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{{Use mdy dates|date=October 2023}}
{{Italic title}}
{{Short description|Chicago to San Francisco passenger express train}}{{Italic title}}
{{stack|
{{Infobox rail service
] train 101, the ''City of San Francisco'', near ], Wyoming on December 4, 1948]]
| box_width =
] ] leads ''City of San Francisco'' west at SN overpass {{coord|38.29|-121.9597|citation=inline}}, Cannon CA, in April 1971— just before ]]]}}
| name = ''City of San Francisco''
| logo =
| logo_width =
| image = File:OP-19316.jpg
| image_width = 300px
| caption = ] train 101, the ''City of San Francisco'', near ], Wyoming on December 4, 1948
| type = ]
| status = Discontinued
| locale = ]
| predecessor =
| first = {{Start date and age|1936|06|14}}
| last = {{End date and age|1972|06|10}}
| successor = '']''
| operator =
| formeroperator = <nowiki/>
*]
*]
*]
*]
*]
| ridership =
| ridership2 =
| website =
| start = ] (pre-1971) <br /> ] (post-1971)
| stops = <nowiki/>
*37 (westbound)
*38 (eastbound)
| end = ]<br />]
| distance =
| journeytime = <nowiki/>
*45 hours 45 minutes (westbound)
*43 hours 44 minutes (eastbound)
| frequency =
| trainnumber = <nowiki/>
*103-101 (westbound)
*102-104 (eastbound)
| line_used = ]
| class =
| access =
| seating =
| sleeping =
| autorack =
| catering =
| observation =
| entertainment =
| baggage =
| otherfacilities =
| stock =
| gauge = {{track gauge|ussg}}
| el =
| speed = <nowiki/>
*49.5 mph (westbound)
*51.8 mph (eastbound)
| owners =
| routenumber =
| map = {{City of San Francisco|inline=1}} {{Amtrak City of San Francisco}}
| map_state = collapsed
}}
The '''''City of San Francisco''''' was a ] through passenger train which ran from 1936 to 1971 on the ] between ], Illinois and ], California, with a ferry connection on to ]. It was owned and operated jointly by the ] (1936–55), ] (1955–71), the ], and the ]. It provided premium extra fare service from Chicago to San Francisco when introduced in 1936 with a running time of 39 hours and 45 minutes each way.


==History==
The '''''City of San Francisco''''' was a streamlined passenger train on the ], the ] and the ] between ], Illinois and ], California, with a ferry connection to ]. It was the pride of the Southern Pacific fleet, providing crack service from Chicago to San Francisco in 1936 of 39 hr 45 min each way.
] ] leads ''City of San Francisco'' west at SN overpass {{coord|38.29|-121.9597|display=inline}}, Cannon CA, in April 1971&mdash; just before ]]]


The ''City of San Francisco'' (TR 101-102) made its first run between ] and ]/] on June 14, 1936.
On August 12, 1939 the train derailed while crossing a bridge near ], Nevada, killing 24 and injuring 121. The wreck appeared to have been caused by ], but despite a major manhunt, offers of reward, and years of investigation by SP,<ref>DeNevi, Don. "Tragic Train: The City of San Francisco -- The Development and Historic Wreck of a Streamliner." (1979, Superior Publishing). ISBN 0875645259. </ref> the case remains unsolved.<ref>http://www2.gbcnv.edu/howh/CitySF.html</ref>


On July&nbsp;26, 1941, a second set of equipment entered service allowing departures ten times per month each way. The added service replaced the short-lived steam powered Pullman-built mostly heavyweight (steel) streamline ''Forty-Niner'' that had operated an almost ten-hour slower 49-hour run five times a month between Chicago and San Francisco from July&nbsp;8, 1937 to July&nbsp;27, 1941.<ref name=HeathSketch /><ref>{{harvnb|Wayner|1972|p=150}}</ref> Under an order of the ], no new head-end or passenger cars of any type (other than "military sleepers") were built and delivered to US railroads from mid 1942 until late 1945.<ref>{{Cite magazine |date=July 30, 1945 |title=Railroads: The U.P. Trail |magazine=]}}</ref>
Competing streamlined passenger trains were, starting in 1949, the '']'' on the ], ], and ] Railroads, and starting in 1954, the '']'' on the ]. As with the '']'', many of the train's cars bore the names of locales around its namesake city, including ''Mission Dolores'', the nickname given to ]'s ].


On October&nbsp;1, 1946, service was increased to thrice weekly departures from both Chicago and San Francisco made every Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday evening.<ref>1942 Annual Report, The Chicago & Northwestern Railway Company, p. 7</ref> On September&nbsp;1, 1947, the ''City'' became daily with the creation of additional train sets to support seven-day-a-week operation in both directions of its 39-and-a-half-hour service. This change relegated the long-standing (since 1887) ''Overland'' to a secondary, no longer "limited" train in providing daily service between Chicago and Oakland/San Francisco on the ''Overland Route''.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Beebe |first=Lucius Morris |title=The Overland Limited |date=1963 |publisher=Howell-North Books |location=Berkeley, CA |page=50}}</ref><ref name=HeathSketch />


Competing streamlined passenger trains were, starting in 1949, the '']'' on the ] (WP), ] (D&RGW), and ] (CB&Q) Railroads, and starting in 1954, the '']'' on the ] (AT&SF).
The ''City of San Francisco'' is remembered for the ] in the ] that trapped the train for six days in January 1952 at {{coord|39.3262|-120.593|citation=inline}} on ] in California. Snowdrifts from 160 km/h (100 mph) winds blocked the train, burying it in 12 feet of snow and stranding it from January 13 to January 19. The event made international headlines. In the effort to reach the train, the railroad's snow-clearing equipment and snow-blowing rotary plows became frozen to the tracks. Hundreds of workers and volunteers, including ], using snowplows, tractors and manpower came to the rescue by clearing nearby Highway 40 to reach the train. The 196 passengers and 20 crewmembers were evacuated within 72 hours, on foot to vehicles that carried them the few highway miles to Nyack Lodge. The train itself was extricated several days later.


In October 1955 the ] replaced the Chicago and North Western between Chicago and Omaha; in 1960 the ''City of San Francisco'' was combined with the ''City of Los Angeles'' east of Ogden. A May 1969 ] is available online.<ref>http://www.streamlinerschedules.com/concourse/track8/citysanfran196906.html</ref> On October&nbsp;30, 1955, the ] replaced the Chicago and North Western between Chicago and Omaha.<ref>. ''The Milwaukee Road Magazine'', Vol. 43, No. 7. October 1955. pp. 4-6</ref> In 1960 the ''City of San Francisco'' was combined with the ''City of Los Angeles'' east of Ogden.


On July 16, 1962, the SP's ''San Francisco Overland'' (TR 27-28) ended its long run as a separate San Francisco/Oakland to Ogden year-round daily train when that service was consolidated with the ''City of San Francisco'' except for occasional summer and holiday seasonal extra section runs of the ''Overland'' which service ended on January&nbsp;2, 1964.<ref>ICC Financial Docket No. 21946 (Filed February 5, 1962, decided July 6, 1962, served July 16, 1962)</ref><ref>), July 16, 1962</ref>
==History==
<!-- Commented out because image was deleted: ] -->


On May&nbsp;1, 1971, ] took over all long-distance inter city passenger operations in the United States, discontinuing the MILW-UP-SP ''City of San Francisco''. Amtrak retained the name for the thrice-weekly Denver–San Francisco/Oakland portion of the run until June 1972, when the entire Chicago-San Francisco/Oakland route became daily again as the '']''.<ref>. Amtrak A History of America's Railroad. http://history.amtrak.com {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160125141715/http://history.amtrak.com/ |date=January 25, 2016 }}</ref> Amtrak replaced its service between Chicago and San Francisco/Oakland on July&nbsp;16, 1983 with its current daily train, the ''California Zephyr'', when a portion of the route was moved from Union Pacific tracks in Wyoming to those of the ] in Colorado.<ref>{{Cite news |date=July 13, 1983 |title=Last passenger trains rolling across Wyoming |work=] |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=6OsRAAAAIBAJ&pg=7126,6604371&dq=san-francisco-zephyr&hl=en }}{{Dead link|date=September 2023 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref>
===Timeline===
] on a trial run]]
* 1936: The ''City of San Francisco'' makes its first run between ], Illinois and ], California as streamline through service operated with a dedicated, diesel-electric powered articulated 11-unit consist.<ref>Heath, Erle ''Seventy-Five Years of Progress: Historical Sketch of the Southern Pacific'' (1945) San Francisco: Southern Pacific Railroad. p.39</ref><ref>A railroad train "consist" is defined by 49 CFR §210.7 as "one or more locomotives coupled to a rail car or rail cars." Office of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration. ''Code of Federal Regulations, Title 49, Parts 200 to 299, Transportation''. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office (2005), p. 59</ref>
* 1938: Upgraded on January 2, 1938 to a quarter-mile long 17-unit consist made up of a three-part 6,000 h.p. diesel-electric power set built by the Electro-Motive Corporation and 14 aluminum-alloy girder-type baggage-dormitory, diner, lounge, sleepers, and observation cars.<ref>Heath 1945 p. 39</ref><ref>''The Official Guide of the Railways and Steam Navigation Lines of the United States, Puerto Rico, Canada, Mexico and Cuba'', Volume 70, Issue 8 (1938). New York: National Railway Publication Company, p. 39</ref><ref>"Railway Age" Vol. 11 (1941). New York: Simmons-Boardman Publishing Corporation. p. 305</ref> Frequency remained at five trips per month each way.
* August 12, 1939: Sabotaged track sends the ''City of San Francisco'' flying off a bridge in the Nevada desert; two dozen passengers and crew members are killed and many more injured, and five cars are destroyed.
* July 1941: A second set of equipment enters service, allowing departures ten times per month thus replacing the short lived steam powered all-Pullman streamline ''Forty-Niner'' service that had operated five times a month between Chicago and San Francisco from July 8, 1937 to July 27, 1941.<ref>Heath 1945 p. 39</ref>
* 1946: Service increased to thrice weekly on October 1, 1946.
* 1947: Train became daily on September 1, 1947 when a fourth train set was added to support daily operation in both directions of the ''City's'' 39-and-a-half-hour service thus finally supplanting ''The Overland'' as the only train providing premium daily service between Chicago and San Francisco on the Overland Route.<ref>Beebe, Lucius Morris ''The Overland Limited''. Berkley, CA: Howell-North Books (1963) p. 50.</ref><ref>Heath 1945 p. 39</ref>
* January 13, 1952: The ''City of San Francisco'' is caught in a blizzard and remains stuck for days. The incident was one inspiration for ] book, ].
* May 1, 1971: UP ends the ''City of San Francisco'' train as ] takes over long-distance passenger operations in the United States; Amtrak retains the name until 1972.
<!-- Commented out because image was deleted: ] -->


===Incidents===
On August&nbsp;12, 1939, ] near ]. Two dozen passengers and crew members were killed with many more injured. The incident was ruled an act of sabotage, but remains unsolved despite years of investigation.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Haine |first=Col. Edgar A. |title=Train Wrecks |date=1994 |publisher=Cornwall Books |location=] |page=107}}</ref>

On January&nbsp;13, 1952, the westbound ''City of San Francisco'' was trapped in a blizzard at ] in the ], {{convert|17|mi}} west of ] (Track #1 at {{coord|39.3262|-120.593|display=inline}}). Snow drifts from {{convert|100|mph|adj=mid}} winds blocked the train, burying it in {{convert|12|ft|m|abbr=off|sp=us}} of snow and stranding it for six days. The event made international headlines. During the effort to reach the train, the railroad's snow-clearing equipment and snow-blowing rotary plows became frozen to the tracks near Emigrant Gap. Hundreds of workers and volunteers, including escaped German POW ], rescued stranded passengers by clearing nearby ] to reach the train. The 196 passengers and 30 crewmembers were evacuated within 72 hours of rescuers reaching the train. Upon evacuation, they traveled on foot to vehicles that carried them the few highway miles to ] Lodge. The train itself was extricated three days later on January&nbsp;19.<ref>Bull, Howard W. (January 1953). . ''Trains & Travel''. Vol 13, #3.</ref><ref>{{cite news |first=Peter |last=Hartlaub |url=https://www.sfchronicle.com/oursf/article/1952-blizzard-sierra-train-17628410.php#photo-23233209 |title=1952 Sierra blizzard turned snowbound luxury train into frigid hell |newspaper=San Francisco Chronicle |date=December 3, 2022 }}</ref>

==Operations and equipment==
] on a trial run]]
]
]
]
]
A ''consist'' is the group of rail vehicles (cars plus locomotives) making up a train.<ref>A railroad train "consist" is defined by 49 CFR §210.7 as "one or more locomotives coupled to a rail car or rail cars." Office of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration. ''Code of Federal Regulations, Title 49, Parts 200 to 299, Transportation''. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office (2005), p. 59</ref>

The 1936 ''City of San Francisco'' had a ]-built 11-car articulated lightweight streamline consist: two {{convert|1200|hp|kW|abbr=on}} diesel-electric ] (]), a baggage-mail car, a baggage-dormitory-kitchen car, a diner-lounge car, four named sleeper cars, a 48-seat chair car, and a 38-seat coach-buffet-blind end observation car.<ref>{{harvnb|Wayner|1972|p=142}}</ref><ref> ''The Coach Yard.com''</ref><ref>{{Schafer-Classic|page=17}}</ref><ref name=HeathSketch /><ref>{{Cite book |last=Strack |first=Don |url=http://utahrails.net/up/up-diesel-story-1934-1982.php#heading_toc_j_5 |title=Diesels of the Union Pacific, 1934-1982, The Classic Era, Volume 1 |date=1999 |publisher=Withers Publishing Co. |location=]}}</ref>

The ''City's'' original train set was replaced on January 2, 1938, with an all new {{convert|1/4|mi|m|adj=mid|-long}}, semi-articulated 17-car lightweight streamline consist made up of one ] and two EMC-E2B {{convert|1800|hp|kW|abbr=on}} diesel-electric power unit cars (SF 1-2-3) built by the ] (now EMD), and 14 aluminum-alloy girder-type Pullman-built cars consisting of an auxiliary power-baggage-dormitory car, a 54-seat chair car, a 32-seat coffee shop-kitchen car, a 72-seat diner, a dormitory-buffet-lounge car, eight named sleeper cars, and an 84-foot 6-inch buffet-lounge-observation car (''NOB HILL'') said to be the "longest passenger car built in the United States" to that time.<ref>{{harvnb|DeNevi|1977|pp=9–13}}</ref><ref>{{harvnb|Wayner|1972|pp=139, 150}}</ref><ref> Espee.Railfan.net</ref>
]
While costing over $2&nbsp;million to build, operating costs (fuel, crew, etc) for the train were less than two cents per passenger-mile.<ref name=deNavi15 /> After both the original and new train sets made a joint run from Oakland to Chicago on that date, the older 11-car consist was shopped for a seven-month rebuild and then used over the next decade as the '']'', '']'', or '']'' before being withdrawn in spring 1948 and eventually scrapped.<ref name="HeathSketch">{{Cite book |last=Heath |first=Erle |title=Seventy-Five Years of Progress: Historical Sketch of the Southern Pacific |date=1945 |publisher=Southern Pacific Railroad |location=San Francisco |pages=38–39}}</ref><ref>{{harvnb|Wayner|1972|pp=142-44}}</ref>

The ''City of San Francisco'' train sets were jointly owned by the C&NW, UP and SP with the exception of the sleepers which were Pullman-owned until 1945 when two of those cars were acquired by the C&NW and a dozen by the UP.<ref>{{Cite book |title=The Official Guide of the Railways and Steam Navigation Lines of the United States, Puerto Rico, Canada, Mexico and Cuba |date=1938 |publisher=National Railway Publication Company |volume=70 |location=New York |page=39 |issue=8}}</ref><ref>"Railway Age" Vol. 111 (1941). New York: Simmons-Boardman Publishing Corporation. p. 305</ref><ref>{{harvnb|Wayner|1972|p=152–53}}</ref> The new train was capable of speeds up to {{convert|110|mph}} and accommodated 222 passengers.<ref>"NEW STREAMLINER FOR S.F.-CHICAGO RUN". San Francisco: Southern Pacific News Bureau. January 17, 1938</ref> Sleeping car space was double that of conventional trains with 168 berths compared to 84 while chair car space was increased to 54.<ref name="deNavi15">{{harvnb|DeNevi|1977|p=15}}</ref> The new ''City'' consist had 60 compartments, drawing rooms, bedrooms, and "roomettes" instead of the regular nine for a larger variety of sleeping accommodations to choose from than on any train in America.<ref name=deNavi15 /> Among the premium services provided on the train were stewardess-], a barber shop, a shower bath, and an internal telephone system. All regularly assigned cars were also air-conditioned.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Dubin |first=Arthur D. |title=Some Classic Trains |date=1964 |publisher=Kalmbach Books |location=Milwaukee |pages=186–189}}</ref> Frequency remained at five trips per month each way.

From 1942 to 1946, the lounge-observation car ''Nob Hill'' and lounge-buffet car ''Marina'' were removed from the ''City of San Francisco's'' two train sets and placed in storage during WWII in compliance with a General Order of the Office of Defense Transportation (ODT) banning the carriage of strictly luxury cars without passenger revenue capacity. Those cars were replaced with sleepers.<ref>{{harvnb|Wayner|1972|p=157}}</ref><ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150924103236/http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/?pid=16067 |date=September 24, 2015 }} The American Presidency Project, University of California, Santa Barbara</ref><ref>Eastman, Joseph B. "The Office of Defense Transportation" ''Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science'', Vol. 230, Transportation: War and Postwar (Nov. 1943), pp. 1-4</ref>

A fifth consist made possible by the deliveries of new post war cars was added to the ''City of San Francisco'' in 1950.<ref>{{harvnb|Wayner|1972|p=163}}</ref>

As with the '']'', many of the train's cars bore the names of locales around its namesake city, including ''Mission Dolores'', the nickname given to ]'s ].


==Other railroad uses of the name ''City of San Francisco''== ==Other railroad uses of the name ''City of San Francisco''==
The ''City of San Francisco'' name has been applied to a 10/6 ] built by ] in the early 1950s. The car is now owned by the ] and operates on the line's dinner and first class trains. Union Pacific itself has a ] car used on excursion and executive trains which carries the "City of San Francisco" name. The ''City of San Francisco'' name has been applied to a 10/6 ] built by ] in the early 1950s. The car is now owned by the ] and operates on the line's dinner and first class trains. Union Pacific itself has a ] car used on excursion and executive trains which carries the ''City of San Francisco'' name.


==See also== ==See also==
* ] on the Chicago and North Western Railway * ]
* ] on the Milwaukee Road * ]
* ] on the Southern Pacific Railroad * ]
* ] on the Union Pacific Railroad * ]


==References== ==References==
{{Reflist|30em}}
* {{Schafer-Classic}}

===Bibliography===
{{refbegin}}
* {{Cite book |last=DeNevi |first=Don |title=Tragic Train: The City of San Francisco -- The Development and Historic Wreck of a Streamliner |date=1977 |publisher=Superior Publishing |isbn=0875645259}}
* {{Solomon-UP}} * {{Solomon-UP}}
* {{Cite book |last=Wayner |first=Robert J. |title=Car Names, Numbers and Consists |date=1972 |publisher=Wayner Publications |location=New York}}
{{reflist}}
{{refend}}


==External links== ==External links==
{{commonscat|City of San Francisco}} {{commons category|City of San Francisco}}
{{external media
* offers detailed information and photographs of the 1952 disaster.
| float = right
* offers information and photographs of the 1939 derailment.
| width =
| video1 =
}}
* by Central Pacific Railroad Museum
*, courtesy of streamlinerschedules.com
* The (archived) gives real life parallels to many Railway Series stories


{{UP Passenger}} {{UP Passenger}}
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{{Milwaukee Road named trains}} {{Milwaukee Road named trains}}
{{SP named trains}} {{SP named trains}}
{{Amtrak routes}} {{Former Amtrak routes}}
{{1939 railway accidents}}


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Latest revision as of 17:10, 1 November 2024

Chicago to San Francisco passenger express train
City of San Francisco
Union Pacific train 101, the City of San Francisco, near Cheyenne, Wyoming on December 4, 1948
Overview
Service typeInter-city rail
StatusDiscontinued
LocaleWestern United States
First serviceJune 14, 1936; 88 years ago (1936-06-14)
Last serviceJune 10, 1972; 52 years ago (1972-06-10)
SuccessorSan Francisco Zephyr
Former operator(s)
Route
TerminiChicago, Illinois (pre-1971)
Denver, Colorado (post-1971)
Oakland, California
San Francisco, California
Stops
  • 37 (westbound)
  • 38 (eastbound)
Average journey time
  • 45 hours 45 minutes (westbound)
  • 43 hours 44 minutes (eastbound)
Train number(s)
  • 103-101 (westbound)
  • 102-104 (eastbound)
Line(s) usedOverland Route
Technical
Track gauge4 ft 8+1⁄2 in (1,435 mm)
Operating speed
  • 49.5 mph (westbound)
  • 51.8 mph (eastbound)
Route map
Legend
1936–1971
Chicago C&NW Chicago Union Station
Elgin
Davis Junction
Savanna
Illinois
Iowa
Clinton Marion
Cedar Rapids Perry
Boone
C&NW
UPRR
pre-1955 route
MILW
UPRR
Iowa
Nebraska
Omaha
Grand Island
North Platte
Sidney
Nebraska
Wyoming
Cheyenne
Laramie
Rawlins
Rock Springs
Green River
Evanston
Wyoming
Utah
UPRR
SPRR
Ogden
Utah
Nevada
Elko
Reno
Nevada
California
Sacramento
Martinez
Berkeley
Oakland (16th Street)
Oakland Pier
San Francisco Bay ferry
San Francisco
Bus transfer
San Francisco
This diagram:
Legend
Amtrak
0 mi Chicago
38 mi
61 km
Aurora
83 mi
134 km
Mendota
104 mi
167 km
Princeton
131 mi
211 km
Kewanee
163 mi
262 km
Galesburg
179 mi
288 km
Monmouth
Illinois
Iowa
206 mi
332 km
Burlington
233 mi
375 km
Mount Pleasant
280 mi
451 km
Ottumwa
360 mi
579 km
Osceola
393 mi
632 km
Creston
Iowa
Nebraska
496 mi
798 km
Omaha
551 mi
887 km
Lincoln
648 mi
1043 km
Hastings
702 mi
1130 km
Holdrege
779 mi
1254 km
McCook
Nebraska
Colorado
922 mi
1484 km
Akron
956 mi
1539 km
Fort Morgan
1034 mi
1664 km
Denver Union Station Rio Grande Zephyr
1086 mi
1748 km
Greeley
Colorado
Wyoming
1140 mi
1835 km
Cheyenne
1197 mi
1926 km
Laramie
1314 mi
2115 km
Rawlins
1433 mi
2306 km
Rock Springs
1448 mi
2330 km
Green River
1548 mi
2491 km
Evanston
Wyoming
Utah
1624 mi
2614 km
Ogden Rio Grande Zephyr
Utah
Nevada
1867 mi
3005 km
Elko
1889 mi
3040 km
Carlin
2177 mi
3504 km
Sparks
2180 mi
3508 km
Reno
Nevada
California
2333 mi
3755 km
Sacramento
2420 mi
3895 km
Oakland
motorcoach shuttle
2426 mi
3904 km
San Francisco
This diagram:

The City of San Francisco was a streamlined through passenger train which ran from 1936 to 1971 on the Overland Route between Chicago, Illinois and Oakland, California, with a ferry connection on to San Francisco. It was owned and operated jointly by the Chicago and North Western Railway (1936–55), Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad (1955–71), the Union Pacific Railroad, and the Southern Pacific Railroad. It provided premium extra fare service from Chicago to San Francisco when introduced in 1936 with a running time of 39 hours and 45 minutes each way.

History

Southern Pacific SDP45 leads City of San Francisco west at SN overpass 38°17′24″N 121°57′35″W / 38.29°N 121.9597°W / 38.29; -121.9597, Cannon CA, in April 1971— just before Amtrak

The City of San Francisco (TR 101-102) made its first run between Chicago and Oakland/San Francisco on June 14, 1936.

On July 26, 1941, a second set of equipment entered service allowing departures ten times per month each way. The added service replaced the short-lived steam powered Pullman-built mostly heavyweight (steel) streamline Forty-Niner that had operated an almost ten-hour slower 49-hour run five times a month between Chicago and San Francisco from July 8, 1937 to July 27, 1941. Under an order of the War Production Board, no new head-end or passenger cars of any type (other than "military sleepers") were built and delivered to US railroads from mid 1942 until late 1945.

On October 1, 1946, service was increased to thrice weekly departures from both Chicago and San Francisco made every Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday evening. On September 1, 1947, the City became daily with the creation of additional train sets to support seven-day-a-week operation in both directions of its 39-and-a-half-hour service. This change relegated the long-standing (since 1887) Overland to a secondary, no longer "limited" train in providing daily service between Chicago and Oakland/San Francisco on the Overland Route.

Competing streamlined passenger trains were, starting in 1949, the California Zephyr on the Western Pacific (WP), Denver and Rio Grande Western (D&RGW), and Chicago, Burlington and Quincy (CB&Q) Railroads, and starting in 1954, the San Francisco Chief on the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway (AT&SF).

On October 30, 1955, the Milwaukee Road replaced the Chicago and North Western between Chicago and Omaha. In 1960 the City of San Francisco was combined with the City of Los Angeles east of Ogden.

On July 16, 1962, the SP's San Francisco Overland (TR 27-28) ended its long run as a separate San Francisco/Oakland to Ogden year-round daily train when that service was consolidated with the City of San Francisco except for occasional summer and holiday seasonal extra section runs of the Overland which service ended on January 2, 1964.

On May 1, 1971, Amtrak took over all long-distance inter city passenger operations in the United States, discontinuing the MILW-UP-SP City of San Francisco. Amtrak retained the name for the thrice-weekly Denver–San Francisco/Oakland portion of the run until June 1972, when the entire Chicago-San Francisco/Oakland route became daily again as the San Francisco Zephyr. Amtrak replaced its service between Chicago and San Francisco/Oakland on July 16, 1983 with its current daily train, the California Zephyr, when a portion of the route was moved from Union Pacific tracks in Wyoming to those of the Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad in Colorado.

Incidents

On August 12, 1939, the City of San Francisco derailed near Palisade, Nevada. Two dozen passengers and crew members were killed with many more injured. The incident was ruled an act of sabotage, but remains unsolved despite years of investigation.

On January 13, 1952, the westbound City of San Francisco was trapped in a blizzard at Yuba Pass in the Sierra Nevada, 17 miles (27 km) west of Donner Pass (Track #1 at 39°19′34″N 120°35′35″W / 39.3262°N 120.593°W / 39.3262; -120.593). Snow drifts from 100-mile-per-hour (160 km/h) winds blocked the train, burying it in 12 feet (3.7 meters) of snow and stranding it for six days. The event made international headlines. During the effort to reach the train, the railroad's snow-clearing equipment and snow-blowing rotary plows became frozen to the tracks near Emigrant Gap. Hundreds of workers and volunteers, including escaped German POW Georg Gaertner, rescued stranded passengers by clearing nearby Route 40 to reach the train. The 196 passengers and 30 crewmembers were evacuated within 72 hours of rescuers reaching the train. Upon evacuation, they traveled on foot to vehicles that carried them the few highway miles to Nyack Lodge. The train itself was extricated three days later on January 19.

Operations and equipment

The M-10004 trainset at Reno, Nevada on a trial run
City of San Francisco baggage label 1936
First run of the new (l) and last of the original (r) City train sets, January 2, 1938. Note the lower and tapered profile of the older cars.
The new 17-car City consist crossing over the Great Salt Lake (Lucin Cutoff) c. 1939
SP mailer, Oct 1, 1946

A consist is the group of rail vehicles (cars plus locomotives) making up a train.

The 1936 City of San Francisco had a Pullman-built 11-car articulated lightweight streamline consist: two 1,200 hp (890 kW) diesel-electric power unit cars (M-10004A/B), a baggage-mail car, a baggage-dormitory-kitchen car, a diner-lounge car, four named sleeper cars, a 48-seat chair car, and a 38-seat coach-buffet-blind end observation car.

The City's original train set was replaced on January 2, 1938, with an all new 1⁄4-mile-long (400 m), semi-articulated 17-car lightweight streamline consist made up of one EMC-E2A and two EMC-E2B 1,800 hp (1,300 kW) diesel-electric power unit cars (SF 1-2-3) built by the Electro-Motive Corporation (now EMD), and 14 aluminum-alloy girder-type Pullman-built cars consisting of an auxiliary power-baggage-dormitory car, a 54-seat chair car, a 32-seat coffee shop-kitchen car, a 72-seat diner, a dormitory-buffet-lounge car, eight named sleeper cars, and an 84-foot 6-inch buffet-lounge-observation car (NOB HILL) said to be the "longest passenger car built in the United States" to that time.

Former City of San Francisco Sleeper Civic Center

While costing over $2 million to build, operating costs (fuel, crew, etc) for the train were less than two cents per passenger-mile. After both the original and new train sets made a joint run from Oakland to Chicago on that date, the older 11-car consist was shopped for a seven-month rebuild and then used over the next decade as the City of Los Angeles, City of Denver, or City of Portland before being withdrawn in spring 1948 and eventually scrapped.

The City of San Francisco train sets were jointly owned by the C&NW, UP and SP with the exception of the sleepers which were Pullman-owned until 1945 when two of those cars were acquired by the C&NW and a dozen by the UP. The new train was capable of speeds up to 110 miles per hour (180 km/h) and accommodated 222 passengers. Sleeping car space was double that of conventional trains with 168 berths compared to 84 while chair car space was increased to 54. The new City consist had 60 compartments, drawing rooms, bedrooms, and "roomettes" instead of the regular nine for a larger variety of sleeping accommodations to choose from than on any train in America. Among the premium services provided on the train were stewardess-nurses, a barber shop, a shower bath, and an internal telephone system. All regularly assigned cars were also air-conditioned. Frequency remained at five trips per month each way.

From 1942 to 1946, the lounge-observation car Nob Hill and lounge-buffet car Marina were removed from the City of San Francisco's two train sets and placed in storage during WWII in compliance with a General Order of the Office of Defense Transportation (ODT) banning the carriage of strictly luxury cars without passenger revenue capacity. Those cars were replaced with sleepers.

A fifth consist made possible by the deliveries of new post war cars was added to the City of San Francisco in 1950.

As with the City of Los Angeles, many of the train's cars bore the names of locales around its namesake city, including Mission Dolores, the nickname given to San Francisco's Mission San Francisco de Asís.

Other railroad uses of the name City of San Francisco

The City of San Francisco name has been applied to a 10/6 sleeping car built by Pullman Standard in the early 1950s. The car is now owned by the Boone and Scenic Valley Railroad and operates on the line's dinner and first class trains. Union Pacific itself has a dome lounge car used on excursion and executive trains which carries the City of San Francisco name.

See also

References

  1. ^ Heath, Erle (1945). Seventy-Five Years of Progress: Historical Sketch of the Southern Pacific. San Francisco: Southern Pacific Railroad. pp. 38–39.
  2. Wayner 1972, p. 150
  3. "Railroads: The U.P. Trail". Time. July 30, 1945.
  4. 1942 Annual Report, The Chicago & Northwestern Railway Company, p. 7
  5. Beebe, Lucius Morris (1963). The Overland Limited. Berkeley, CA: Howell-North Books. p. 50.
  6. "Now ... Service to all the West". The Milwaukee Road Magazine, Vol. 43, No. 7. October 1955. pp. 4-6
  7. ICC Financial Docket No. 21946 (Filed February 5, 1962, decided July 6, 1962, served July 16, 1962)
  8. Southern Pacific Overland Route Time Tables (Form 4), July 16, 1962
  9. "San Francisco Zephyr route guide, 1975". Amtrak A History of America's Railroad. http://history.amtrak.com Archived January 25, 2016, at the Wayback Machine
  10. "Last passenger trains rolling across Wyoming". Spokesman-Review. July 13, 1983.
  11. Haine, Col. Edgar A. (1994). Train Wrecks. Cranbury, NJ: Cornwall Books. p. 107.
  12. Bull, Howard W. (January 1953). "'The Case of the Stranded Streamliner' The rescue of SP's snowbound 'City of San Francisco' at Yuba Pass, January 13-19, 1952". Trains & Travel. Vol 13, #3.
  13. Hartlaub, Peter (December 3, 2022). "1952 Sierra blizzard turned snowbound luxury train into frigid hell". San Francisco Chronicle.
  14. A railroad train "consist" is defined by 49 CFR §210.7 as "one or more locomotives coupled to a rail car or rail cars." Office of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration. Code of Federal Regulations, Title 49, Parts 200 to 299, Transportation. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office (2005), p. 59
  15. Wayner 1972, p. 142
  16. M-10004 CITY OF SAN FRANCISCO The Coach Yard.com
  17. Schafer, Mike; Welsh, Joe (1997). Classic American Streamliners. Osceola, Wisconsin: MotorBooks International. p. 17. ISBN 978-0-7603-0377-1.
  18. Strack, Don (1999). Diesels of the Union Pacific, 1934-1982, The Classic Era, Volume 1. Halifax, PA: Withers Publishing Co.
  19. DeNevi 1977, pp. 9–13
  20. Wayner 1972, pp. 139, 150
  21. "Southern Pacific Passenger Trains: The City of San Francisco" Espee.Railfan.net
  22. ^ DeNevi 1977, p. 15
  23. Wayner 1972, pp. 142–44
  24. The Official Guide of the Railways and Steam Navigation Lines of the United States, Puerto Rico, Canada, Mexico and Cuba. Vol. 70. New York: National Railway Publication Company. 1938. p. 39.
  25. "Railway Age" Vol. 111 (1941). New York: Simmons-Boardman Publishing Corporation. p. 305
  26. Wayner 1972, p. 152–53
  27. "NEW STREAMLINER FOR S.F.-CHICAGO RUN". San Francisco: Southern Pacific News Bureau. January 17, 1938
  28. Dubin, Arthur D. (1964). Some Classic Trains. Milwaukee: Kalmbach Books. pp. 186–189.
  29. Wayner 1972, p. 157
  30. President Franklin D. Roosevelt: "Executive Order 8989 Establishing the Office of Defense Transportation", December 18, 1941 Archived September 24, 2015, at the Wayback Machine The American Presidency Project, University of California, Santa Barbara
  31. Eastman, Joseph B. "The Office of Defense Transportation" Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, Vol. 230, Transportation: War and Postwar (Nov. 1943), pp. 1-4
  32. Wayner 1972, p. 163

Bibliography

  • DeNevi, Don (1977). Tragic Train: The City of San Francisco -- The Development and Historic Wreck of a Streamliner. Superior Publishing. ISBN 0875645259.
  • Solomon, Brian (2000). Union Pacific Railroad. Osceola, Wisconsin: MBI. ISBN 0-7603-0756-3.
  • Wayner, Robert J. (1972). Car Names, Numbers and Consists. New York: Wayner Publications.

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video icon Newsreel: Snowstorm strands dozens on Donner Pass - 1952
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