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Southern Pacific Transportation Company

The Southern Pacific (reporting mark SP) (or Espee from the railroad initials) was an American Class I railroad network that existed from 1865 to 1996 and operated largely in the Western United States. The system was operated by various companies under the names Southern Pacific Railroad, Southern Pacific Company and Southern Pacific Transportation Company.

Southern Pacific Transportation Company
SP system map (before the 1988 DRGW merger)
Overview
HeadquartersSan Francisco, California
FoundersWilliam Tell Coleman
Timothy Guy Phelps
William Rosecrans
Reporting markSP
LocaleArizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Illinois, Kansas, Louisiana, Missouri, Nevada, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Oregon, Tennessee, Texas, Utah
Dates of operation1865–1996
PredecessorCentral Pacific Railroad
SuccessorsSanta Fe Pacific Corporation
Union Pacific Railroad
Technical
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge with some 3 ft (914 mm) narrow gauge branches

The original Southern Pacific began in 1865 as a land holding company. The last incarnation of the Southern Pacific, the Southern Pacific Transportation Company, was founded in 1969 and assumed control of the Southern Pacific system. The Southern Pacific Transportation Company was acquired in 1996 by the Union Pacific Corporation and merged with their Union Pacific Railroad.

The Southern Pacific legacy founded hospitals in San Francisco, Tucson, and Houston. In the 1970s, it also founded a telecommunications network with a state-of-the-art microwave and fiber optic backbone. This telecommunications network became part of Sprint, a company whose name came from the acronym for Southern Pacific Railroad Internal Networking Telephony.[1]

History edit

The original Southern Pacific, Southern Pacific Railroad, was founded as a land holding company in 1865, later acquiring the Central Pacific Railroad in 1885 through leasing.[2][3][4] By 1900, the Southern Pacific system was a major railroad system incorporating many smaller companies, such as the Texas and New Orleans Railroad and Morgan's Louisiana and Texas Railroad. It extended from New Orleans through Texas to El Paso, across New Mexico and through Tucson, to Los Angeles, through most of California, including San Francisco and Sacramento. Central Pacific lines extended east across Nevada to Ogden, Utah, and reached north through Oregon to Portland. Other subsidiaries eventually included the St. Louis Southwestern Railway (Cotton Belt), El Paso and Southwestern Railroad, the Northwestern Pacific Railroad at 328 miles (528 km), the 1,331-mile (2,142 km) Southern Pacific Railroad of Mexico, and a variety of 3 ft (914 mm) narrow-gauge routes. The SP was the defendant in the landmark 1886 United States Supreme Court case Santa Clara County v. Southern Pacific Railroad, which is often interpreted as having established certain corporate rights under the Constitution of the United States. The Southern Pacific Railroad was replaced by the Southern Pacific Company and assumed the railroad operations of the Southern Pacific Railroad. In 1929, Southern Pacific/Texas and New Orleans operated 13,848 route-miles not including Cotton Belt, whose purchase of the Golden State Route circa 1980 nearly doubled its size to 3,085 miles (4,965 km), bringing total SP/SSW mileage to around 13,508 miles (21,739 km).

 
An EMD FP7 leads a Pacific Rail Society Special through Floriston, California, in February 1971.

In 1969, the Southern Pacific Transportation Company was established and took over the Southern Pacific Company; this Southern Pacific railroad is the last incarnation and was at times called "Southern Pacific Industries", though "Southern Pacific Industries" is not the official name of the company. By the 1980s, route mileage had dropped to 10,423 miles (16,774 km), mainly due to the pruning of branch lines. On October 13, 1988, the Southern Pacific Transportation Company (including its subsidiary, St. Louis Southwestern Railway) was taken over by Rio Grande Industries, the parent company that controlled the Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad. Rio Grande Industries did not merge the Southern Pacific Transportation Company and the Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad together, but transferred direct ownership of the Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad to the Southern Pacific Transportation Company, allowing the combined Rio Grande Industries railroad system to use the Southern Pacific name due to its brand recognition in the railroad industry and with customers of both the Southern Pacific Transportation Company and the Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad. A long time Southern Pacific subsidiary, the St. Louis Southwestern Railway was also marketed under the Southern Pacific name. Along with the addition of the SPCSL Corporation route from Chicago to St. Louis, the total length of the D&RGW/SP/SSW system was 15,959 miles (25,684 km). Rio Grande Industries was later renamed Southern Pacific Rail Corporation.

By 1996, years of financial problems had dropped Southern Pacific's mileage to 13,715 miles (22,072 km). The financial problems caused the Southern Pacific Transportation Company to be taken over by the Union Pacific Corporation; the parent Southern Pacific Rail Corporation (formerly Rio Grande Industries), the Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad, the St. Louis Southwestern Railway and the SPCSL Corporation was also taken over by the Union Pacific Corporation. The Union Pacific Corporation merged the Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad, the St. Louis Southwestern Railway and the SPCSL Corporation into their Union Pacific Railroad but did not merge the Southern Pacific Transportation Company into the Union Pacific Railroad. Instead, the Union Pacific Corporation merged the Union Pacific Railroad into the Southern Pacific Transportation Company on February 1, 1998; the Southern Pacific Transportation Company became the surviving railroad and at the same time the Union Pacific Corporation renamed the Southern Pacific Transportation Company to Union Pacific Railroad. Thus, the Southern Pacific Transportation Company became, and is still operating as, the current incarnation of the Union Pacific Railroad.

 
G. W. & C. B. Colton, Map Showing the Line of the True Southern Pacific Railway, circa 1881

Locomotives edit

Like most railroads, the SP painted most of its steam locomotives black during the 20th century, but after 1945 SP painted the front of the locomotive's smokebox silver (almost white in appearance), with graphite colored sides, for visibility.

Some passenger steam locomotives bore the Daylight scheme, named after the trains they hauled, most of which had the word Daylight in the train name. The most famous "Daylight" locomotives were the GS-4 steam locomotives. The most famous Daylight-hauled trains were the Coast Daylight and the Sunset Limited.

Well known were the Southern Pacific's unique "cab-forward" steam locomotives.[5] These were 4-8-8-2, 2-8-8-2, and 4-6-6-2 (rebuilt from 2-6-6-2) locomotives set up to run in reverse, with the tender attached to the smokebox end of the locomotive.[5] Southern Pacific had a number of snow sheds in mountain terrain, and locomotive crews nearly asphyxiated from smoke in the cab.[5] After a number of engineers began running their engines in reverse (pushing the tender), Southern Pacific asked Baldwin Locomotive Works to produce cab-forward designs.[5] No other North American railroad ordered cab-forward locomotives.

List of locomotives used edit

Steam locomotives edit

Diesel locomotives edit

Passenger train service edit

Until May 1, 1971 (when Amtrak took over long-distance passenger operations in the United States), the Southern Pacific at various times operated the following named passenger trains. Trains with names in italicized bold text still operate under Amtrak:

Notable accidents edit

  • John Sontag, a young Southern Pacific employee, was injured c. 1888 while coupling cars in the railroad yard in Fresno. He accused the company of not providing him with medical care while he was recuperating from his on-the-job injury and then not rehiring him when he had healed. He soon turned to a life of crime (mostly train robberies) and died of gunshot wounds and tetanus in the Fresno jail in 1893 aged 32 years.[8]
Sontag's partner in crime, Chris Evans also hated the Southern Pacific, which Evans accused of forcing farmers to sell their lands at reduced rates to the company.[8]
  • On 28 March 1907, the Southern Pacific Sunset Express, descending the grade out of the San Timoteo Canyon, entered the Colton rail yard traveling about 60 miles per hour (97 km/h), hit an open switch and careened off the track, resulting in 24 fatalities. Accounts said 9 of the train's 14 cars disintegrated as they piled on top of one another, leaving the dead and injured in "a heap of kindling and crumpled metal". Of the dead, 18 were Italian immigrants traveling to jobs in San Francisco from Genoa, Italy.[9]
  • The Coast Line Limited was heading for Los Angeles, on 22 May 1907, when it was derailed just west of Glendale, California. Passenger cars reportedly tumbled down the embankment. At least 2 people were killed and others injured. "The horrible deed was planned with devilish accurateness" the Pasadena Star News reported at the time. It said spikes were removed from the track and a hook placed under the end of the rail. The Star's coverage was extensive and its editorial blasted the criminal elements behind the wreck:

    The man or men who committed this horrible deed near Glendale may not be anarchists, technically speaking. But if they are sane men, moved by motive, they are such stuff as anarchists are made of. If the typical anarchist conceived that a railroad corporation should be terrorized, he would not scruple to wreck a passenger train and send scores and hundreds to instant death.[10]

  • In the early hours of 1 June 1907, an attempt to derail a Southern Pacific train near Santa Clara, California, was foiled when a pile of railway ties was discovered on the tracks. A work train crew found that someone had driven a steel plate into a switch near Burbank, California, intending to derail the Santa Barbara local.[citation needed]
  • On 12 August 1939, the westbound City of San Francisco derailed from a bridge in Palisade Canyon, between Battle Mountain and Carlin in the Nevada desert. Among the passengers and crew members 24 people were killed and many more injured, and 5 cars were destroyed. An act of sabotage was determined to be the most likely cause; however, no suspect(s) was(were) ever identified.[citation needed]
  • On New Year's Eve 1944 a rear-end collision west of Ogden in thick fog killed 48 people.[11]
  • On 17 January 1947, the Southern Pacific Nightflier wrecked 12 miles (19 km) outside of Bakersfield; 7 people were killed and over 50 injured. Four coaches and a tourist sleeper were overturned, landing far off the tracks; the other seven cars remained upright. The locomotive stayed on the tracks and its crew was uninjured. A 29-year-old passenger, Robert Crowley from Miami, Florida, had been conversing with a man across the aisle who was killed instantly. Crowley, who was a combat war veteran, said “I never saw such a mess” even on a battlefield.[12]
  • On 8 May 1948, in Monterey, California, a Southern Pacific passenger train, the Del Monte Express struck a car driven by influential marine biologist Ed Ricketts at the now defunct railroad crossing at Drake Avenue. Ricketts subsequently succumbed to his injuries three days later in the hospital.[13]
  • On 17 September 1963, a Southern Pacific freight train crashed into an illegally converted bus at a grade crossing in Chualar, California, killing 32 bracero workers. It would later be a factor in the decision by Congress in 1964 to terminate the bracero program, despite its strong support among farmers. It also helped spur the Chicano civil rights movement.[14][15] As of 2014, it was the deadliest automobile accident in United States history, according to the National Safety Council[14][16]
  • On 28 April 1973, a Southern Pacific freight train carrying munitions exploded in Roseville Yard injuring 52 people, the cause of this was due to a hot box on a railcar setting the floor ablaze, heating a bomb until it detonated.[17]
  • On 12 May 1989, a Southern Pacific train carrying trona derailed in San Bernardino, California. The train failed to slow while descending a nearby slope, and sped up to about 110 miles per hour (180 km/h) before derailing, causing the San Bernardino train disaster. The crash destroyed 7 homes along Duffy Street and killed 2 train workers and 2 residents. Thirteen days later on 25 May 1989, an underground pipeline running along the right-of-way ruptured and caught fire due to damage done to the pipeline during clean-up from the derailment or from the derailment itself, destroying 11 more homes and killing 2 more people.[18]
 
Site of the 1991 spill. The guardrail on the left was constructed after the spill.
  • On the night of 14 July 1991, a Southern Pacific train derailed into the upper Sacramento River at a sharp bend of track called “the Cantara Loop”, upstream from Dunsmuir, California, in Siskiyou County. Several cars made contact with the water, including a tank car. Early in the morning of 15 July, it became apparent that the tank car had ruptured and spilled its entire contents into the river – approximately 19,000 US gallons (72 m3) of metam sodium, a soil fumigant. Ultimately, over a million fish, and tens of thousands of amphibians and crayfish were killed. Millions of aquatic invertebrates, including insects and mollusks, which form the basis of the river's ecosystem, were destroyed. Hundreds of thousands of willows, alders, and cottonwoods eventually died; many more were severely injured.[19]
The chemical plume left a 41 miles (66 km) wake of destruction from the spill site to the entry point of the river into Shasta Lake.[20] The accident still ranks as the largest hazardous chemical spill in California history.[19] At the time of the incident, metam sodium was not classified as a hazardous material.

Preserved locomotives edit

There are many Southern Pacific locomotives still in revenue service with railroads such as the Union Pacific Railroad, and many older and special locomotives have been donated to parks and museums, or continue operating on scenic or tourist railroads. Most of the engines now in use with Union Pacific have been "patched", where the SP logo on the front is replaced by a Union Pacific shield, and new numbers are applied over the old numbers with a Union Pacific sticker, however some engines remain in Southern Pacific "bloody nose" paint. Over the past couple years, most of the patched units were repainted into the full Union Pacific scheme and as of January 2019, less than ten units remain in their old paint. Among the more notable equipment is:

 
SP 1518 at IRM, July 2005

Honorary tribute edit

On August 19, 2006, UP unveiled a brand new EMD SD70ACe locomotive, Union Pacific 1996, as part of a new heritage program. It was the final unit in UP's Heritage Series of locomotives, and was painted in a color scheme inspired by the "Daylight" and "Black Widow" schemes.

Company officers edit

Presidents edit

Chairmen of Executive Committee edit

Chairmen of Board of Directors edit

Notable employees edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ see SP 6051
  2. ^ SSW only
  3. ^ leased from Amtrak
  4. ^ operated jointly with the Rock Island Railroad (1926–1938)[6]
  5. ^ operated jointly with the Rock Island Railroad
  6. ^ operates today as part of the Coast Starlight train
  7. ^ operated jointly with the Chicago and North Western Railway and the Union Pacific Railroad; SP portion operates today as part of Amtrak's California Zephyr
  8. ^ operates today as part of the Coast Starlight train
  9. ^ proposed, was to have been operated jointly with the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad
  10. ^ operated jointly with the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad
  11. ^ operated jointly with the Rock Island Railroad 1946–1967)[6]
  12. ^ operated until 1985, now Caltrain
  13. ^ operated jointly with the Chicago and North Western Railway and the Union Pacific Railroad
  14. ^ operated from 1927 till 1949 as an international train under the subsidiary Southern Pacific Railroad of Mexico between Tucson and Guadalajara, featuring through sleepers from Los Angeles to Mexico City
  15. ^ operated from 1927 till 1951 as an international train under the subsidiary Southern Pacific Railroad of Mexico between Tucson and Guadalajara

References edit

  1. ^ Block, Melissa; Neff, Brijet (October 15, 2012). "Sprint Born From Railroad, Telephone Businesses". All Things Considered. NPR. from the original on October 24, 2012. Retrieved January 14, 2013. It all began in Kansas in the late 19th century and came to include a long-distance system created by the Southern Pacific Railroad Internal Network Telecommunications, or SPRINT.
  2. ^ Yenne (1996), p. 29.
  3. ^ Yenne (1996), p. 51.
  4. ^ Farmer, Jared (2013). Trees in paradise : a California history. Norton. ISBN 978-0-393-07802-2. OCLC 889889389.
  5. ^ a b c d Yenne (1996), p. 96.
  6. ^ a b "Imperial and Apache consists". Rock Island Technical Society. Retrieved December 12, 2013.
  7. ^ a b Schwantes, Carlos A. (1993). Railroad Signatures across the Pacific Northwest. University of Washington Press, Seattle, WA. ISBN 0-295-97210-6. OCLC 27266208.
  8. ^ a b "Sontag and Evans". eshomvalley.com. Retrieved August 6, 2013.
  9. ^ "[no title cited]". San Bernardino Sun. March 29, 1907.
  10. ^ "Diabolism Incarnate". Editorial. Pasadena Star News. May 1907.
  11. ^ Arave, Lynn (December 26, 2014). . Standard-Examiner. Archived from the original on June 17, 2019. Retrieved June 17, 2019.
  12. ^ "7 Dead in "Owl" Wreck". The Bakersfield Californian. January 17, 1947. Retrieved December 30, 2018.
  13. ^ "Doc Ricketts Memorial". Atlas Obscura. n.d. Retrieved February 14, 2019.
  14. ^ a b Flores, Lori A. (Summer 2013). "A Town Full of Dead Mexicans: The Salinas Valley Bracero Tragedy of 1963, the End of the Bracero Program, and the Evolution of California's Chicano Movement". The Western Historical Quarterly. 44 (2): 124–143. doi:10.2307/westhistquar.44.2.0124.
  15. ^ Martin, Philip L. (2003). Promise Unfulfilled: Unions, Immigration, and the Farm Workers. ILR Press. p. 50. ISBN 0801488753.
  16. ^ "Second survivor of 1963 Chualar bus crash emerges". Monterey Herald. March 1, 2014. from the original on October 6, 2014. Retrieved February 5, 2019.
  17. ^ Berthelsen, John (April 29, 1973). "Freight train blasts shock area". Sacramento Bee. Retrieved June 7, 2021.
  18. ^ Malnic, Eric; Warren, Jennifer (May 13, 1989). "3 Die as Runaway Train Tumbles Onto Homes". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved December 30, 2018.
  19. ^ a b "20th anniversary of largest chemical spill in California history". California Department of Toxic Substance Control. 2007.
  20. ^ Final Report on the Recovery of the Upper Sacramento River. Cantara Trustee Council. 2007.
  21. ^ "Locomotives". Austin Steam Train Association. Retrieved September 13, 2021.
  22. ^ "History of Southern Pacific 982 Steam Locomotive". www.facebook.com. Retrieved April 28, 2021.
  23. ^ "Orange Empire Railway Museum – Bringing Southern California's Railway History to Life".
  24. ^ "W. Burch Lee Funeral Here in Afternoon: Former Clerk of Federal Court Expires After Week of Illness". The Shreveport Times through findagrave.com. Retrieved March 22, 2015.
  25. ^ "Harry (Haywire Mac) McClintock". Hillbilly-Music.com. Retrieved April 23, 2023.
General
  • Beale, Edwin I. (1907). Highways & Byways of the Virginia Peninsula. Newport News, Virginia: E. I. Beale. LCCN 07009602.
  • Beebe, Lucius (1963). The Central Pacific and The Southern Pacific Railroads. Berkeley, California: Howell-North Books. ISBN 0-8310-7034-X.
  • Colton, T. (May 2, 2014). . ShipbuildingHistory. Archived from the original on October 26, 2014. Retrieved February 23, 2015.
  • Cooper, Bruce C. (2005). Riding the Transcontinental Rails: Overland Travel on the Pacific Railroad 1865–1881. Philadelphia: Polyglot Press. ISBN 1-4115-9993-4.
  • Cooper, Bruce Clement, ed. (2010). The Classic Western American Railroad Routes. New York: Chartwell Books/Worth Press. ISBN 978-0-7858-2573-9. BINC: 3099794.
  • Coscia, David (2018). Southern Pacific in the San Fernando Valley 1876-1996. Bellflower: Shade Tree Books. ISBN 978-0-93-074253-8.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: ignored ISBN errors (link)
  • Daggett, Stuart. Chapters on the History of the Southern Pacific (1922) online. detailed history
  • Darton, D. H. (1933). Guidebook of the Western United States; Part F. The Southern Pacific Lines, New Orleans to Los Angeles. Geological Survey Bulletin 845. Washington (D.C.): Government Printing Office.
  • Darton, D.H. Guidebook of the Western United States; Part F. The Southern Pacific Lines, New Orleans to Los Angeles. Geological Survey Bulletin 845. Washington (D.C.): Government Printing Office, 1933.
  • Diebert, Timothy S. & Strapac, Joseph A. (1987). Southern Pacific Company steam locomotive compendium. Huntington Beach, California: Shade Tree Books. ISBN 0-930742-12-5. OCLC 18401969.
  • Hofsommer, Donovan; The Southern Pacific, 1901–1985. Texas A&M University Press; (1986) ISBN 9781603441278.
  • Hofsommer, Don L. "Rivals for California: The Great Northern and the Southern Pacific, 1905-1931." Montana: The Magazine of Western History 38.2 (1988): 58–67.
  • Johnson, Emory R. (1912). The Relation of the Panama Canal to the Traffic and Rates of American Railroads. United States Senate Reports. Washington, D.C.: United States Government Printing Office. Retrieved February 22, 2015.
  • Jungen, C. W. (1922). "Ocean Unit of Lines That Span Continent". Southern Pacific Bulletin. San Francisco: Southern Pacific. 11 (January 1922). Retrieved February 22, 2015.
  • Lewis, Daniel (2007). Iron Horse Imperialism: The Southern Pacific of Mexico, 1880–1951. Tucson, Arizona: University of Arizona Press. ISBN 978-0-8165-2604-8. OCLC 238833401.
  • Mayo, H. M. (1900). "Cuba and the Way There". Sunset. San Francisco: Passenger Department Southern Pacific Company. 4 (January, 1900): 95–98. Retrieved March 15, 2015.
  • Lewis, Oscar (1938). The Big Four. New York, New York: Alfred A. Knopf, Inc.
  • Orsi, Richard J. (2005). Sunset Limited: The Southern Pacific Railroad and the Development of the American West 1850–1930. Berkeley, California: University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-20019-5. OCLC 55055386.
  • Thompson, Anthony W. (1992). Pacific Fruit Express. Wilton, California: Signature Press. ISBN 1-930013-03-5. OCLC 48551573.
  • White, Richard (2011). Railroaded: The Transcontinentals and the Making of Modern America. W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 978-0-393-06126-0.
  • Woodman, E. H., ed. (1899). "Transportation". Sunset. San Francisco: Passenger Department Southern Pacific Company. 2 (March, 1899). Retrieved March 15, 2015.
  • Yenne, Bill (1996). The History of the Southern Pacific. New York, New York: Smithmark Pub. ISBN 0-8317-3788-3.

External links edit

  • Sphts.org: Southern Pacific Historical & Technical Society
  • Harvard Business School, Lehman Brothers Collection: "History of the Southern Pacific Transportation Company"
  • Union Pacific Railroad.com: Union Pacific History
  • "Across the Great Salt Lake, The Lucin Cutoff" — 1937 article.
  • Abandoned Rails.com: History of the Santa Ana and Newport Railroad.

southern, pacific, transportation, company, southern, pacific, redirects, here, other, uses, southern, pacific, disambiguation, sprr, redirects, here, proposed, railroad, pennsylvania, south, pennsylvania, railroad, this, article, includes, list, general, refe. Southern Pacific redirects here For other uses see Southern Pacific disambiguation SPRR redirects here For the proposed railroad in Pennsylvania see South Pennsylvania Railroad This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations December 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Southern Pacific reporting mark SP or Espee from the railroad initials was an American Class I railroad network that existed from 1865 to 1996 and operated largely in the Western United States The system was operated by various companies under the names Southern Pacific Railroad Southern Pacific Company and Southern Pacific Transportation Company Southern Pacific Transportation CompanySP system map before the 1988 DRGW merger OverviewHeadquartersSan Francisco CaliforniaFoundersWilliam Tell ColemanTimothy Guy PhelpsWilliam RosecransReporting markSPLocaleArizona Arkansas California Colorado Illinois Kansas Louisiana Missouri Nevada New Mexico Oklahoma Oregon Tennessee Texas UtahDates of operation1865 1996PredecessorCentral Pacific RailroadSuccessorsSanta Fe Pacific CorporationUnion Pacific RailroadTechnicalTrack gauge4 ft 8 1 2 in 1 435 mm standard gauge with some 3 ft 914 mm narrow gauge branchesThe original Southern Pacific began in 1865 as a land holding company The last incarnation of the Southern Pacific the Southern Pacific Transportation Company was founded in 1969 and assumed control of the Southern Pacific system The Southern Pacific Transportation Company was acquired in 1996 by the Union Pacific Corporation and merged with their Union Pacific Railroad The Southern Pacific legacy founded hospitals in San Francisco Tucson and Houston In the 1970s it also founded a telecommunications network with a state of the art microwave and fiber optic backbone This telecommunications network became part of Sprint a company whose name came from the acronym for Southern Pacific Railroad Internal Networking Telephony 1 Contents 1 History 2 Locomotives 2 1 List of locomotives used 2 1 1 Steam locomotives 2 1 2 Diesel locomotives 3 Passenger train service 4 Notable accidents 5 Preserved locomotives 6 Honorary tribute 7 Company officers 7 1 Presidents 7 2 Chairmen of Executive Committee 7 3 Chairmen of Board of Directors 8 Notable employees 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 External linksHistory editMain article History of the Southern Pacific The original Southern Pacific Southern Pacific Railroad was founded as a land holding company in 1865 later acquiring the Central Pacific Railroad in 1885 through leasing 2 3 4 By 1900 the Southern Pacific system was a major railroad system incorporating many smaller companies such as the Texas and New Orleans Railroad and Morgan s Louisiana and Texas Railroad It extended from New Orleans through Texas to El Paso across New Mexico and through Tucson to Los Angeles through most of California including San Francisco and Sacramento Central Pacific lines extended east across Nevada to Ogden Utah and reached north through Oregon to Portland Other subsidiaries eventually included the St Louis Southwestern Railway Cotton Belt El Paso and Southwestern Railroad the Northwestern Pacific Railroad at 328 miles 528 km the 1 331 mile 2 142 km Southern Pacific Railroad of Mexico and a variety of 3 ft 914 mm narrow gauge routes The SP was the defendant in the landmark 1886 United States Supreme Court case Santa Clara County v Southern Pacific Railroad which is often interpreted as having established certain corporate rights under the Constitution of the United States The Southern Pacific Railroad was replaced by the Southern Pacific Company and assumed the railroad operations of the Southern Pacific Railroad In 1929 Southern Pacific Texas and New Orleans operated 13 848 route miles not including Cotton Belt whose purchase of the Golden State Route circa 1980 nearly doubled its size to 3 085 miles 4 965 km bringing total SP SSW mileage to around 13 508 miles 21 739 km nbsp An EMD FP7 leads a Pacific Rail Society Special through Floriston California in February 1971 In 1969 the Southern Pacific Transportation Company was established and took over the Southern Pacific Company this Southern Pacific railroad is the last incarnation and was at times called Southern Pacific Industries though Southern Pacific Industries is not the official name of the company By the 1980s route mileage had dropped to 10 423 miles 16 774 km mainly due to the pruning of branch lines On October 13 1988 the Southern Pacific Transportation Company including its subsidiary St Louis Southwestern Railway was taken over by Rio Grande Industries the parent company that controlled the Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad Rio Grande Industries did not merge the Southern Pacific Transportation Company and the Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad together but transferred direct ownership of the Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad to the Southern Pacific Transportation Company allowing the combined Rio Grande Industries railroad system to use the Southern Pacific name due to its brand recognition in the railroad industry and with customers of both the Southern Pacific Transportation Company and the Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad A long time Southern Pacific subsidiary the St Louis Southwestern Railway was also marketed under the Southern Pacific name Along with the addition of the SPCSL Corporation route from Chicago to St Louis the total length of the D amp RGW SP SSW system was 15 959 miles 25 684 km Rio Grande Industries was later renamed Southern Pacific Rail Corporation By 1996 years of financial problems had dropped Southern Pacific s mileage to 13 715 miles 22 072 km The financial problems caused the Southern Pacific Transportation Company to be taken over by the Union Pacific Corporation the parent Southern Pacific Rail Corporation formerly Rio Grande Industries the Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad the St Louis Southwestern Railway and the SPCSL Corporation was also taken over by the Union Pacific Corporation The Union Pacific Corporation merged the Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad the St Louis Southwestern Railway and the SPCSL Corporation into their Union Pacific Railroad but did not merge the Southern Pacific Transportation Company into the Union Pacific Railroad Instead the Union Pacific Corporation merged the Union Pacific Railroad into the Southern Pacific Transportation Company on February 1 1998 the Southern Pacific Transportation Company became the surviving railroad and at the same time the Union Pacific Corporation renamed the Southern Pacific Transportation Company to Union Pacific Railroad Thus the Southern Pacific Transportation Company became and is still operating as the current incarnation of the Union Pacific Railroad nbsp G W amp C B Colton Map Showing the Line of the True Southern Pacific Railway circa 1881Locomotives editLike most railroads the SP painted most of its steam locomotives black during the 20th century but after 1945 SP painted the front of the locomotive s smokebox silver almost white in appearance with graphite colored sides for visibility nbsp SP 4449 underway wearing the Daylight scheme April 1981 nbsp SP 4294 cab forward locomotive nbsp Restored SP 9 showing the traditional silver paint on the front of the smokebox nbsp Restored No 1744 while it operated on the Rio Grande Scenic Railroad Some passenger steam locomotives bore the Daylight scheme named after the trains they hauled most of which had the word Daylight in the train name The most famous Daylight locomotives were the GS 4 steam locomotives The most famous Daylight hauled trains were the Coast Daylight and the Sunset Limited Well known were the Southern Pacific s unique cab forward steam locomotives 5 These were 4 8 8 2 2 8 8 2 and 4 6 6 2 rebuilt from 2 6 6 2 locomotives set up to run in reverse with the tender attached to the smokebox end of the locomotive 5 Southern Pacific had a number of snow sheds in mountain terrain and locomotive crews nearly asphyxiated from smoke in the cab 5 After a number of engineers began running their engines in reverse pushing the tender Southern Pacific asked Baldwin Locomotive Works to produce cab forward designs 5 No other North American railroad ordered cab forward locomotives List of locomotives used edit Steam locomotives edit 2 8 0 Consolidation 2 8 2 Mikado 4 4 2 Atlantic 4 6 2 Pacific see SP 2472 4 8 2 Mountain see SP Mt 5 4 8 4 Golden State General Service see SP 4449 2 8 8 4 4 8 8 2 Cab Forward Articulated 4 10 2 Southern Pacific see SP 5021Diesel locomotives edit ALCO PA EMC E2 EMD E7 EMD E8 EMD E9 note 1 EMD FP7 GE 70 ton switcher EMD NW2 EMD NW5 EMD SW1 EMD SW8 EMD SW900 EMD SW1200 EMD SW1500 GE U25B GE U28B GE U30C GE U33C FM H 12 44 FM H 24 66 Train Master EMD GP7 note 2 EMD GP9 EMD SD7 EMD SD9 GE P30CH note 3 EMD SD40M 2 EMD SD39 EMD SD38 2 EMD SD35 EMD SDP45 EMD GP60 EMD GP40P 2 EMD GP40M 2 EMD GP40 2 EMD GP38 2 EMD GP20 EMD SD35 GE B30 7 GE B36 7 GE B39 8 GE B40 8 GE AC4400CW GE C44 9W EMD SD50 EMD SD45 EMD SD45T 2 EMD SD40T 2 EMD SD40R EMD SD70MPassenger train service editUntil May 1 1971 when Amtrak took over long distance passenger operations in the United States the Southern Pacific at various times operated the following named passenger trains Trains with names in italicized bold text still operate under Amtrak 49er Acadian Apache note 4 Argonaut Arizona Limited note 5 Beaver Californian Cascade note 6 City of San Francisco note 7 Coast Daylight note 8 Coast Mail Coaster Del Monte Fast Mail Golden Rocket note 9 Golden State note 10 Grand Canyon Hustler Imperial note 11 Klamath Lark Oregonian Overland Owl Limited Pacific Limited Peninsula Commute note 12 Loop Service Rogue River Sacramento Daylight San Francisco Challenger note 13 San Joaquin Daylight Senator Shasta Daylight Shasta Express 7 Shasta Limited Shasta Limited De Luxe 7 Starlight Sunbeam Sunset Limited Suntan Special Tehachapi West Coast El Costeno note 14 El Yaqui note 15 Notable accidents editJohn Sontag a young Southern Pacific employee was injured c 1888 while coupling cars in the railroad yard in Fresno He accused the company of not providing him with medical care while he was recuperating from his on the job injury and then not rehiring him when he had healed He soon turned to a life of crime mostly train robberies and died of gunshot wounds and tetanus in the Fresno jail in 1893 aged 32 years 8 Sontag s partner in crime Chris Evans also hated the Southern Pacific which Evans accused of forcing farmers to sell their lands at reduced rates to the company 8 On 28 March 1907 the Southern Pacific Sunset Express descending the grade out of the San Timoteo Canyon entered the Colton rail yard traveling about 60 miles per hour 97 km h hit an open switch and careened off the track resulting in 24 fatalities Accounts said 9 of the train s 14 cars disintegrated as they piled on top of one another leaving the dead and injured in a heap of kindling and crumpled metal Of the dead 18 were Italian immigrants traveling to jobs in San Francisco from Genoa Italy 9 The Coast Line Limited was heading for Los Angeles on 22 May 1907 when it was derailed just west of Glendale California Passenger cars reportedly tumbled down the embankment At least 2 people were killed and others injured The horrible deed was planned with devilish accurateness the Pasadena Star News reported at the time It said spikes were removed from the track and a hook placed under the end of the rail The Star s coverage was extensive and its editorial blasted the criminal elements behind the wreck The man or men who committed this horrible deed near Glendale may not be anarchists technically speaking But if they are sane men moved by motive they are such stuff as anarchists are made of If the typical anarchist conceived that a railroad corporation should be terrorized he would not scruple to wreck a passenger train and send scores and hundreds to instant death 10 In the early hours of 1 June 1907 an attempt to derail a Southern Pacific train near Santa Clara California was foiled when a pile of railway ties was discovered on the tracks A work train crew found that someone had driven a steel plate into a switch near Burbank California intending to derail the Santa Barbara local citation needed On 12 August 1939 the westbound City of San Francisco derailed from a bridge in Palisade Canyon between Battle Mountain and Carlin in the Nevada desert Among the passengers and crew members 24 people were killed and many more injured and 5 cars were destroyed An act of sabotage was determined to be the most likely cause however no suspect s was were ever identified citation needed On New Year s Eve 1944 a rear end collision west of Ogden in thick fog killed 48 people 11 On 17 January 1947 the Southern Pacific Nightflier wrecked 12 miles 19 km outside of Bakersfield 7 people were killed and over 50 injured Four coaches and a tourist sleeper were overturned landing far off the tracks the other seven cars remained upright The locomotive stayed on the tracks and its crew was uninjured A 29 year old passenger Robert Crowley from Miami Florida had been conversing with a man across the aisle who was killed instantly Crowley who was a combat war veteran said I never saw such a mess even on a battlefield 12 On 8 May 1948 in Monterey California a Southern Pacific passenger train the Del Monte Express struck a car driven by influential marine biologist Ed Ricketts at the now defunct railroad crossing at Drake Avenue Ricketts subsequently succumbed to his injuries three days later in the hospital 13 On 17 September 1963 a Southern Pacific freight train crashed into an illegally converted bus at a grade crossing in Chualar California killing 32 bracero workers It would later be a factor in the decision by Congress in 1964 to terminate the bracero program despite its strong support among farmers It also helped spur the Chicano civil rights movement 14 15 As of 2014 it was the deadliest automobile accident in United States history according to the National Safety Council 14 16 On 28 April 1973 a Southern Pacific freight train carrying munitions exploded in Roseville Yard injuring 52 people the cause of this was due to a hot box on a railcar setting the floor ablaze heating a bomb until it detonated 17 On 12 May 1989 a Southern Pacific train carrying trona derailed in San Bernardino California The train failed to slow while descending a nearby slope and sped up to about 110 miles per hour 180 km h before derailing causing the San Bernardino train disaster The crash destroyed 7 homes along Duffy Street and killed 2 train workers and 2 residents Thirteen days later on 25 May 1989 an underground pipeline running along the right of way ruptured and caught fire due to damage done to the pipeline during clean up from the derailment or from the derailment itself destroying 11 more homes and killing 2 more people 18 nbsp Site of the 1991 spill The guardrail on the left was constructed after the spill On the night of 14 July 1991 a Southern Pacific train derailed into the upper Sacramento River at a sharp bend of track called the Cantara Loop upstream from Dunsmuir California in Siskiyou County Several cars made contact with the water including a tank car Early in the morning of 15 July it became apparent that the tank car had ruptured and spilled its entire contents into the river approximately 19 000 US gallons 72 m3 of metam sodium a soil fumigant Ultimately over a million fish and tens of thousands of amphibians and crayfish were killed Millions of aquatic invertebrates including insects and mollusks which form the basis of the river s ecosystem were destroyed Hundreds of thousands of willows alders and cottonwoods eventually died many more were severely injured 19 The chemical plume left a 41 miles 66 km wake of destruction from the spill site to the entry point of the river into Shasta Lake 20 The accident still ranks as the largest hazardous chemical spill in California history 19 At the time of the incident metam sodium was not classified as a hazardous material Preserved locomotives editThere are many Southern Pacific locomotives still in revenue service with railroads such as the Union Pacific Railroad and many older and special locomotives have been donated to parks and museums or continue operating on scenic or tourist railroads Most of the engines now in use with Union Pacific have been patched where the SP logo on the front is replaced by a Union Pacific shield and new numbers are applied over the old numbers with a Union Pacific sticker however some engines remain in Southern Pacific bloody nose paint Over the past couple years most of the patched units were repainted into the full Union Pacific scheme and as of January 2019 less than ten units remain in their old paint Among the more notable equipment is nbsp SP 1518 at IRM July 2005745 Mk 5 2 8 2 owned by the Louisiana Rail Heritage Trust operated by the Louisiana Steam Train Association and based in Jefferon near New Orleans Louisiana 786 Mk 5 2 8 2 owned by the City of Austin leased to the Austin Steam Train Association Currently under full mechanical restoration in Austin Texas 21 794 Mk 5 2 8 2 the last Mikado built for the Texas and New Orleans Railroad in 1916 out of spare parts in their Houston shops It currently resides with cosmetic restoration at San Antonio Station San Antonio Texas but plans are to restore it to operating condition 982 F 1 2 10 2 tender located at the Heber Valley Railroad in Heber City Utah main locomotive located in Houston Texas 22 1518 EMD SD7 former EMD demonstrator 990 and first SD7 built located at the Illinois Railway Museum Union Illinois 1744 M 6 2 6 0 components slowly being gathered at Brightside California for a restoration to operating condition on the Niles Canyon Railway 2248 Puffy T 1 4 6 0 operated by the Grapevine Vintage Railroad but is currently pending for a 1 472 day overhaul required by the FRA in Grapevine Texas 2353 T 31 4 6 0 on display at the Pacific Southwest Railway Museum in Campo California 2467 P 8 4 6 2 on loan by the Pacific Locomotive Association Fremont California to the California State Railroad Museum 2472 P 8 4 6 2 owned and operated by the Golden Gate Railroad Museum Redwood City California 2479 P 10 4 6 2 owned and being restored by the California Trolley and Railroad Corporation San Jose California 3100 former SP6800 Bicentennial U25B owned and operated by the Orange Empire Railway Museum 23 Perris CA 3420 C 19 2 8 0 owned by El Paso Historic Board stored at Phelps Dodge copper refinery El Paso Texas 3709 EMD GP9 being restored to operation at Pacific Southwest Railway Museum in Campo California 3769 EMD GP9 On display and used as a switch engine for the Utah State Railroad Museum in Ogden Utah 4294 AC 12 4 8 8 2 located at the California State Railroad Museum Sacramento California 4449 GS 4 4 8 4 formerly located at the Brooklyn Roundhouse before being relocated to the Oregon Rail Heritage Center in June 2012 Portland Oregon 4460 GS 6 4 8 4 located at the National Museum of Transportation Kirkwood Missouri 5119 GE 70 ton switcher Operational and awaiting paint restoration to SP colors at Pacific Southwest Railway Museum in Campo California 7304 ALCO RS 32 on display awaiting restoration at Pacific Southwest Railway Museum in Campo California 7457 EMD SD45 the first GM Electro Motive Division SD45 diesel electric road switcher locomotive to be built for that railroad in 1966 It last saw service on Donner Pass It was donated to the Utah State Railroad Museum in 2002 For a complete list see List of preserved Southern Pacific Railroad rolling stock Honorary tribute editOn August 19 2006 UP unveiled a brand new EMD SD70ACe locomotive Union Pacific 1996 as part of a new heritage program It was the final unit in UP s Heritage Series of locomotives and was painted in a color scheme inspired by the Daylight and Black Widow schemes Company officers editPresidents edit Timothy Guy Phelps 1865 1868 Charles Crocker 1868 1885 Leland Stanford 1885 1890 Collis P Huntington 1890 1900 Charles Melville Hays 1900 1901 E H Harriman 1901 1909 Robert S Lovett 1909 1911 William Sproule 1911 1918 Julius Kruttschnitt 1918 1920 William Sproule 1920 1928 Paul Shoup 1929 1932 Angus Daniel McDonald 1932 1941 Armand Mercier 1941 1951 Donald J Russell 1952 1964 Benjamin F Biaggini 1964 1976 Denman McNear 1976 1979 Alan Furth 1979 1982 Robert Krebs 1982 1988 D M Mike Mohan 1988 1993 Edward L Moyers 1993 1995 Jerry R Davis 1995 1996 Chairmen of Executive Committee edit Leland Stanford 1890 1893 vacant 1893 1909 Robert S Lovett 1909 1913 Julius Kruttschnitt 1913 1925 Henry deForest 1925 1928 Hale Holden 1928 1932 Chairmen of Board of Directors edit Henry deForest 1929 1932 Hale Holden 1932 1939 position nonexistent 1939 1964 Donald J Russell 1964 1972 Benjamin F Biaggini 1976 1982 Denman K McNear 1982 1988 Edward L Moyers 1993 1995 Chairman C E O Notable employees editCarl Ingold Jacobson Los Angeles California City Council member 1925 33 W Burch Lee employee in New Orleans office along with his father John Martin Lee Jr before serving in the Louisiana House of Representatives 24 Blake R Van Leer President of Georgia Tech United States Army officer and hydraulic process inventor Charles Wright land surveyor for the railway before becoming a botanist Jack Kerouac novelist Harry K McClintock singer songwriter The Big Rock Candy Mountains 25 Jimmie Rodgers Father of Country Music singer songwriterSee also edit nbsp Railways portalHistory of rail transportation in California El Paso and Southwestern Railroad Long Wharf Santa Monica Mussel Slough Tragedy Pacific Fruit Express Santa Fe Southern Pacific merger Southern Pacific 7399 Southern Pacific 4449 Southern Pacific Depot St Louis Southwestern Railway Texas and New Orleans Railroad TOPS Total Operations Processing System rolling stock management system jointly developed with IBM and Stanford University and used by SP until 1980 still used by British Rail and successor systemNotes edit see SP 6051 SSW only leased from Amtrak operated jointly with the Rock Island Railroad 1926 1938 6 operated jointly with the Rock Island Railroad operates today as part of the Coast Starlight train operated jointly with the Chicago and North Western Railway and the Union Pacific Railroad SP portion operates today as part of Amtrak s California Zephyr operates today as part of the Coast Starlight train proposed was to have been operated jointly with the Chicago Rock Island and Pacific Railroad operated jointly with the Chicago Rock Island and Pacific Railroad operated jointly with the Rock Island Railroad 1946 1967 6 operated until 1985 now Caltrain operated jointly with the Chicago and North Western Railway and the Union Pacific Railroad operated from 1927 till 1949 as an international train under the subsidiary Southern Pacific Railroad of Mexico between Tucson and Guadalajara featuring through sleepers from Los Angeles to Mexico City operated from 1927 till 1951 as an international train under the subsidiary Southern Pacific Railroad of Mexico between Tucson and GuadalajaraReferences edit Block Melissa Neff Brijet October 15 2012 Sprint Born From Railroad Telephone Businesses All Things Considered NPR Archived from the original on October 24 2012 Retrieved January 14 2013 It all began in Kansas in the late 19th century and came to include a long distance system created by the Southern Pacific Railroad Internal Network Telecommunications or SPRINT Yenne 1996 p 29 Yenne 1996 p 51 Farmer Jared 2013 Trees in paradise a California history Norton ISBN 978 0 393 07802 2 OCLC 889889389 a b c d Yenne 1996 p 96 a b Imperial and Apache consists Rock Island Technical Society Retrieved December 12 2013 a b Schwantes Carlos A 1993 Railroad Signatures across the Pacific Northwest University of Washington Press Seattle WA ISBN 0 295 97210 6 OCLC 27266208 a b Sontag and Evans eshomvalley com Retrieved August 6 2013 no title cited San Bernardino Sun March 29 1907 Diabolism Incarnate Editorial Pasadena Star News May 1907 Arave Lynn December 26 2014 Remembering Utah s Worst Train Wreck Standard Examiner Archived from the original on June 17 2019 Retrieved June 17 2019 7 Dead in Owl Wreck The Bakersfield Californian January 17 1947 Retrieved December 30 2018 Doc Ricketts Memorial Atlas Obscura n d Retrieved February 14 2019 a b Flores Lori A Summer 2013 A Town Full of Dead Mexicans The Salinas Valley Bracero Tragedy of 1963 the End of the Bracero Program and the Evolution of California s Chicano Movement The Western Historical Quarterly 44 2 124 143 doi 10 2307 westhistquar 44 2 0124 Martin Philip L 2003 Promise Unfulfilled Unions Immigration and the Farm Workers ILR Press p 50 ISBN 0801488753 Second survivor of 1963 Chualar bus crash emerges Monterey Herald March 1 2014 Archived from the original on October 6 2014 Retrieved February 5 2019 Berthelsen John April 29 1973 Freight train blasts shock area Sacramento Bee Retrieved June 7 2021 Malnic Eric Warren Jennifer May 13 1989 3 Die as Runaway Train Tumbles Onto Homes Los Angeles Times Retrieved December 30 2018 a b 20th anniversary of largest chemical spill in California history California Department of Toxic Substance Control 2007 Final Report on the Recovery of the Upper Sacramento River Cantara Trustee Council 2007 Locomotives Austin Steam Train Association Retrieved September 13 2021 History of Southern Pacific 982 Steam Locomotive www facebook com Retrieved April 28 2021 Orange Empire Railway Museum Bringing Southern California s Railway History to Life W Burch Lee Funeral Here in Afternoon Former Clerk of Federal Court Expires After Week of Illness The Shreveport Times through findagrave com Retrieved March 22 2015 Harry Haywire Mac McClintock Hillbilly Music com Retrieved April 23 2023 GeneralBeale Edwin I 1907 Highways amp Byways of the Virginia Peninsula Newport News Virginia E I Beale LCCN 07009602 Beebe Lucius 1963 The Central Pacific and The Southern Pacific Railroads Berkeley California Howell North Books ISBN 0 8310 7034 X Colton T May 2 2014 Newport News Shipbuilding Newport News VA ShipbuildingHistory Archived from the original on October 26 2014 Retrieved February 23 2015 Cooper Bruce C 2005 Riding the Transcontinental Rails Overland Travel on the Pacific Railroad 1865 1881 Philadelphia Polyglot Press ISBN 1 4115 9993 4 Cooper Bruce Clement ed 2010 The Classic Western American Railroad Routes New York Chartwell Books Worth Press ISBN 978 0 7858 2573 9 BINC 3099794 Coscia David 2018 Southern Pacific in the San Fernando Valley 1876 1996 Bellflower Shade Tree Books ISBN 978 0 93 074253 8 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint ignored ISBN errors link Daggett Stuart Chapters on the History of the Southern Pacific 1922 online detailed history Darton D H 1933 Guidebook of the Western United States Part F The Southern Pacific Lines New Orleans to Los Angeles Geological Survey Bulletin 845 Washington D C Government Printing Office Darton D H Guidebook of the Western United States Part F The Southern Pacific Lines New Orleans to Los Angeles Geological Survey Bulletin 845 Washington D C Government Printing Office 1933 Diebert Timothy S amp Strapac Joseph A 1987 Southern Pacific Company steam locomotive compendium Huntington Beach California Shade Tree Books ISBN 0 930742 12 5 OCLC 18401969 Hofsommer Donovan The Southern Pacific 1901 1985 Texas A amp M University Press 1986 ISBN 9781603441278 Hofsommer Don L Rivals for California The Great Northern and the Southern Pacific 1905 1931 Montana The Magazine of Western History 38 2 1988 58 67 Johnson Emory R 1912 The Relation of the Panama Canal to the Traffic and Rates of American Railroads United States Senate Reports Washington D C United States Government Printing Office Retrieved February 22 2015 Jungen C W 1922 Ocean Unit of Lines That Span Continent Southern Pacific Bulletin San Francisco Southern Pacific 11 January 1922 Retrieved February 22 2015 Lewis Daniel 2007 Iron Horse Imperialism The Southern Pacific of Mexico 1880 1951 Tucson Arizona University of Arizona Press ISBN 978 0 8165 2604 8 OCLC 238833401 Mayo H M 1900 Cuba and the Way There Sunset San Francisco Passenger Department Southern Pacific Company 4 January 1900 95 98 Retrieved March 15 2015 Lewis Oscar 1938 The Big Four New York New York Alfred A Knopf Inc Orsi Richard J 2005 Sunset Limited The Southern Pacific Railroad and the Development of the American West 1850 1930 Berkeley California University of California Press ISBN 0 520 20019 5 OCLC 55055386 Thompson Anthony W 1992 Pacific Fruit Express Wilton California Signature Press ISBN 1 930013 03 5 OCLC 48551573 White Richard 2011 Railroaded The Transcontinentals and the Making of Modern America W W Norton amp Company ISBN 978 0 393 06126 0 Woodman E H ed 1899 Transportation Sunset San Francisco Passenger Department Southern Pacific Company 2 March 1899 Retrieved March 15 2015 Yenne Bill 1996 The History of the Southern Pacific New York New York Smithmark Pub ISBN 0 8317 3788 3 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Southern Pacific Transportation Company Sphts org Southern Pacific Historical amp Technical Society Harvard Business School Lehman Brothers Collection History of the Southern Pacific Transportation Company Union Pacific Railroad com Union Pacific History Across the Great Salt Lake The Lucin Cutoff 1937 article Abandoned Rails com History of the Santa Ana and Newport Railroad Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Southern Pacific Transportation Company amp oldid 1204358940, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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