Misplaced Pages

Flambeau 400

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

Flambeau
Flambeau 400
A C&NW EMD F-7(A) number 4087-A, and its train of five Bi-Level, gallery cars, are at the Green Bay C&NW station in August 1969.
Overview
Service typeInter-city rail
StatusDiscontinued
LocaleIllinois, Wisconsin, Michigan
First service
  • Flambeau: June 21, 1935 (1935-06-21)
  • Flambeau 400: May 26, 1950 (1950-05-26)
Last serviceMay 1, 1971 (1971-05-01)
Former operator(s)Chicago and North Western Railway
Route
TerminiNorth Western Terminal
Chicago, Illinois
Distance travelled452 miles (727 km)
Train number(s)153, 216
Technical
Track gauge4 ft 8+1⁄2 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Operating speedMax 90 mph, between Chicago and Green Bay, average speed 50 mph
Route map
Legend
428 Ashland
406.4 Saxon
395 Hurley
394 Ironwood
Montreal River
Michigan
Wisconsin
374.7 Mercer
359.1 Lac du Flambeau
349 Wooddruff
Minocqua Lake
341.3 Lake Tomahawk
326.4 Rhinelander
363.2 Watersmeet (Service ended 1965)
Michigan
Wisconsin
355.6 Land O' Lakes (Service ended 1965)
348 Conover (Service ended 1965)
338.5 Eagle River (Service ended 1965)
333.3 Clearwater Lake (Service ended 1965)
329.2 Three Lakes (Service ended 1965)
313 Monico
308 Pelican Lake
305 Elcho
301.2 Summit Lake
284.6 Antigo
266 Eland
Wolf River
236.9 Shawano
218.4 Pulaski
Peninsula 400
to Ishpeming
203 Green Bay
Peninsula 400
via Fond du Lac
180.2 Denmark (Service ended 1968)
160.4 Manitowoc (Service ended 1968)
147.5 Cleveland (Service ended 1968)
136 Sheboygan (Service ended 1968)
126.4 Oostburg (Service ended 1968)
122.5 Cedar Grove (Service ended 1968)
109.5 Port Washington (Service ended 1968)
Peninsula 400
via Fond du Lac
Milwaukee Road
84.4 Milwaukee (C&NW Lakefront)
Milwaukee Union Station (1966–1971)
Milwaukee Road
Kinnickinnic River
61.9 Racine
51.6 Kenosha
KD Line
to Rockford
Wisconsin
Illinois
35.9 Waukegan
12 Evanston
Chicago River (north branch)
Minnesota 400
to Madison
Milwaukee Road (Hiawatha from Union Station)
0 Chicago (C&NW Terminal)
This diagram:

The Flambeau 400 was a streamlined passenger train operated by the Chicago and North Western Railway between Chicago, Illinois, and Ashland, Wisconsin on Lake Superior, via Green Bay, Wisconsin. It was originally a special service in the summer time.

History

Beginning in 1935, the Flambeau transported the new American middle class to its new leisure time in the North Woods of Wisconsin. The Flambeau operated over basically the same route as later trains did except for bypassing Green Bay to run via Hortonville and Eland. By 1937 the route changed to operate via Green Bay. In July 1949 the Flambeau was integrated with the Shoreland 400 and the Valley 400, running as one train between Chicago and Green Bay and as separate trains beyond Green Bay. Northbound trains ran via Fond du Lac and southbound trains via Manitowoc.

In 1950 the train received a new name, Flambeau 400, in reference to the C&NW's popular Twin Cities 400, named for making the approximately 400 mile run from Chicago to Minneapolis, Minnesota in 400 minutes, and Flambeau, the French word for a torch. In 1958 the Flambeau 400 and Peninsula 400 received bilevel equipment. Serving the north woods of Wisconsin, it saw heavy tourist traffic, but by May 1968, it was losing thousands of dollars for the North Western. In 1969 the Flambeau became an unnamed Chicago-Green Bay train with seasonal service to Ashland.

The last Flambeau 400 rolled out of the North Woods on January 5, 1971. Amtrak did not include Green Bay and Ashland in its initial route structure.

Equipment

The consist varied over the years and by seasonal demand. The number of cars varied between ten and two. Trains may have had a coach-lounge instead of a diner, and some trains had neither. The train used heavyweight 56-seat single level coaches until the arrival of new gallery cars in 1958. The otherwise bi-level train featured a single-level dining car (which operated Chicago-Green Bay) with a false roof to match the gallery cars. The motive power in the early years by class R-1 Ten-wheelers on the Watersmeet branch, and class E-2-a Pacifics everywhere else. By the later 40s or early 50s E8s and F7s took over. Two units usually ran as far as Green Bay, where one would lay over with the dining car for the return trip.

References

  1. Schafer, Mike; Welsh, Joe (2002). Streamliners: History of a Railroad Icon. Saint Paul, MN: MBI. ISBN 0-7603-1371-7. OCLC 51069308.
  2. ^ Schafer, Mike (1996). Classic American Railroads. Saint Paul, MN: MBI. ISBN 978-0-7603-0239-2. OCLC 768619768.
  3. Craig Sanders (September 16, 1996). "Routes and Trains on the Eve of Amtrak". Archived from the original on January 31, 2013. Retrieved 2009-10-18.

External links

Named trains of the Chicago and North Western Railway
400s
Overland Route
Other Named Trains
  • Arrowhead Limited
  • Ashland Limited
  • Ashland Mail
  • Corn King Limited
  • Duluth-Superior Limited
  • Iron & Copper Country Express
  • Minnesota & Black Hills Express
  • North Western Limited
  • Northwoods Fisherman
  • Rochester-Minnesota Special
  • The Commuter
  • The Mondamin
  • The North American
  • The Shoreland
  • The Valley
  • The Victory
  • The Viking
  • The Winnebago
Categories: