Wow!! Just wow!
There is a train track in the middle of a freeway in California, the
Freeway is called Interstate 10 and the train is the Santa Fe 3751 Steam
Train, built in 1927.
After researching this topic is seems fairly common in America for
putting rail lines in Highway medians, down middle of freeways or even
down the main streets on a small town.
But I still found it interesting as it looks so close to the cars on the
Freeway.
Built in 1927 by the Baldwin Locomotive Works,
3751 was Baldwin's and the Santa Fe railway's first 4-8-4. It had a
Santa Fe 5-chime freight whistle mounted on it. Tests showed that 3751
was 20% more efficient and powerful than Santa Fe's 4-8-2 3700 class
steamer, which at the point was Santa Fe's most advanced steam
locomotive. In 1936, the engine was converted to burn oil. Two years
later, the locomotive was given a larger tender able to hold 20,000
gallons of water and 7,107 gallons of fuel oil. 3751 was also present at
the grand opening of Union Station in Los Angeles on May 7, 1939
pulling the Scout, one of Santa Fe's crack passenger trains as it
arrived from Chicago. It was the first steam locomotive to bring a
passenger train into LAUPT. In 1941, along with other 4-8-4s, 3751
received major upgrades including: 80-inch drive wheels, a new frame,
roller bearings all around, and more. That same year, it achieved its
highest recorded speed at 103 mph. It continued to be a very reliable
working locomotive until 1953, when it pulled the last regularly
scheduled steam powered passenger train on the Santa Fe to run between
Los Angeles and San Diego on August 25, this was its last run in revenue
service. After that, it was stored at the Redondo Junction, California
roundhouse in Los Angeles for four years before it was officially
retired from the roster by the railroad in 1957, and in 1958 it was
placed on display in San Bernardino.
Restoration
In 1981, the San Bernardino Railroad Historical Society was formed with intentions of restoring and operating 3751. Four years later, they achieved their goal when 3751 was sold to them with the condition that the SBRHS must restore and operate the locomotive. In 1986, 3751 was moved from its display to California Steel Industries, where it was restored at a cost of $1.5 million. In 1991, it operated for the first time in 38 years, running with two Santa Fe FP45s and 16 passenger cars on a four-day trip from Los Angeles to Bakersfield. Since then, it has been utilized for a large number of excursions and special trips as well as being on display at many events.:o)
What do you want to bet that the train track was in the middle of a wide median originally and the highway was repeatedly widened until they reached the current condition?
ReplyDeleteVery nice to see the old locomotive operating.
You are probably right, Feral. It's the same with our roads up here. They just paved over where the cows walked. :o)
Delete