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Utah Division (D&RGW)

The Utah Division of the former Denver & Rio Grande Western Railroad (D&RGW) is a rail line that connects Grand Junction, Colorado and Salt Lake City, Utah (formerly Ogden) in the Western United States. It is now incorporated into the Union Pacific Railroad (UP) system as part of the Central Corridor. The modern Union Pacific has split the line into two subdivisions for operational purposes, the Green River Subdivision between Grand Junction and Helper, Utah and the Provo Subdivision from Helper to Salt Lake City.[2] Daily passenger service is provided by Amtrak's California Zephyr; the BNSF Railway and Utah Railway have trackage rights over the line.

Utah Division
Denver & Rio Grande Western Railroad
Castle Gate in the Price Canyon, ca. 1929
Overview
LocaleUtah, western Colorado
Dates of operation1882–1992
SuccessorSouthern Pacific Lines
Technical
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge; originally 3 ft (914 mm)
Length332.3 miles (534.8 km)[1]

The line dates back to the early 1880s, when the predecessors of the D&RGW completed a 3 ft (914 mm) narrow gauge line through the Royal Gorge, over Marshall Pass, through the Black Canyon of the Gunnison, across the Utah desert, and over Soldier Summit. It was rebuilt to standard gauge in 1890, and has since remained a through line, often serving as parts of larger networks including the Gould transcontinental system, Southern Pacific, and now the Union Pacific.

The division also included a number of branch lines, the longest being the Marysvale Branch through the Sevier Valley.

Route description edit

 

History edit

Construction: 1870s to 1883 edit

When the Denver & Rio Grande Railway (D&RG) was chartered in 1870, it had the goal of connecting Denver with El Paso, Texas.[3] But when it reached Raton Pass in 1878, it found that the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad had beaten it to the best crossing into New Mexico.[4] After several years of financially draining battle, the two companies came to an agreement in 1880, and the D&RG, under the direction of William J. Palmer, set its sights on Salt Lake City.[5]

In the meantime, the Utah and Pleasant Valley Railway (U&PV) had built a 3-foot (914mm) narrow gauge line from the coal mines in the Pleasant Valley to Provo on the Union Pacific Railroad-controlled Utah Southern Railroad. The company was incorporated on December 11, 1875, under the general laws of Utah[6] by owners of land in the valley. The company began grading in April 1877 and track laying on August 29, 1878, driving the last spike between Pleasant Valley and Springville on November 5, 1879. The short distance in the Utah Valley from Springville to the larger city of Provo, which closely paralleled the Utah Southern, opened in October 1880. Investor Charles W. Scofield of New York, who was already in control of two other narrow gauge mining roads - the Bingham Canyon and Camp Floyd Rail Road since 1873 and the Wasatch and Jordan Valley Railroad since 1875 - acquired the U&PV in October 1878.[7]

The U&PV began at a mine in the Pleasant Valley south of Scofield,[8] heading north along the present Pleasant Valley Subdivision to the Scofield Reservoir. The old grade has been flooded until it leaves the lake to the north, rising to an elevation of 7,967 feet (2,428 m) above sea level before descending, via a pair of switchbacks, to Starvation Creek. The valley of that creek took the railroad to the Spanish Fork Canyon, and the later D&RGW, at Tucker. The remainder of the U&PV is now, for the most part, still operated, as it follows Spanish Fork Canyon into the Utah Valley.[9]

Associates of Palmer incorporated the Sevier Valley Railway in Utah on December 7, 1880,[6] with a route paralleling the Union Pacific's lines from the railroad center of Ogden south through Salt Lake City and Provo to Nephi, and then continuing through Salt Creek Canyon and the Sanpete Valley to Salina in the Sevier Valley. There it would split, one line continuing south to the Arizona state line, and the other turning east through Salina Canyon and across the Castle Valley to the Grand (Colorado) River, following it to meet the westward-building D&RG at the Colorado border. To counter this threat to its monopoly, the Union Pacific set up the Utah Southern and Castle Valley Railroad less than two weeks later to extend its Utah Southern through Salina Canyon to the Castle Valley. In another week, when UP workers reached the canyon, the Sevier Valley had already begun grading.[7]

On May 26, 1881, D&RG interests incorporated the Salt Lake and Park City Railway,[6] a branch from Salt Lake City east to Park City and Coalville.[10] The lines of this company and the Sevier Valley were included in the far-reaching charter for the Denver & Rio Grande Western Railway, incorporated on July 21, 1881[6] and immediately consolidated with the others. Palmer knew that it would be important to first complete the line to Ogden, where the Central Pacific Railroad extended west to California. It was rumored as early as April 1881 that the D&RG had gained control of the U&PV and would bypass Salina Canyon, instead using a shorter route northwesterly from Castle Valley to a connection with that road,[11] and Palmer confirmed this in September. (The original grading through Castle Valley was never used for a railroad, although in the 1910s it was briefly part of the Midland Trail, now US-6.) The D&RGW bought the assets of the Wasatch and Jordan Valley Railroad, which had merged with the Bingham Canon and Camp Floyd Rail Road, at foreclosure on December 31, 1881, adding to its system two profitable branches from Midvale to Bingham and Little Cottonwood Canyons.[7]

The D&RGW similarly acquired the U&PV's property on June 14, 1882, and at about that time began operating trains between Salt Lake City and Pleasant Valley, using new trackage north of Provo. The D&RG of Colorado leased the D&RGW of Utah on August 1,[12] allowing the former to operate the latter for a payment of 40% of gross receipts. The difficult double switchback on the original U&PV was bypassed by a new connection to the under-construction D&RGW at Colton on November 23, 1882, as well as the new line from Colton over Soldier Summit to Tucker.[13] D&RG and D&RGW crews met at a point now known as Desert, 14 miles (23 km) west of Green River, on March 30, 1883, and trains began running between Denver and Salt Lake City several days later.[14] (Although the D&RG built the line from the state line to Desert, it was owned by the D&RGW.[15]) Final completion to Ogden in May was delayed for several days by the Union Pacific's refusal to let the D&RGW cross, but on May 19 the D&RGW was complete.[7] Palmer soon resigned as D&RG president, since the directors were opposed to further expansion, but remained in control of the leased D&RGW.[16]

Retrenchment and turmoil: 1883 to 1901 edit

With the line into Utah complete, the D&RG system consisted of a narrow gauge main line from Denver to Ogden, passing through or over Colorado Springs, Pueblo, the Royal Gorge, Salida, Marshall Pass, Gunnison, the Black Canyon of the Gunnison, Montrose, Grand Junction, Green River, and Salt Lake City. It included numerous branches, but only three west of Grand Junction - to Pleasant Valley, Bingham Canyon, and Little Cottonwood Canyon.[8] The main line began by following the valley of the Grand (Colorado) River west out of Grand Junction, but curved away at Mack to avoid Ruby Canyon. Some steep grades and sharp curves carried the original line over the highlands north of the river, crossing the state line and continuing southwesterly and westerly to Green River, Utah. Curving northwest around the Beckwith Plateau, the railroad crossed the Price River at Woodside, where it began to follow that river through its valleys and canyons. Almost immediately, due to flooding, the railroad had to be removed from the canyon between Grassy Trail (south of Cedar) and Farnham (southeast of Wellington), though it remained alongside the river from Grassy Trail southeast to Woodside until bypassed by the present standard gauge alignment. Continuing on, the line passed through the Price Canyon, including the Castle Gate rock formation, as it rose to the top of the Wasatch Range at Soldier Summit. The Spanish Fork Canyon took the line down into the Utah Valley, with some 4% grades near the top before it met the earlier U&PV at Tucker. Through the Utah Valley and adjacent Salt Lake Valley, connected by the Jordan Narrows, the D&RGW's line closely paralleled a UP line, serving many of the valleys' populated areas. The final stretch generally followed the Great Salt Lake's shore to Ogden, where it connected to the Central Pacific Railroad.[9][17]

The expansion resulted in a large debt that the D&RG was unable to pay the interest on. D&RGW president Palmer and D&RG president Frederick Lovejoy got into an argument over the management and payment of rental for the leased D&RGW. Unable to break the lease, Lovejoy ordered the tracks torn up at the state line in retaliation, costing both railroads the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad's through traffic. The D&RG entered receivership on July 12, 1884 and the D&RGW on August 12, with D&RGW superintendent W. H. Bancroft being appointed to the Utah company.[18] The two companies resumed friendly relations, and after the D&RG reorganized on July 14, 1886,[6] it terminated the lease of the D&RGW on July 31, giving the latter company significant amounts of rolling stock.[19] Palmer returned to his position as D&RGW president, the company having been released from receivership.[20]

Now independent, the D&RGW looked to the east, where the standard gauge Colorado Midland Railway was building west from Colorado Springs with the intent of entering Utah. Palmer realized that if he did not widen his gauge and cooperate with the Midland, he might soon have new competition. To raise the money to convert the line, which would require about 100 miles (160 km) of new railroad where the existing grade was too steep or curvy, he incorporated a new Rio Grande Western Railway. (Palmer had initially proposed the name "Utah and Colorado Railway" for the new company.[21]) The State Line and Denver Railway was incorporated May 16, 1889[6] with the power to build east to Glenwood Springs, Colorado, then the terminus of the Midland. That same day, it was consolidated with the old Denver & Rio Grande Western Railway, with articles of incorporation filed in both states on June 24.[22]

Construction began immediately, the line being converted from Ogden to Salt Lake City by mid-November 1889,[23] to Provo on March 7, 1890,[24] and the rest of the way to Grand Junction on June 10.[25] The line was completely relocated out of the canyon of the Price River from Grassy Trail to Woodside, and into the Ruby Canyon of the Grand (Colorado) River from Whitehouse to Crevasse, Colorado. Beyond Crevasse, the RGW leased the D&RG track to Grand Junction in December 1889 and subsequently widened its gauge. The Rio Grande Junction Railway, owned jointly by the D&RG and Midland, was completed to Grand Junction on November 15, 1890, and through service began the next day over the RGW and both eastern roads, the D&RG having completed its standard gauge line over Tennessee Pass.[26] All branches were also converted, except for short 3 ft (914 mm) gauge sections at the ends of the lines into Bingham and Little Cottonwood Canyons.[27]

 
Ca. 1900 map of the Colorado Midland Railway (red), showing its connections to the Rio Grande Western Railway (black, left) and Colorado and Southern Railway (black, lower right)

For the next ten years, the RGW operated as an independent standard gauge bridge line connecting Grand Junction to Salt Lake City and Ogden, with branches to sources of valuable minerals. Through its new subsidiary, the Utah Central Railroad, the RGW acquired several Salt Lake City-area lines in 1898, finally adding to its system the branch to Park City through Parley's Canyon that had been chartered in 1881. The RGW teamed up with the Colorado and Southern Railway, which had recently been split from the bankrupt Union Pacific Railroad, and stretched north–south from Wyoming through eastern Colorado into Texas, to jointly buy control of the connecting Colorado Midland Railway. RGW stock prices rose, delaying a takeover by the D&RG until George Gould arrived. Gould, owner of the Missouri Pacific Railroad (MP), wished to create a transcontinental railroad system, and identified the D&RG/RGW as the best route west into Utah. The MP began buying D&RG stock in 1900, and the D&RG did the same with the RGW. Palmer still owned a controlling interest in the RGW, but he came to an agreement to sell the company to Gould, and Gould management, including new president Edward Turner Jeffery, took over on July 1, 1901.[28]

Gould control and aftermath: 1901 to present edit

In 1901, the Union Pacific Railroad gained control of the Southern Pacific Railroad, which owned the Central Pacific Railway, the portion of the First transcontinental railroad west of Ogden. Searching for another route to the Pacific, Gould incorporated the Castle Valley Railway as a cutoff from the RGW's main line near Farnham to the Marysvale Branch at Salina and beyond to the under-construction San Pedro, Los Angeles and Salt Lake Railroad (Salt Lake Route) at Milford. However, the Union Pacific gained control of the Salt Lake Route in mid-1903, forcing Gould to construct an entirely new line to California. The financing of the Western Pacific Railway (WP) would take almost all the revenues of the MP, D&RG, and RGW, leaving very little for maintenance, let alone improvements. The D&RG and RGW, operated as a single system since 1901, were merged as the Denver & Rio Grande Western Railroad on July 31, 1908,[6] finally combining the two halves of the Denver-Ogden line into one railroad company.[29]

Improvement of the standard gauge main line through Utah to relieve congestion had begun in 1898, when the RGW added a second track to the steep 4% grade to Tucker on the west side of Soldier Summit. The shallower east-side grade was similarly doubled to Colton in 1906, and further to Kyune and from Castle Gate to Helper in 1909. Construction began on a new low-grade line west of the summit in 1912, when the D&RG added a track between Detour (the west end of the realignment) and Thistle. The new line, with a double hairpin curve, was completed the next year, as was a second track between Kyune and Castle Gate, completing a double-track line between Thistle and Helper,[30] with a maximum grade of 2.4% on the east slope and 2.0% on the west.[31] Local competition arrived in 1912, when the United States Smelting, Refining and Mining Company, which owned coal mines southwest of Price, organized the Utah Railway (originally the Utah Coal Railway). U.S. Smelting objected to the D&RG's charging of higher freight rates due to the mines' location on a branch line, and began to build its own line over Soldier Summit into the Utah Valley. The two companies reached an agreement in November 1913, where the D&RG would operate the Utah Railway between a junction near Castle Gate and the mines, and the unfinished line between Thistle and Provo would be completed as a second track.[32] This arrangement began with the completion of the road in 1914, and the D&RG now had a double-track line between Provo and Helper. Three years later, the Utah Railway began independent operations between the mines and Provo under a reciprocal trackage rights arrangement that has persisted to the present, where each company allows the other to use its half of the double-track line.[33]

The WP was completed in 1910, but its construction had given the D&RG enormous debts. After periods of ownership by Eastern U.S. bankers, the courts appointed two local trustees in 1935. The system was slowly rebuilt into a profitable enterprise, and in 1947 it was reorganized as the *Denver & Rio Grande Western Railroad.[34] After buying the Southern Pacific Transportation Company in 1988 and adopting the latter's name,[35] the D&RGW became part of the Union Pacific Railroad in 1996.[36]

With the level of the Great Salt Lake rising in the mid-1980s, the D&RGW and UP came to a trackage rights agreement, where the D&RGW would use the UP's higher line between Salt Lake City and Ogden, and in exchange the UP could use the D&RGW between Salt Lake City and Provo, a better-designed route than the UP's.[35] The majority of the ex-D&RGW north of Salt Lake City is now the Denver & Rio Grande Western Rail Trail, while the UP has sold its Sharp Subdivision north of Provo to the Utah Transit Authority, which operates the TRAX Blue Line (light rail) along the corridor, as well as contracts with the Salt Lake City Southern Railroad for freight.

Branches edit

A long branch was begun in 1890 as 3 ft (914 mm) gauge and widened in 1891, extending south from Thistle up Thistle Creek and down the San Pitch River to Manti. It was extended south to Sevier in 1891, via the Sevier River, by the Sevier Railway, and that same year the Tintic Range Railway built from Springville southwest and west to Eureka in the Tintic Mountains. The RGW organized both of these companies to be owned by RGW stockholders, but out of the control of RGW bondholders. The Panic of 1893 stopped new construction until 1896, when the Sevier Railway was extended farther south to Belknap.[37]

The Ballard & Thompson Railroad between Thompson Springs and Sego was purchased in 1913 by the D&RGW and became the Sego Branch.[38]

In the future, a new rail line into the Uintah Basin, currently under study by the state of Utah, may be constructed, branching off the existing line near Soldier Summit.[39]

Presidents edit

This is a list of presidents (and equivalents) of the Utah company before it was merged into the D&RG in 1908. For post-1908 presidents, see Denver & Rio Grande Western Railroad Presidents.

Station listing edit

County Location MP[1] Name Notes
Mesa Grand Junction 450.0 Grand Junction Junction of Tennessee Pass Line/Moffat Line (1890–present) and Gunnison Line (1882–present)
451.7 Durham
Fruita 460.5 Fruita
468.9 Mack Junction of Uintah Railway (1904–1939)
473.1 Ruby
478.0 Shale
483.3 Utaline Siding at the Utah-Colorado state line
Grand 488.4 Westwater
498.1 Agate
504.4 Cisco
510.5 Whitehouse
515.6 Elba
520.7 Sagers
528.1 Thompson Junction with Ballard and Thompson Railroad (1912–1950)
533.8 Brendel Junction with Cane Creek Branch (1962–present)
540.4 Floy
546.9 Solitude
Emery Green River 555.2 Green River
561.5 Sphinx
567.6 Desert
574.2 Cliff
581.4 Woodside
586.6 Grassy
593.1 Cedar
602.9 Mounds Junction with Sunnyside Branch (1899–present)
Carbon 611.3 Wash
Wellington 613.0 Wellington
Price 619.1 Price
622.1 Maxwell
Spring Glen Junction with Kenilworth and Helper Railway (1907–1926)
Helper 626.4 Helper Junction with Kenilworth Branch (1926-1960s) and Spring Canyon Branch (1912-1970s)
628.8 Utah Railway Junction Junction with Utah Railway (1914–present)
630.4 Castle Gate
632.0 Lynn
Utah 638.9 Kyune Junction with Jennings and Potter's Quarry Branch (1892–1917)
644.8 Colton Junction with Pleasant Valley Branch (1882–present)
Wasatch 651.4 Summit
Utah 661.0 Gilluly Name of the horseshoe curves at this siding
Tucker Original junction with Pleasant Valley Branch (1882)
665.6 Detour Refers to this being the western end of a reroute up the grade to Soldier Summmit, the old grade is today used by U.S. Route 6
672.3 Narrows
676.7 Rio
681.0 Thistle Junction with Marysvale Branch (1890–1983)
684.4 Castilla
Springville 695.8 Springville Junction with Tintic Branch (1891–present)
698.6 Ironton
Provo 701.1 Provo Junction with Orem Branch (1946-1970s) and Provo Canyon Branch (1899–1970)
Orem 705.7 Lakota
707.1 Geneva
708.4 Pipe Mill
American Fork 715.0 American Fork
Lehi 720.3 Mesa
Salt Lake Draper 728.6 Riverton
Midvale 734.9 Midvale Junction with Bingham Branch (1882–present) and Little Cottonwood Branch (1882–1964)
South Salt Lake 742.0 Roper Former name of the freight yard still at this location, Junction with Park City Branch (1900–2005)
Salt Lake City 745.1 Salt Lake City
745.5 Grant Tower
748.7 Becks
Davis North Salt Lake 750.3 North Salt Lake
West Bountiful 753.9 Woods Cross
Farmington Farmington Junction with Lake Park Branch (1887–1925)
Clearfield 770.4 Clearfield
Weber Roy Roy Junction with Hooper Branch (1905–1959)
Ogden 779.3 Sugar Works
782.0 Ogden

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Denver & Rio Grande Western Railroad Company, (Employee) System Time-Table No. 6, effective October 30, 1983
  2. ^ , effective February 1, 2000 (includes a list of subdivisions from the first post-merger timetable in 1998)
  3. ^ LeMassena, p. 15
  4. ^ LeMassena, p. 22
  5. ^ LeMassena, pp. 26, 30
  6. ^ a b c d e f g Interstate Commerce Commission, 26 Val. Rep. 733 (1929), p. 805: Denver and Rio Grande Railroad Company
  7. ^ a b c d Clarence A. Reeder, Jr., The History of Utah's Railroads, 1869-1883 (1970 doctoral dissertation), published 1981 by Arno Press, ISBN 0-405-13759-1
  8. ^ a b Rand McNally & Company, Denver and Rio Grande Railway System, 1886
  9. ^ a b Google Maps street maps and USGS topographic maps, accessed July 2008 via ACME Mapper
  10. ^ Charter of the Salt Lake and Park City Railway: George A. Lowe, primary stockholder, was a D&RG man
  11. ^ Deseret News, Sevier Valley Railroad, April 27, 1881, p. 9
  12. ^ LeMassena, p. 83
  13. ^ Salt Lake Daily Tribune, November 23, 1882
  14. ^ Ogden Daily Herald, Connection Completed, March 31, 1883
  15. ^ LeMassena, p. 85
  16. ^ LeMassena, p. 41
  17. ^ LeMassena, pp. 41, 83, 85, 367
  18. ^ Salt Lake Daily Tribune, Receiver Bancroft, August 13, 1884, p. 4
  19. ^ LeMassena, pp. 43, 46, 51, 85, 87
  20. ^ Ogden Daily Herald, Changed Hands, July 30, 1886, p. 4
  21. ^ Robert M. Ormes, Railroads and the Rockies: A Record of Lines in and Near Colorado, 1963, OCLC 1557664, p. 389
  22. ^ LeMassena, pp. 87, 89, 255
  23. ^ Salt Lake Daily Tribune, New R. G. W. Time Card, November 14, 1889, p. 4: "[one of the new broad gauge passenger engines] is hauling trains Nos. 7 and 8 between here and Ogden"
  24. ^ Salt Lake Tribune, Broad Gauged at Last, March 8, 1890, p. 5
  25. ^ Ogden Standard, Narrow Gauge No More, June 10, 1890, p. 2
  26. ^ Salt Lake Tribune, Rumbles of the Railroad, November 16, 1890, p. 5
  27. ^ LeMassena, pp. 57, 87, 89, 91-92
  28. ^ LeMassena, pp. 70, 74, 76, 101, 107, 109, 111
  29. ^ LeMassena, pp. 76-81, 111-115
  30. ^ LeMassena, pp. 101, 115, 123, 125
  31. ^ Condensed Profile of the D&RGWRR System 2008-05-09 at the Wayback Machine, 1923, 1934, and 1970
  32. ^ Eastern Utah Advocate, Utah Railroad Abandons Work, November 6, 1913, p. 3
  33. ^ LeMassena, pp. 125, 129
  34. ^ LeMassena, pp. 123, 149, 163
  35. ^ a b Don Strack, Ogden Rails: Denver & Rio Grande Western (Union Pacific Historical Society), 2005, ISBN 1-932704-04-3
  36. ^ Union Pacific Railroad, Chronological History 2006-08-10 at the Wayback Machine, accessed August 2008
  37. ^ LeMassena, pp. 89-101
  38. ^ Don Strack. "Sego Mine". Utah Rails—Utah Fuels the West: Utah's coal industry and the railroads that served it. Retrieved July 10, 2008.
  39. ^ "Utah looks to build new railroad to tap oil boom". Trains Magazine. 9 October 2014. Retrieved 26 October 2014.
  • R. A. LeMassena (1974). Rio Grande ... to the Pacific!. Sundance Publications. ISBN 0-913582-09-3.

External links edit

  Media related to Utah Division (D&RGW) at Wikimedia Commons

utah, division, utah, division, former, denver, grande, western, railroad, rail, line, that, connects, grand, junction, colorado, salt, lake, city, utah, formerly, ogden, western, united, states, incorporated, into, union, pacific, railroad, system, part, cent. The Utah Division of the former Denver amp Rio Grande Western Railroad D amp RGW is a rail line that connects Grand Junction Colorado and Salt Lake City Utah formerly Ogden in the Western United States It is now incorporated into the Union Pacific Railroad UP system as part of the Central Corridor The modern Union Pacific has split the line into two subdivisions for operational purposes the Green River Subdivision between Grand Junction and Helper Utah and the Provo Subdivision from Helper to Salt Lake City 2 Daily passenger service is provided by Amtrak s California Zephyr the BNSF Railway and Utah Railway have trackage rights over the line Utah DivisionDenver amp Rio Grande Western RailroadCastle Gate in the Price Canyon ca 1929OverviewLocaleUtah western ColoradoDates of operation1882 1992SuccessorSouthern Pacific LinesTechnicalTrack gauge4 ft 8 1 2 in 1 435 mm standard gauge originally 3 ft 914 mm Length332 3 miles 534 8 km 1 The line dates back to the early 1880s when the predecessors of the D amp RGW completed a 3 ft 914 mm narrow gauge line through the Royal Gorge over Marshall Pass through the Black Canyon of the Gunnison across the Utah desert and over Soldier Summit It was rebuilt to standard gauge in 1890 and has since remained a through line often serving as parts of larger networks including the Gould transcontinental system Southern Pacific and now the Union Pacific The division also included a number of branch lines the longest being the Marysvale Branch through the Sevier Valley Contents 1 Route description 2 History 2 1 Construction 1870s to 1883 2 2 Retrenchment and turmoil 1883 to 1901 2 3 Gould control and aftermath 1901 to present 2 4 Branches 3 Presidents 4 Station listing 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksRoute description editThis section is empty You can help by adding to it July 2010 nbsp History editConstruction 1870s to 1883 edit When the Denver amp Rio Grande Railway D amp RG was chartered in 1870 it had the goal of connecting Denver with El Paso Texas 3 But when it reached Raton Pass in 1878 it found that the Atchison Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad had beaten it to the best crossing into New Mexico 4 After several years of financially draining battle the two companies came to an agreement in 1880 and the D amp RG under the direction of William J Palmer set its sights on Salt Lake City 5 In the meantime the Utah and Pleasant Valley Railway U amp PV had built a 3 foot 914mm narrow gauge line from the coal mines in the Pleasant Valley to Provo on the Union Pacific Railroad controlled Utah Southern Railroad The company was incorporated on December 11 1875 under the general laws of Utah 6 by owners of land in the valley The company began grading in April 1877 and track laying on August 29 1878 driving the last spike between Pleasant Valley and Springville on November 5 1879 The short distance in the Utah Valley from Springville to the larger city of Provo which closely paralleled the Utah Southern opened in October 1880 Investor Charles W Scofield of New York who was already in control of two other narrow gauge mining roads the Bingham Canyon and Camp Floyd Rail Road since 1873 and the Wasatch and Jordan Valley Railroad since 1875 acquired the U amp PV in October 1878 7 The U amp PV began at a mine in the Pleasant Valley south of Scofield 8 heading north along the present Pleasant Valley Subdivision to the Scofield Reservoir The old grade has been flooded until it leaves the lake to the north rising to an elevation of 7 967 feet 2 428 m above sea level before descending via a pair of switchbacks to Starvation Creek The valley of that creek took the railroad to the Spanish Fork Canyon and the later D amp RGW at Tucker The remainder of the U amp PV is now for the most part still operated as it follows Spanish Fork Canyon into the Utah Valley 9 Associates of Palmer incorporated the Sevier Valley Railway in Utah on December 7 1880 6 with a route paralleling the Union Pacific s lines from the railroad center of Ogden south through Salt Lake City and Provo to Nephi and then continuing through Salt Creek Canyon and the Sanpete Valley to Salina in the Sevier Valley There it would split one line continuing south to the Arizona state line and the other turning east through Salina Canyon and across the Castle Valley to the Grand Colorado River following it to meet the westward building D amp RG at the Colorado border To counter this threat to its monopoly the Union Pacific set up the Utah Southern and Castle Valley Railroad less than two weeks later to extend its Utah Southern through Salina Canyon to the Castle Valley In another week when UP workers reached the canyon the Sevier Valley had already begun grading 7 On May 26 1881 D amp RG interests incorporated the Salt Lake and Park City Railway 6 a branch from Salt Lake City east to Park City and Coalville 10 The lines of this company and the Sevier Valley were included in the far reaching charter for the Denver amp Rio Grande Western Railway incorporated on July 21 1881 6 and immediately consolidated with the others Palmer knew that it would be important to first complete the line to Ogden where the Central Pacific Railroad extended west to California It was rumored as early as April 1881 that the D amp RG had gained control of the U amp PV and would bypass Salina Canyon instead using a shorter route northwesterly from Castle Valley to a connection with that road 11 and Palmer confirmed this in September The original grading through Castle Valley was never used for a railroad although in the 1910s it was briefly part of the Midland Trail now US 6 The D amp RGW bought the assets of the Wasatch and Jordan Valley Railroad which had merged with the Bingham Canon and Camp Floyd Rail Road at foreclosure on December 31 1881 adding to its system two profitable branches from Midvale to Bingham and Little Cottonwood Canyons 7 The D amp RGW similarly acquired the U amp PV s property on June 14 1882 and at about that time began operating trains between Salt Lake City and Pleasant Valley using new trackage north of Provo The D amp RG of Colorado leased the D amp RGW of Utah on August 1 12 allowing the former to operate the latter for a payment of 40 of gross receipts The difficult double switchback on the original U amp PV was bypassed by a new connection to the under construction D amp RGW at Colton on November 23 1882 as well as the new line from Colton over Soldier Summit to Tucker 13 D amp RG and D amp RGW crews met at a point now known as Desert 14 miles 23 km west of Green River on March 30 1883 and trains began running between Denver and Salt Lake City several days later 14 Although the D amp RG built the line from the state line to Desert it was owned by the D amp RGW 15 Final completion to Ogden in May was delayed for several days by the Union Pacific s refusal to let the D amp RGW cross but on May 19 the D amp RGW was complete 7 Palmer soon resigned as D amp RG president since the directors were opposed to further expansion but remained in control of the leased D amp RGW 16 Retrenchment and turmoil 1883 to 1901 edit With the line into Utah complete the D amp RG system consisted of a narrow gauge main line from Denver to Ogden passing through or over Colorado Springs Pueblo the Royal Gorge Salida Marshall Pass Gunnison the Black Canyon of the Gunnison Montrose Grand Junction Green River and Salt Lake City It included numerous branches but only three west of Grand Junction to Pleasant Valley Bingham Canyon and Little Cottonwood Canyon 8 The main line began by following the valley of the Grand Colorado River west out of Grand Junction but curved away at Mack to avoid Ruby Canyon Some steep grades and sharp curves carried the original line over the highlands north of the river crossing the state line and continuing southwesterly and westerly to Green River Utah Curving northwest around the Beckwith Plateau the railroad crossed the Price River at Woodside where it began to follow that river through its valleys and canyons Almost immediately due to flooding the railroad had to be removed from the canyon between Grassy Trail south of Cedar and Farnham southeast of Wellington though it remained alongside the river from Grassy Trail southeast to Woodside until bypassed by the present standard gauge alignment Continuing on the line passed through the Price Canyon including the Castle Gate rock formation as it rose to the top of the Wasatch Range at Soldier Summit The Spanish Fork Canyon took the line down into the Utah Valley with some 4 grades near the top before it met the earlier U amp PV at Tucker Through the Utah Valley and adjacent Salt Lake Valley connected by the Jordan Narrows the D amp RGW s line closely paralleled a UP line serving many of the valleys populated areas The final stretch generally followed the Great Salt Lake s shore to Ogden where it connected to the Central Pacific Railroad 9 17 The expansion resulted in a large debt that the D amp RG was unable to pay the interest on D amp RGW president Palmer and D amp RG president Frederick Lovejoy got into an argument over the management and payment of rental for the leased D amp RGW Unable to break the lease Lovejoy ordered the tracks torn up at the state line in retaliation costing both railroads the Chicago Burlington and Quincy Railroad s through traffic The D amp RG entered receivership on July 12 1884 and the D amp RGW on August 12 with D amp RGW superintendent W H Bancroft being appointed to the Utah company 18 The two companies resumed friendly relations and after the D amp RG reorganized on July 14 1886 6 it terminated the lease of the D amp RGW on July 31 giving the latter company significant amounts of rolling stock 19 Palmer returned to his position as D amp RGW president the company having been released from receivership 20 Now independent the D amp RGW looked to the east where the standard gauge Colorado Midland Railway was building west from Colorado Springs with the intent of entering Utah Palmer realized that if he did not widen his gauge and cooperate with the Midland he might soon have new competition To raise the money to convert the line which would require about 100 miles 160 km of new railroad where the existing grade was too steep or curvy he incorporated a new Rio Grande Western Railway Palmer had initially proposed the name Utah and Colorado Railway for the new company 21 The State Line and Denver Railway was incorporated May 16 1889 6 with the power to build east to Glenwood Springs Colorado then the terminus of the Midland That same day it was consolidated with the old Denver amp Rio Grande Western Railway with articles of incorporation filed in both states on June 24 22 Construction began immediately the line being converted from Ogden to Salt Lake City by mid November 1889 23 to Provo on March 7 1890 24 and the rest of the way to Grand Junction on June 10 25 The line was completely relocated out of the canyon of the Price River from Grassy Trail to Woodside and into the Ruby Canyon of the Grand Colorado River from Whitehouse to Crevasse Colorado Beyond Crevasse the RGW leased the D amp RG track to Grand Junction in December 1889 and subsequently widened its gauge The Rio Grande Junction Railway owned jointly by the D amp RG and Midland was completed to Grand Junction on November 15 1890 and through service began the next day over the RGW and both eastern roads the D amp RG having completed its standard gauge line over Tennessee Pass 26 All branches were also converted except for short 3 ft 914 mm gauge sections at the ends of the lines into Bingham and Little Cottonwood Canyons 27 nbsp Ca 1900 map of the Colorado Midland Railway red showing its connections to the Rio Grande Western Railway black left and Colorado and Southern Railway black lower right For the next ten years the RGW operated as an independent standard gauge bridge line connecting Grand Junction to Salt Lake City and Ogden with branches to sources of valuable minerals Through its new subsidiary the Utah Central Railroad the RGW acquired several Salt Lake City area lines in 1898 finally adding to its system the branch to Park City through Parley s Canyon that had been chartered in 1881 The RGW teamed up with the Colorado and Southern Railway which had recently been split from the bankrupt Union Pacific Railroad and stretched north south from Wyoming through eastern Colorado into Texas to jointly buy control of the connecting Colorado Midland Railway RGW stock prices rose delaying a takeover by the D amp RG until George Gould arrived Gould owner of the Missouri Pacific Railroad MP wished to create a transcontinental railroad system and identified the D amp RG RGW as the best route west into Utah The MP began buying D amp RG stock in 1900 and the D amp RG did the same with the RGW Palmer still owned a controlling interest in the RGW but he came to an agreement to sell the company to Gould and Gould management including new president Edward Turner Jeffery took over on July 1 1901 28 Gould control and aftermath 1901 to present edit In 1901 the Union Pacific Railroad gained control of the Southern Pacific Railroad which owned the Central Pacific Railway the portion of the First transcontinental railroad west of Ogden Searching for another route to the Pacific Gould incorporated the Castle Valley Railway as a cutoff from the RGW s main line near Farnham to the Marysvale Branch at Salina and beyond to the under construction San Pedro Los Angeles and Salt Lake Railroad Salt Lake Route at Milford However the Union Pacific gained control of the Salt Lake Route in mid 1903 forcing Gould to construct an entirely new line to California The financing of the Western Pacific Railway WP would take almost all the revenues of the MP D amp RG and RGW leaving very little for maintenance let alone improvements The D amp RG and RGW operated as a single system since 1901 were merged as the Denver amp Rio Grande Western Railroad on July 31 1908 6 finally combining the two halves of the Denver Ogden line into one railroad company 29 Improvement of the standard gauge main line through Utah to relieve congestion had begun in 1898 when the RGW added a second track to the steep 4 grade to Tucker on the west side of Soldier Summit The shallower east side grade was similarly doubled to Colton in 1906 and further to Kyune and from Castle Gate to Helper in 1909 Construction began on a new low grade line west of the summit in 1912 when the D amp RG added a track between Detour the west end of the realignment and Thistle The new line with a double hairpin curve was completed the next year as was a second track between Kyune and Castle Gate completing a double track line between Thistle and Helper 30 with a maximum grade of 2 4 on the east slope and 2 0 on the west 31 Local competition arrived in 1912 when the United States Smelting Refining and Mining Company which owned coal mines southwest of Price organized the Utah Railway originally the Utah Coal Railway U S Smelting objected to the D amp RG s charging of higher freight rates due to the mines location on a branch line and began to build its own line over Soldier Summit into the Utah Valley The two companies reached an agreement in November 1913 where the D amp RG would operate the Utah Railway between a junction near Castle Gate and the mines and the unfinished line between Thistle and Provo would be completed as a second track 32 This arrangement began with the completion of the road in 1914 and the D amp RG now had a double track line between Provo and Helper Three years later the Utah Railway began independent operations between the mines and Provo under a reciprocal trackage rights arrangement that has persisted to the present where each company allows the other to use its half of the double track line 33 The WP was completed in 1910 but its construction had given the D amp RG enormous debts After periods of ownership by Eastern U S bankers the courts appointed two local trustees in 1935 The system was slowly rebuilt into a profitable enterprise and in 1947 it was reorganized as the Denver amp Rio Grande Western Railroad 34 After buying the Southern Pacific Transportation Company in 1988 and adopting the latter s name 35 the D amp RGW became part of the Union Pacific Railroad in 1996 36 With the level of the Great Salt Lake rising in the mid 1980s the D amp RGW and UP came to a trackage rights agreement where the D amp RGW would use the UP s higher line between Salt Lake City and Ogden and in exchange the UP could use the D amp RGW between Salt Lake City and Provo a better designed route than the UP s 35 The majority of the ex D amp RGW north of Salt Lake City is now the Denver amp Rio Grande Western Rail Trail while the UP has sold its Sharp Subdivision north of Provo to the Utah Transit Authority which operates the TRAX Blue Line light rail along the corridor as well as contracts with the Salt Lake City Southern Railroad for freight Branches edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it August 2008 A long branch was begun in 1890 as 3 ft 914 mm gauge and widened in 1891 extending south from Thistle up Thistle Creek and down the San Pitch River to Manti It was extended south to Sevier in 1891 via the Sevier River by the Sevier Railway and that same year the Tintic Range Railway built from Springville southwest and west to Eureka in the Tintic Mountains The RGW organized both of these companies to be owned by RGW stockholders but out of the control of RGW bondholders The Panic of 1893 stopped new construction until 1896 when the Sevier Railway was extended farther south to Belknap 37 The Ballard amp Thompson Railroad between Thompson Springs and Sego was purchased in 1913 by the D amp RGW and became the Sego Branch 38 In the future a new rail line into the Uintah Basin currently under study by the state of Utah may be constructed branching off the existing line near Soldier Summit 39 Presidents editThis is a list of presidents and equivalents of the Utah company before it was merged into the D amp RG in 1908 For post 1908 presidents see Denver amp Rio Grande Western Railroad Presidents William J Palmer 1881 1884 W H Bancroft 1884 1886 receiver William J Palmer 1886 1901 Edward Turner Jeffery 1901 1908Station listing editCounty Location MP 1 Name NotesMesa Grand Junction 450 0 Grand Junction Junction of Tennessee Pass Line Moffat Line 1890 present and Gunnison Line 1882 present 451 7 DurhamFruita 460 5 Fruita468 9 Mack Junction of Uintah Railway 1904 1939 473 1 Ruby478 0 Shale483 3 Utaline Siding at the Utah Colorado state lineGrand 488 4 Westwater498 1 Agate504 4 Cisco510 5 Whitehouse515 6 Elba520 7 Sagers528 1 Thompson Junction with Ballard and Thompson Railroad 1912 1950 533 8 Brendel Junction with Cane Creek Branch 1962 present 540 4 Floy546 9 SolitudeEmery Green River 555 2 Green River561 5 Sphinx567 6 Desert574 2 Cliff581 4 Woodside586 6 Grassy593 1 Cedar602 9 Mounds Junction with Sunnyside Branch 1899 present Carbon 611 3 WashWellington 613 0 WellingtonPrice 619 1 Price622 1 MaxwellSpring Glen Junction with Kenilworth and Helper Railway 1907 1926 Helper 626 4 Helper Junction with Kenilworth Branch 1926 1960s and Spring Canyon Branch 1912 1970s 628 8 Utah Railway Junction Junction with Utah Railway 1914 present 630 4 Castle Gate632 0 LynnUtah 638 9 Kyune Junction with Jennings and Potter s Quarry Branch 1892 1917 644 8 Colton Junction with Pleasant Valley Branch 1882 present Wasatch 651 4 SummitUtah 661 0 Gilluly Name of the horseshoe curves at this sidingTucker Original junction with Pleasant Valley Branch 1882 665 6 Detour Refers to this being the western end of a reroute up the grade to Soldier Summmit the old grade is today used by U S Route 6672 3 Narrows676 7 Rio681 0 Thistle Junction with Marysvale Branch 1890 1983 684 4 CastillaSpringville 695 8 Springville Junction with Tintic Branch 1891 present 698 6 IrontonProvo 701 1 Provo Junction with Orem Branch 1946 1970s and Provo Canyon Branch 1899 1970 Orem 705 7 Lakota707 1 Geneva708 4 Pipe MillAmerican Fork 715 0 American ForkLehi 720 3 MesaSalt Lake Draper 728 6 RivertonMidvale 734 9 Midvale Junction with Bingham Branch 1882 present and Little Cottonwood Branch 1882 1964 South Salt Lake 742 0 Roper Former name of the freight yard still at this location Junction with Park City Branch 1900 2005 Salt Lake City 745 1 Salt Lake City745 5 Grant Tower748 7 BecksDavis North Salt Lake 750 3 North Salt LakeWest Bountiful 753 9 Woods CrossFarmington Farmington Junction with Lake Park Branch 1887 1925 Clearfield 770 4 ClearfieldWeber Roy Roy Junction with Hooper Branch 1905 1959 Ogden 779 3 Sugar Works782 0 OgdenSee also edit nbsp Trains portal nbsp Utah portalList of Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad linesReferences edit a b Denver amp Rio Grande Western Railroad Company Employee System Time Table No 6 effective October 30 1983 Agreement Between Union Pacific Railroad Company and Brotherhood of Railroad Signalmen effective February 1 2000 includes a list of subdivisions from the first post merger timetable in 1998 LeMassena p 15 LeMassena p 22 LeMassena pp 26 30 a b c d e f g Interstate Commerce Commission 26 Val Rep 733 1929 p 805 Denver and Rio Grande Railroad Company a b c d Clarence A Reeder Jr The History of Utah s Railroads 1869 1883 1970 doctoral dissertation published 1981 by Arno Press ISBN 0 405 13759 1 a b Rand McNally amp Company Denver and Rio Grande Railway System 1886 a b Google Maps street maps and USGS topographic maps accessed July 2008 via ACME Mapper Charter of the Salt Lake and Park City Railway George A Lowe primary stockholder was a D amp RG man Deseret News Sevier Valley Railroad April 27 1881 p 9 LeMassena p 83 Salt Lake Daily Tribune November 23 1882 Ogden Daily Herald Connection Completed March 31 1883 LeMassena p 85 LeMassena p 41 LeMassena pp 41 83 85 367 Salt Lake Daily Tribune Receiver Bancroft August 13 1884 p 4 LeMassena pp 43 46 51 85 87 Ogden Daily Herald Changed Hands July 30 1886 p 4 Robert M Ormes Railroads and the Rockies A Record of Lines in and Near Colorado 1963 OCLC 1557664 p 389 LeMassena pp 87 89 255 Salt Lake Daily Tribune New R G W Time Card November 14 1889 p 4 one of the new broad gauge passenger engines is hauling trains Nos 7 and 8 between here and Ogden Salt Lake Tribune Broad Gauged at Last March 8 1890 p 5 Ogden Standard Narrow Gauge No More June 10 1890 p 2 Salt Lake Tribune Rumbles of the Railroad November 16 1890 p 5 LeMassena pp 57 87 89 91 92 LeMassena pp 70 74 76 101 107 109 111 LeMassena pp 76 81 111 115 LeMassena pp 101 115 123 125 Condensed Profile of the D amp RGWRR System Archived 2008 05 09 at the Wayback Machine 1923 1934 and 1970 Eastern Utah Advocate Utah Railroad Abandons Work November 6 1913 p 3 LeMassena pp 125 129 LeMassena pp 123 149 163 a b Don Strack Ogden Rails Denver amp Rio Grande Western Union Pacific Historical Society 2005 ISBN 1 932704 04 3 Union Pacific Railroad Chronological History Archived 2006 08 10 at the Wayback Machine accessed August 2008 LeMassena pp 89 101 Don Strack Sego Mine Utah Rails Utah Fuels the West Utah s coal industry and the railroads that served it Retrieved July 10 2008 Utah looks to build new railroad to tap oil boom Trains Magazine 9 October 2014 Retrieved 26 October 2014 R A LeMassena 1974 Rio Grande to the Pacific Sundance Publications ISBN 0 913582 09 3 External links edit nbsp Media related to Utah Division D amp RGW at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Utah Division D 26RGW amp oldid 1174855504, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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