat "leg-rest" coaches, two lunch counter-dining cars, a club-lounge, and a coach-observation car. Most of

658-689: The Texas Chief was discontinued. Until the 1979 realignment via Topeka, service operated via the direct route between Kansas City and Emporia, via Olathe , Gardner and Ottawa . The western portion of the Pasadena Subdivision was converted to the Gold Line in the 1990s, requiring the Southwest Chief to be rerouted to the San Bernardino Subdivision between Los Angeles and San Bernardino. Eastbound service

705-534: The El Capitan portion. Today the route of the El Capitan is served by Amtrak 's Southwest Chief . Many Amtrak trains used a combination of refurbished former Santa Fe Hi-Level cars with newer Superliner railcars until the early 2000s. The El Capitan debuted in February 1938 with two all-lightweight consists manufactured by the Budd Company . Each included a baggage-dormitory-coach, two coaches,

752-460: The Hector Mine earthquake . All the cars stayed upright and four passengers were injured. On March 14, 2016, the Southwest Chief derailed 3 miles (4.8 km) from Cimarron, Kansas . Of 14 crew and 128 passengers, 20 were injured. Investigators determined the train derailed after the tracks were knocked out of alignment by a runaway truck from a nearby farm operation that had rolled down

799-634: The Pennsylvania Railroad 's Trail Blazer , it offered "low-cost passage with high-speed convenience". The fare from Chicago to Los Angeles was $ 5.00 above the $ 39.50 regular coach fare in 1938. Originally conceived as the Economy Chief , the name 'El Capitan' was chosen to commemorate the Spanish conquistadors ; it competed for passenger traffic with Union Pacific 's Challenger . Unique in charging an extra fare despite being

846-490: The Southwest Chief from the affected sections of track to its Southern Transcon via Wichita, Amarillo, and Clovis—the same route once used by the San Francisco Chief . To avoid a reroute, Amtrak sought help from the affected states—Kansas, Colorado, and New Mexico. The states eventually contributed money toward rebuilding and rehabilitating the tracks—much of it obtained from federal transportation grants—and

893-716: The Super Chief and El Capitan to start operating daily; the new schedules went into effect on February 29. The extra-fare charges were dropped from both El Capitan and the Chief on December 14, 1953. El Capitan was one of the first Santa Fe trains to use the Budd-built " Big Dome "- Lounge cars. These were soon given to the Chief (another AT&SF Chicago-to-Los Angeles special), and replaced by new double-decker " Hi-Level " chair cars (coaches) developed by Budd and

940-417: The Super Chief / El Capitan names with Santa Fe's permission. From June 11 to September 10, 1972, Amtrak operated the Chief , a second Chicago–Los Angeles train along the same route, reviving the name of another notable Chicago–Los Angeles sleeper train operated by the Santa Fe. This was the only occasion on which Amtrak ran a second train to duplicate a long-distance service along its entire route outside

987-561: The station building along the former Santa Fe line was closed and later demolished. In January 1994, the Southwest Chief was rerouted between San Bernardino and Los Angeles onto the Santa Fe Third District via Fullerton and Riverside. Previously, it served Pasadena and Pomona via the Santa Fe Pasadena Subdivision , which was closed to all through traffic following damage to a bridge over

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1034-638: The BNSF's Southern Transcon , but branches off between Albuquerque and Kansas City via the Topeka, La Junta , Raton , and Glorieta Subdivision . Amtrak bills the route as one of its most scenic, with views of the Painted Desert and the Red Cliffs of Sedona , as well as the plains of Illinois, Missouri, Kansas, and Colorado. During fiscal year 2023, the Southwest Chief carried 253,838 passengers,

1081-707: The Missouri General Assembly approved $ 1 million of state funds to establish a Southwest Chief infill station in Carrollton , between the Kansas City and La Plata stations. If approved by the governor, the state funds would have to be matched by local agencies. On October 2, 1979, the Southwest Limited derailed at Lawrence, Kansas . Of the 30 crew and 147 passengers on board, two were killed and 69 were injured. The cause

1128-586: The New York–Florida corridor. Amtrak dropped the El Capitan designation on April 19, 1973, truncating only the name to Super Chief , and on March 7, 1974, the Santa Fe directed Amtrak to stop using the Super Chief and Texas Chief (another notable service originally operated by Santa Fe and which between Chicago and Emporia, Kansas shared route with the Super Chief/El Capitan . Amtrak also took over that service in 1971) names due to

1175-437: The Santa Fe billed as "the first and only daily ⁠39 + 3 / 4 ⁠ hour service between Chicago and California". On January 25, 1948, one of the locomotives assigned to the El Capitan crashed through a steel bumper post and concrete wall at Los Angeles' Union Passenger Terminal , ending with the locomotive dangling about 20 feet above Aliso Street. In 1948 the Santa Fe received additional equipment which permitted

1222-412: The Santa Fe main line between Chicago and Los Angeles on the same fast schedule as the railroad's premier all-Pullman Super Chief . It was also the first train to receive the pioneering Hi-Level equipment with which it would become synonymous. The El Capitan debuted on February 22, 1938, on a twice-weekly schedule, using two five-car sets of streamlined equipment built by the Budd Company . Like

1269-559: The US, see High-speed rail in the United States El Capitan (train) The El Capitan was a streamlined passenger train operated by the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway ("Santa Fe") between Chicago , Illinois , and Los Angeles , California . It operated from 1938 to 1971; Amtrak retained the name until 1973. The El Capitan was the only all-coach or "chair car" (non- Pullman sleeper) to operate on

1316-590: The action and urged providing the match. In an open letter, former Amtrak President and CEO Joseph H. Boardman said, "The Southwest Chief issue is the battleground whose outcome will determine the fate of American’s national interconnected rail passenger network". In June 2018, Amtrak announced that it was considering the replacement of rail service along the Kansas portion of the Southwest Chief with Amtrak Thruway buses between Albuquerque and Dodge City, where train service east to Chicago would resume. Senators in

1363-579: The affected area succeeded in offering an amendment to a funding bill. Per a press release from the office of co-sponsor Senator Jerry Moran , "This amendment would provide resources for maintenance and safety improvements along the Southwest Chief route and would compel Amtrak to fulfill its promise of matching funding for the successful TIGER IX discretionary grant ... In addition, this amendment would effectively reverse Amtrak’s decision to substitute rail service with bus service over large segments of

1410-471: The coaches were built by Pullman-Standard . The reduced seating in the coaches was given over to improved leg room for passengers. Between 1954 and 1956 the El Capitan's consist included the " Big Dome "-Lounge that replaced the mid-train club-lounge car. On July 15, 1956, the new, " Hi-Level " streamliner consist debuted. Santa Fe purchased enough "Hi-Level" equipment for five nine-car consists. Six of

1457-474: The consist expanded to 12 cars. Heavy traffic during World War II forced the Santa Fe to lengthen the train's schedule by two hours in July 1942; it restored the old schedule on June 2, 1946. On September 29, 1946, the El Capitan began running every other day, departing Los Angeles and Chicago on odd-numbered days (except the 31st). Together with the Super Chief on even-numbered days, the two trains formed what

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1504-754: The eastbound lanes of Interstate 210 in Arcadia during the Northridge Earthquake . Between 1997 and 1998, Amtrak operated the Southwest Chief in conjunction with the Washington–Chicago Capitol Limited . The two trains used the same Superliner equipment sets and passengers traveling on both trains could remain aboard during the layover in Chicago. Originally announced in 1996, Amtrak planned to call this through service National Chief and assign it its own numbers (15/16), but

1551-461: The ex- Super Chief "Pleasure Dome" and " Hi-Level " cars on the Southwest Limited with new superliners, completing the replacement of the original old Super Chief cars with the new cars. The old Hi-Level coaches used on the El Capitan inspired the design for the Superliners. Santa Fe managers, impressed by the design of the new Superliners, permitted Amtrak to restore the name Chief to

1598-518: The last semaphores located on the NMDOT (former 4th Santa Fe District / Glorieta Sub) section of the line, between WSS Lamy and Waldo Siding near Cerrillos were replaced, leaving only 11 blades currently in operation between Wagon Mound and Colmor, in the BNSF Raton Sub. [REDACTED] Media related to Southwest Chief at Wikimedia Commons For 150 mph (241 km/h) or more in

1645-654: The merger of the Burlington Northern and the Santa Fe in 1996, BNSF constructed a connector track at Cameron, Illinois , which allowed freight and passenger trains to transfer between the BN Mendota Subdivision and the Chillicothe Subdivision. The Chief was rerouted on the old Burlington Northern (former Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad - CB&Q ) through Naperville , Princeton , and Mendota to Galesburg,

1692-495: The name and numbers were never used. Amtrak dropped the practice with its May 1998 timetable. The Southwest Chief was one of five routes studied for possible performance improvements by Amtrak in FY 2012. The part of the Southwest Chief's route in western Kansas, southeastern Colorado, and northeastern New Mexico faced uncertainty throughout the 2010s. In 2010, BNSF said that Amtrak would have to pay for all track maintenance on

1739-491: The portion of the Southwest Chief ' route between La Junta and Lamy (Raton and Glorieta Subdivisions), because BNSF does not run any freight trains over this segment. BNSF also said that they would be lowering the track class on the portion of the Southwest Chief's route between Hutchinson and La Junta from Class IV to Class III and decreasing the passenger train speed limit from 79 mph (127 km/h) to 60 mph (97 km/h). In return, BNSF proposed rerouting

1786-443: The railroad in 1954–1956. These experimental cars had a quieter ride, increased seating capacities, and better views. The Santa Fe combined the Super Chief and El Capitan on January 12, 1958. The combined train used the Super Chief' s numbers, 17 and 18, but the Santa Fe continued to use both names. On its formation Amtrak continued the combined Super Chief / El Capitan designation until April 29, 1973, when it dropped

1833-488: The railroad's older baggage-dormitory cars had a cosmetic fairing applied to the rear roofline to create the distinctive "transition" cars and maintain a streamlined appearance on El Capitan . The real transition cars were the 68-seat step down chair cars, which had a regular-height diaphragm at one end and a high-level at the other. The dining cars rode on six-wheel trucks due to their massive weight (all other cars rode on four-wheel trucks). The "Big Domes" were transferred to

1880-505: The route between La Junta and Albuquerque (Raton and Glorieta Subs) is known for having some of the last active semaphores on a Class I railroad mainline, dating back to the ATSF era. Little and/or no freight traffic on those portions of the Chief's route is what caused the semaphores to last until the present day, although over time many were removed by both BNSF and NMDOT . In August 2024,

1927-487: The route through FY2019". In February 2020, USDOT granted $ 225,000 toward studying a Southwest Chief spur train service that would run to Colorado Springs, Colorado , via Pueblo. This follows prior plans to add service to Pueblo and connect with the proposed Front Range Passenger Rail service between Denver and Pueblo. It would have also run along former Colorado & Southern tracks through Walsenburg, reconnecting with its current alignment at Trinidad. In May 2022,

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1974-469: The route was not changed. However, this same part of the Southwest Chief's route was threatened again in 2018 when it became the focal point of a struggle to determine whether to continue Amtrak as a national network or to operate regional stand-alone networks. The issue arose when Amtrak introduced new requirements for the third renewal grant and raised previously undiscussed technical issues. A letter dated May 31, 2018, co-signed by 11 Senators, condemned

2021-497: The train, and Amtrak renamed it the Southwest Chief on October 28, 1984. In September 1993, the Chief was the first of Amtrak's western long-distance trains to receive the new Superliner II sleeping coaches built by Bombardier Transportation . In 1979, the Southwest Chief route between Kansas City and Emporia was shifted in order to maintain service to Topeka and Lawrence, which would otherwise have lost service when

2068-418: Was "all- Pullman ", carrying sleeping cars only. The Santa Fe merged the Super Chief with its all-coach counterpart, the El Capitan , in 1958. The merged train was known as the Super Chief/El Capitan , but retained the train numbers used by the Super Chief , 17 westbound and 18 eastbound. Amtrak retained the Super Chief/El Capitan after taking over passenger rail service on May 1, 1971. Initially retained

2115-401: Was excessive speed on a curve. Underlying causes included the engineer's unfamiliarity with the route and speed restriction signage having been removed during track repairs. On August 9, 1997, the eastbound Southwest Chief derailed about 5 miles northeast of Kingman, Arizona , when a bridge whose undergirding had been washed out by a flash flood collapsed under the weight of the train, which

2162-532: Was rerouted on November 28, 1993, replacing the stops at Pasadena and Pomona with Fullerton . Westbound service was rerouted on January 15, 1994. An additional stop at Riverside was added on April 29, 2002. Prior to 1996, the Southwest Chief operated in Illinois between Chicago and Galesburg via the ATSF's Chillicothe Subdivision, stopping at Joliet , Streator , and Chillicothe . Following

2209-412: Was traveling close to 90 mph (145 km/h). While the lead locomotive stayed on the track, the three trailing locomotives, nine passenger cars, and seven baggage and mail cars derailed. All stayed upright. Of the 325 passengers and crew aboard, 154 were injured and none were killed. On October 16, 1999, the westbound Southwest Chief suffered a minor derailment near Ludlow, California , following

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