CHIEF (PASSENGER TRAIN)

"Drumhead" logos such as these often adorned the ends of observation cars on the ''Chief''.

The '''Chief''' was one of the named passenger trains of the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway. Its route ran from Chicago, Illinois to Los Angeles, California. The ''Chief'' was inaugurated as an all-Pullman limited train to supplement the road's ''California Limited'', with an extra surcharge of USD $10.00 for an end-to-end fare. The heavyweight began its inaugural run from both ends of the line, simultaneously, on November 14, 1926, making the cross-country trip in the advertised 63 hours, a speed that brought the East and West one business day closer.
The ''Chief'' became an instant success, gaining the slogan "Extra Fast-Extra Fine-Extra Fare" though it failed to relieve traffic on the ''California Limited''. The ''Chief'' quickly became famous as a "rolling boudoir" for film stars and Hollywood executives alike. In time, the ''Chief'' would reduce its schedule to equal that of its cousins, the ''Super Chief'' and ''El Capitan,'' and would ultimately drop the extra fare requirement as well.
The ''Chief'' would have been the "crown jewel" of most railroads' passenger fleets. But it did not survive the national decline in passenger demand, and ended operations on May 15, 1968.



Contents
History
Timeline
Equipment used
References
See also
External links

History


Timeline

A scale replica of Locomotive #3460 and the ''Chief'' sits trackside at Stillwater, Oklahoma on Armistice Day, 1939. The sides of the cars are adorned with banners touting the many benefits of travelling to California on the Santa Fe.


1926: In order to supplement the ''California Limited'', Santa Fe inaugurates the all-Pullman, extra-fare limited heavyweight ''Chief'', running between Chicago and Los Angeles.

November 14, 1926: The ''Chief'' makes its initial run from both ends of the line, simultaneously.

1937: The Santa Fe announces that the ''Chief'' will receive all streamlined (lightweight) cars to replace the original heavyweights, and will run on a 50¾-hour schedule.

February 22, 1938: 10 new streamlined cars are placed into service.

1942: Consist size expands to 13 cars, and each logs 743 daily miles.

1945: The train receives a complete replacement of rolling stock, and the schedule is reduced to 45 hours.

March 27, 1947: New sleeping car service is inaugurated to go directly to San Diego.

December 14, 1953: The 45-hour schedule is reduced to 39 hours, 45 minutes eastbound and 39 hours, 30 minutes westbound.

January 10 1954: The fare surcharge is dropped after the Union Pacific reintroduces its all-coach ''Challenger'' train.

1954: Coaches are added to the ''Chief'' and dining service is limited to a lunch-counter coffee shop car. Round-end observation cars are removed, leaving the train without such equipment since its inauguration. The cars are blunt-ended at Pullman's Richmond, California facility and returned to service in the new ''San Francisco Chief's'' consists as Pullman lounges.

1956: Santa Fe transfers transcontinental sleeping car service from the ''Super Chief''.

September 5, 1956: A Sante Fe fireman throws a switch right front of the speeding ''Chief'' at Robinson, New Mexico causing it to enter a siding and collide head-on with the stationary eastbound ''Fast Mail Express.'' Both engine crews (save for the hapless fireman) are killed instantly, along with the onboard service crew of the ''Chief'', and several passengers.

May 15, 1968: The ''Chief'' ceases operations as a passenger train; Santa Fe will resurrect the name for its new fast "piggyback" freight train later that year.

★ Summer 1972: Amtrak revives the ''Chief'' for a three month period, utilizing the original passenger service schedule and train Nos. 19 & 20.

Equipment used


Santa Fe #3718, a type 4-8-2, pulls train No. 19, the ''Chief'', with an 8-car heavyweight consist west of La Junta, Colorado on March 18, 1934.

A typical heavyweight ''Chief'' consist in Winter, 1937:

4-6-4 "Hudson"-type Steam Locomotive #3451

★ Express Mail #2041

Railway Post Office #63

Baggage-Club-Lounge #1304 ''Chief Manakaja''

★ Lounge ''General Carr'' (10 sections, likely utilized as crew Dormitory space)

Fred Harvey Company Diner #1472

Sleeper ''Glen Ewen'' (6 compartments, 3 drawing rooms)

★ Sleeper ''Laurel Wood'' (8 sections, 2 compartments, 1 drawing room)

★ Sleeper-Observation-Lounge ''Crystal Bay'' (3 compartments, 2 drawing rooms)
A typical "mixed" ''Chief'' consist as of January 31, 1938 (the ''Chief'' regularly included heavyweight head-end cars in its consist, even into the late 1940s):

4-6-4 "Hudson"-type Steam Locomotive #3460 (also known as the "Blue Goose")

Railway Post Office #79 (heavyweight)

Baggage #1894 (heavyweight)
This photograph from a ''circa''-1940 brochure for the ''Chief'' and ''Super Chief'' shows passengers boarding the California-bound ''Chief'' at Dearborn Station in Chicago.


★ Baggage-Buffet-Lounge #1380 ''San Miguel'' (also included a barber shop)

Sleeper ''Otowi'' (17 roomettes)

★ Sleeper ''Ganado'' (14 sections)

★ Sleeper ''Toreva'' (8 sections, 2 compartments, 2 double bedrooms)

★ Sleeper ''Mankoweap'' (4 compartments, 2 drawing rooms, 4 Dbl. Bdrm.)

★ Dormitory-Club-Lounge #1373 ''Tesuque''

Fred Harvey Company Diner #1477

★ Sleeper ''Mohave'' (4 compartments, 2 drawing rooms, 4 double bedrooms)

★ Sleeper ''Sinyala'' (8 sections, 2 compartments, 2 double bedrooms)

★ Sleeper-Observation-Lounge ''Betahtakin'' (4 drawing rooms, 1 double bedroom)
''Transcontinental Sleeping Car Service'' was inaugurated in Spring 1946, and the ''Chief'' began regularly carrying three such cars in its consist: two originating in New York City, and the other in Washington, DC (most often these were smooth-sided cars painted two-tone Pullman grey). By the following summer, the ''Chief'' had retired all of its steam-driven motive power and was usually pulled behind A-B-B-A sets of EMD FT locomotives or A-B-A sets of the new ALCO PAs).
The streamlined Pullman observation-lounge car ''Coconino'', coupled to a heavyweight sleeper painted in two-tone Pullman grey, brings up the rear of the ''Chief'' at La Junta, Colorado on February 27, 1938.

The following is a typical all-lightweight ''Chief'' consist as of late 1947:

ALCO PA Locomotive #53L

ALCO PB Locomotive #53A

★ ALCO PA Locomotive #53B

Baggage #3452

Railway Post Office #88

★ Baggage #3438

★ Baggage-Buffet-Lounge #1381 ''San Marcial'' (also included a barber shop)

Sleeper ''Maito'' (17 roomettes)

★ Sleeper ''Verde Valley'' (6 sections, 6 roomettes, 4 double bedrooms)

★ Sleeper ''Imperial Park'' (4 compartments, 2 drawing rooms, 4 double bedrooms)

★ Sleeper ''Tapacipa'' (4 compartments, 2 drawing rooms, 4 double bedrooms)

★ Dormitory-Club-Lounge #1372 ''Picuris''

Fred Harvey Company Diner #1497

★ Sleeper ''Kayenta'' (4 compartments, 2 drawing rooms, 4 double bedrooms)

★ Sleeper ''Sinyala'' (8 sections, 2 compartments, 2 double bedrooms)

★ Sleeper ''Tolani'' (8 sections, 2 compartments, 2 double bedrooms)

★ Sleeper-Observation-Lounge ''Biltabito'' (4 drawing rooms, 1 double bedroom)
A typical ''Chief'' consist in the mid-1950s (note the absence of an observation car, which was eliminated as per Santa Fe policy):
One of Santa Fe's "Big Dome"-Lounge cars originally built by the Budd Company for ''El Capitan''; eventually, these cars would find their way into consists on nearly every main line. Unit #506 (shown above) was the only unit retained by the Santa Fe after 1971 (its designation changed to #60); all the rest have been sold to Auto-Train. The car "lives" today as a member of the BNSF Railway roster as BNSF31, the ''Bay View''.


EMD F7A Locomotive #46C

★ EMD F7B Locomotive #46B

EMD F3B Locomotive #19B

★ EMD F7B Locomotive #301A

★ EMD F7A Locomotive #301L

Baggage #3657

★ Baggage #3442

★ Baggage-Dormitory #1381

★ "Chair" car / Coach (44 "leg-rest" seats) #2938

★ "Chair" car / Coach (44 "leg-rest" seats) #2883

★ "Chair" car / Coach (44 "leg-rest" seats) #2909

★ Lunch Counter-Diner #1568

★ "Chair" car / Coach (44 "leg-rest" seats) #2848

★ "Chair" car / Coach (44 "leg-rest" seats) #2831

★ "Big Dome"-Lounge #509

Fred Harvey Company Diner #1491

Sleeper ''Blue Island'' (10 roomettes, 2 compartments, 3 double bedrooms)


★ Sleeper ''Pine Dale'' (10 roomettes, 6 double bedrooms)

★ Sleeper ''Palm Star'' (10 roomettes, 6 double bedrooms)

★ Sleeper ''Citrus Valley'' (6 sections, 6 roomettes, 4 double bedrooms) (ran from Chicago, Illinois — Denver, Colorado; switched out at La Junta, Colorado).

★ Sleeper ''Estancia Valley'' (6 sections, 6 roomettes, 4 double bedrooms) (ran from Denver, Colorado — Los Angeles, California; switched in at La Junta, Colorado).
:
★ NOTE:
The nineteen "10-2-3" sleepers in the ''Blue'' series had a floorplan configuration unique to the Santa Fe.

References



Santa Fe...Steel Rails through California, Duke, Donald and Stan Kistler, , , Golden West Books, San Marino, CA, 1963,

Santa Fe: The Railroad Gateway to the American West, Volume Two, Duke, Donald, , , Golden West Books, San Marino, CA, 1997, ISBN 0-87095-110-6

A Quarter Century of Santa Fe Consists, Frailey, Fred W., , , RPC Publications, Godfrey, IL, 1974,

Santa Fe: The Chief Way, Strein, Robert, et al, , , New Mexico Magazine, 2001, ISBN 0-937206-71-7

Car Names, Numbers and Consists, Wayner, Robert J., ed., , , Wayner Publications, New York, NY, 1972,

Santa Fe Streamliners: The Chiefs and Their Tribesman, Zimmerman, Karl, , , Quadrant Press, Inc., New York, NY, 1987, ISBN 0-915276-41-0

See also



Passenger train service on the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway

External links



California State Railway Museum

Santa Fe Railway Historical & Modeling Society
A map depicting the '"Grand Canyon Route"' of the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway ''circa'' 1901.

The ''Chief'', powered by a trio of Alco "PA" units, passes near Littleton, Colorado on July 15, 1951.


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