http://www.uprr.com/aboutup/history/passengr.shtmlI'm looking at a list of famous Union Pacific passenger trains, and am wondering if anybody here ever rode one of them. By the time I was around--and they disappeared very shortly after I was around--they were all streamlined, long yellow cars with a red stripe near the top.
The Union Pacific's
Overland Limited, Chicago to San Francisco, probably the most famous train in America, was before any of our time, unless someone here was born back in the 1930s.
I know, I know, everybody who knows passenger trains has their favorites, but the
Twentieth Century Limited of the New York Central, the
Chief (later replaced by the
Super Chief) of the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe, the
Broadway Limited of the Pennsylvania, the
Crescent of the Southern, the
Sunset Limited of the Southern Pacific, the
California Zephyr of the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy, the
Empire Builder of the Great Northern, the
North Coast Limited of the Northern Pacific, &c., &c., &c., apparently couldn't hold a candle to the
Overland Limited.
Overland Limited (Chicago-San Francisco, 1897)
Los Angeles Limited (Chicago-Lost Angeles, 1905)
Columbine (Chicago-Denver, beginning in the 1920s)
Portland Rose (Chicago-Portland, beginning in the 1920s)
Challenger (Chicago-Lost Angeles, beginning 1935)
City of Salina (Kansas City-Salina, 1934-1940)
City of Portland (Chicago-Portland, 1934-1971)
City of Los Angeles (Chicago-Lost Angeles, 1936-1971)
City of Denver (Chicago-Denver, 1936-1971)
City of San Francisco (Chicago-San Francisco, 1936-1971)
City of St. Louis (St. Louis-Lost Angeles, 1949-1971)
I vaguely recall riding the
City of Denver from North Platte, Nebraska, to Denver, round trip, but as I was just a wee lad, all I can recall from it is the dining-car; it was odd, dining in a moving restaurant.
Sometime later than that, I rode the
City of Portland from Kearney, Nebraska to Chicago, round trip, but as I was still just a wee lad, I wasn't paying attention, other than being impressed that we were in a three-room "suite" on a Pullman.
One time, while in college, I rode the storied
Broadway Limited from Chicago to Harrisburg, Pennsylvania (one way; I flew back to Nebraska), but by that time the train had long ago been taken over by Amtrak, and there wasn't anything special about it.
I rode trains all over Europe, none of them famous that I know of, other than the
Orient Express, Paris to the Swiss border.