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Texas Eagle

The Texas Eagle is a long-distance passenger train operated daily by Amtrak on a 1,306-mile (2,102 km) route between Chicago, Illinois, and San Antonio, Texas, with major stops in St. Louis, Little Rock, Dallas, Fort Worth, and Austin. Three days per week, the train joins the Sunset Limited in San Antonio and continues to Los Angeles via El Paso and Tucson. The combined 2,728-mile (4,390 km) route is the longest in the United States and the second-longest in the Americas, after the Canadian.

Texas Eagle
Texas Eagle in Austin, 2011
Overview
Service typeInter-city rail, higher-speed rail
LocaleMidwest and Southwestern United States (daily)
PredecessorInter-American
First serviceOctober 2, 1981 (1981-10-02)
Current operator(s)Amtrak
Annual ridership294,439 (FY23) 16.2%[a][1]
Route
TerminiChicago, Illinois
San Antonio, Texas or
Los Angeles, California
Stops43
Distance travelled
  • 1,306 miles (2,102 km) (to San Antonio)
  • 2,728 miles (4,390 km) (to Los Angeles)
Average journey time
  • 30 34 hours (San Antonio to Chicago)
  • 32 14 hours (Chicago to San Antonio)
  • 61 34 hours (Los Angeles to Chicago)
  • 65 34 hours (Chicago to Los Angeles)[2]
Service frequencyDaily, tri-weekly to Los Angeles
Train number(s)21 (southbound), 22 (northbound) (to San Antonio)
321, 322 (to St. Louis)
421, 422 (to Los Angeles)
On-board services
Class(es)Coach Class
Sleeper Service
Disabled accessTrain lower level, all stations
Sleeping arrangements
  • Roomette (2 beds)
  • Bedroom (2 beds)
  • Bedroom Suite (4 beds)
  • Accessible Bedroom (2 beds)
  • Family Bedroom (4 beds)
Catering facilitiesDining car (San Antonio-Los Angeles only), Café
Observation facilitiesSightseer lounge car (San Antonio-Los Angeles only)
Baggage facilitiesOverhead racks, checked baggage available at selected stations
Technical
Rolling stockGE Genesis
Superliner
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Operating speed55 mph (89 km/h) (avg.)
100 mph (161 km/h) (top)[3]
Track owner(s)UP, BNSF, CN
Route map
0 mi
0 km
Chicago
37 mi
60 km
Joliet
92 mi
148 km
Pontiac
124 mi
200 km
Normal
156 mi
251 km
Lincoln
185 mi
298 km
Springfield
237 mi
381 km
Carlinville
257 mi
414 km
Alton
284 mi
457 km
St. Louis
376 mi
605 km
Arcadia Valley
453 mi
729 km
Poplar Bluff
523 mi
842 km
Walnut Ridge
560 mi
901 km
Newport
closed
1996
634 mi
1020 km
Little Rock
677 mi
1090 km
Malvern
694 mi
1117 km
Arkadelphia
741 mi
1193 km
Hope
774 mi
1246 km
Texarkana
proposed
840 mi
1352 km
Marshall
864 mi
1390 km
Longview
912 mi
1468 km
Mineola
991 mi
1595 km
Dallas
branch discontinued 1995
1022 mi
1645 km
Fort Worth
1051 mi
1691 km
Cleburne
1125 mi
1811 km
McGregor
1036 mi
1667 km
Corsicana
1150 mi
1851 km
Temple
1152 mi
1854 km
College Station
1188 mi
1912 km
Taylor
1223 mi
1968 km
Austin
1247 mi
2007 km
Houston
1253 mi
2017 km
San Marcos
1306 mi
2102 km
San Antonio
daily
tri-weekly
1475 mi
2374 km
Del Rio
1601 mi
2577 km
Sanderson
1692 mi
2723 km
Alpine
1910 mi
3074 km
El Paso
1998 mi
3215 km
Deming
2058 mi
3312 km
Lordsburg
2176 mi
3502 km
Benson
2226 mi
3582 km
Tucson
2312 mi
3721 km
Maricopa
Phoenix
discontinued
1996
2477 mi
3986 km
Yuma
Indio
closed
1998
2622 mi
4220 km
Palm Springs
2689 mi
4328 km
Ontario
2696 mi
4339 km
Pomona
2728 mi
4390 km
Los Angeles

all stops are accessible

Prior to 1988, the train was known simply as the Eagle.

History edit

Amtrak's Texas Eagle is the direct successor of the Missouri Pacific Railroad and Texas and Pacific Railway train of the same name, which was inaugurated in 1948 and ultimately discontinued in 1971. The route of Amtrak's Texas Eagle is longer (Chicago to San Antonio versus St. Louis to San Antonio), but much of today's route is historically a part of the original Texas Eagle route. St. Louis to Texarkana and Taylor, Texas, to San Antonio travels over former Missouri Pacific Railroad trackage, while the Texarkana to Fort Worth segment traverses the former Texas and Pacific Railway. The T&P merged with MoPac in 1982; in turn MoPac was acquired by Union Pacific in 1986.

The Eagle began on October 2, 1981, as a restructuring of the Inter-American, which had operated a daily schedule from Chicago to Laredo, Texas, via San Antonio since 1973. From 1979 onward, it operated a section to Houston, Texas, which diverged at Temple, Texas. The new Eagle dropped the Houston section, while its southern terminus was cut back from Laredo to San Antonio. The new train carried Superliner equipment, replacing the Amfleet coaches on the Inter-American. In addition, the new train ran on a thrice-weekly schedule with a through car on the Sunset Limited to Los Angeles, although the latter was not announced until the April 1982 timetable.[4][5][6][7]

On November 15, 1988, Amtrak revived a Houston section, this time diverging at Dallas and running over the route of the Southern Pacific's Sunbeam. It was the first time passenger traffic had served that route since 1958. Amtrak had intended to operate the Lone Star over this route back in the 1970s, but dropped the plan in the face of obstruction from the Southern Pacific.[8][9] With the change, Amtrak revived the name Texas Eagle for the thrice-weekly Chicago-San Antonio/Houston train, while the off-day Chicago–St. Louis train remained the Eagle. This section would be discontinued on September 10, 1995.[10] On April 4, 2013, Amtrak opened a new station in Hope, Arkansas, the hometown of former U.S. president Bill Clinton.[11] Arcadia Valley was added on November 17, 2016, serving Iron County, Missouri.[12]

In August 2023, Amtrak approved construction of a new station in De Soto, Missouri for trains to stop at between St. Louis and Arcadia Valley.[13]

COVID-19 pandemic edit

As part of Amtrak's response to the COVID-19 pandemic resulting in greatly depressed ridership, service was reduced to tri-weekly throughout the corridor October 11, 2020.[14] In March 2021, Amtrak announced plans to return the Texas Eagle to its pre-pandemic schedule on May 24, 2021.[15] However, the train began operating on a five days per week schedule in January 2022 due to a resurgence of the virus caused by the Omicron variant and remained so until March 2022.[15][16]

Proposed changes edit

In the August 2009 issue of Trains, Brian Rosenwald, Amtrak's chief of product management, noted that the Sunset Limited might be replaced by an extension of the Texas Eagle to Los Angeles: "We projected the revenue and looked at the logistics, and with a little bit of rescheduling came to the conclusion that we can make this happen with the equipment we have, and the additional revenue the train earns will more than cover the increased operating costs". The move would restore a connection to the Coast Starlight in both directions, and move boarding in Maricopa and Tucson, Arizona, to civilized times. "We are putting a stake in the ground: Triweekly needs to disappear," Rosenwald said.[17] While the route of the Sunset Limited would not be entirely replaced, the performance improvements listed explain what will happen:

  • Conversion to daily ChicagoLos Angeles train
  • Shortening of the schedule by 9 hours
  • San AntonioNew Orleans stub service on a daily basis to connect with this train
  • Use of the Diner-Lounge on the stub service

These changes would, in turn, create a through-car change similar to that of the Empire Builder. Such service would originate from Los Angeles and split at San Antonio, and vice versa from New Orleans.[18]

Operation edit

Route edit

As of July 2022,[19] the southbound Texas Eagle (train 21) departs Chicago 1:45 pm, running between Chicago and its first station stop in Joliet, parallel to the Illinois and Michigan Canal, along first the Canadian National's Freeport Subdivision and then Joliet Subdivision, which is also used by Metra's Heritage Corridor and Amtrak's Lincoln Service. From Joliet, the train travels along Union Pacific rails, often parallel to Interstate 55, making station stops in Pontiac, Bloomington–Normal, Lincoln, Springfield, Carlinville (a flag stop), and Alton before crossing the Mississippi River to make its stop at St. Louis' Gateway Multimodal Transportation Center, scheduled for 7:13 pm. After St. Louis, the train skirts the Ozark Mountains, stopping in Poplar Bluff, Missouri, before crossing the state line into Arkansas. In Arkansas, the train stops in Walnut Ridge, the state capital of Little Rock, and the stations at Malvern, Arkadelphia, Hope, and Texarkana, on the Arkansas–Texas border.

Continuing into Texas, the train makes station stops in Marshall, Longview (bus connection with Houston), Mineola, Dallas and Fort Worth, which has connections to Oklahoma City via Amtrak's Heartland Flyer, and from there the train travels on BNSF trackage. The train continues on, making stops in Cleburne, McGregor, Temple (where the train resumes traveling on the Union Pacific), Taylor, the state capital of Austin, and San Marcos, with a scheduled arrival into San Antonio at 9:55 pm (the next day). A sleeping car and a coach (designated internally as train 421) are conveyed to the Sunset Limited on Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Sundays, departing San Antonio at 2:45 am.

The northbound Texas Eagle (train 22) leaves San Antonio at 7 am, splitting from the eastbound Sunset Limited (train 422) on Tuesdays, Fridays, and Sundays. The train arrives in Chicago at 1:44 pm the next day.

 
Amtrak Texas Eagle route

Stations edit

Amtrak Texas Eagle stations
State/Province City Station
Illinois Chicago Chicago Union
Joliet Joliet
Pontiac Pontiac
Normal Bloomington–Normal
Lincoln Lincoln
Springfield Springfield
Carlinville Carlinville
Alton Alton
Missouri St. Louis St. Louis Gateway
Ironton Arcadia Valley
Poplar Bluff Poplar Bluff
Arkansas Walnut Ridge Walnut Ridge
Little Rock Little Rock
Malvern Malvern
Arkadelphia Arkadelphia
Hope Hope
Texarkana Texarkana
Texas Marshall Marshall
Longview Longview
Mineola Mineola
Dallas Dallas
Fort Worth Fort Worth
Cleburne Cleburne
McGregor McGregor
Temple Temple
Taylor Taylor
Austin Austin
San Marcos San Marcos
San Antonio San Antonio
Del Rio Del Rio
Sanderson Sanderson
Alpine Alpine
El Paso El Paso
New Mexico Deming Deming
Lordsburg Lordsburg
Arizona Benson Benson
Tucson Tucson
Maricopa Maricopa
Yuma Yuma
California Palm Springs Palm Springs
Ontario Ontario
Pomona Pomona
Los Angeles Los Angeles Union

Equipment edit

 
Amtrak P42DC #69 leading Texas Eagle #421 in Dallas Union Station

The normally assigned consist on the Texas Eagle includes:

The train once featured a Superliner Sightseer Lounge. That car has been removed since October 2020. The decision concerning whether or not it will return remains in question.

Three times a week, one coach and one sleeping car from the Texas Eagle are connected to the Sunset Limited and travel between San Antonio and Los Angeles as train #421/422.[20]

Additionally, to provide extra capacity, an additional Superliner coach operates between Chicago and St. Louis as train #321/322.

As is already happening on all its long-distance routes, Amtrak will replace the P42DCs with modern Siemens ALC-42 locomotives by 2027, and the Superliner cars with new long-distance cars by 2032.[21]

Ridership edit

During fiscal year 2019, the Texas Eagle carried 321,694 passengers, a 4.2% decrease from 2018.[22] In FY2016, the train had a total revenue of $22,323,171, an 8.5% decrease from FY2015.[23]

Ridership by Fiscal Year (October–September)
Ridership Change over previous year
2007[24] 218,321 -
2008[24] 251,518  015.25%
2009[24] 260,467  03.56%
2010[25] 287,164  010.25%
2011[25] 299,508  04.30%
2012[26] 337,973  012.84%
2013[26] 340,081  00.62%
2014[27] 313,338  07.86%
2015[27] 317,282  01.26%
2016[23] 306,321  03.45%
2017[28] 345,679  012.85%
2018[29] 335,771  02.87%
2019[29] 311,367  07.27%
2020[30] 196,078  037.03%
2021[31] 151,393  022.79%
2022[32] 253,491  067.44%
2023[33] 294,439  016.15%

References edit

  1. ^ "Amtrak Fiscal Year 2023 Ridership" (PDF). Amtrak. November 27, 2023. Retrieved November 30, 2023.
  2. ^ "Amtrak Timetable Results". www.amtrak.com. Retrieved December 20, 2021.
  3. ^ Johnston, Bob (May 3, 2023). "110 mph Schedules Coming for Amtrak Chicago-St. Louis Corridor". Trains. Retrieved May 6, 2023.
  4. ^ "Amtrak To Eliminate Unprofitable Routes". The Blade. Toledo, Ohio. Associated Press. August 26, 1981. p. 1. Retrieved August 6, 2010.
  5. ^ "National Train Timetables". Amtrak. October 25, 1981. Retrieved August 8, 2010.
  6. ^ Versaggi, Joe M. (January 17, 1982). "No headline". The New York Times. Retrieved August 8, 2010.
  7. ^ "National Train Timetables". Amtrak. April 25, 1982. Retrieved August 8, 2010.
  8. ^ Smith, Griffin (August 1974). "Waiting For The Train". Texas Monthly. 2 (8): 79–83, 89–99.
  9. ^ Reifenberg, Anne (September 29, 1988). "Amtrak Will Link Dallas, Houston". Dallas Morning News. Retrieved August 8, 2010.
  10. ^ Johnston, Bob (June 6, 2017). "Getting the most from the 'Texas Eagle' detour". Trains Magazine. Retrieved April 9, 2019.
  11. ^ "Amtrak Texas Eagle Adds Stop in Hope, Ark" (PDF). Amtrak. Retrieved April 16, 2013.
  12. ^ Jenkins, Kevin R. (November 19, 2016). "Arcadia Valley welcomes Amtrak". Daily Journal. Retrieved November 19, 2016.
  13. ^ Schneider, Joey; Thomas, Mallory (August 22, 2023). "Amtrak Adding New Stop in De Soto, Missouri". KTVI. St. Louis, Missouri. Retrieved August 23, 2023.
  14. ^ Davis, Vincent (October 11, 2020). "Amtrak is cutting the schedule to three days a week". San Antonio Express-News. Retrieved October 12, 2020.
  15. ^ a b "Amtrak to decrease service on most routes Jan. 24 to March 27". Trains. Retrieved January 26, 2022.
  16. ^ "With Increased Demand and Congressional Funding, Amtrak Restores 12 Long Distance Routes to Daily Service". March 10, 2021. Retrieved March 16, 2021.
  17. ^ Johnson, Bob (August 2009). "Amtrak's Southwest Expansion". Trains. p. 20.
  18. ^ "Sunset Limited Marketing Meeting". RailPAC. June 11, 2009. Retrieved January 26, 2014.
  19. ^ "Texas Eagle and Heartland Flyer effective July 18, 2022" (PDF). Retrieved July 18, 2022.
  20. ^ Amtrak National Consist Book, May 1, 2008
  21. ^ "FY 2022-2027 Service and Asset Line Plans" (PDF). Amtrak. 2021. p. 133.
  22. ^ "Amtrak Route Ridership FY19 vs. FY18" (PDF). Amtrak. (PDF) from the original on April 7, 2020. Retrieved April 26, 2023.
  23. ^ a b "Amtrak FY16 Ridership & Revenue" (PDF). Amtrak. (PDF) from the original on August 19, 2017. Retrieved April 26, 2023.
  24. ^ a b c "Amtrak Fiscal Year 2009, October 2008–September 2009 (compared with Fiscal Years 2008 and 2007)" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on October 30, 2013. Retrieved October 24, 2013.
  25. ^ a b (PDF). Amtrak. October 13, 2011. Archived from the original (PDF) on November 8, 2012. Retrieved July 30, 2012.
  26. ^ a b (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on August 24, 2020.
  27. ^ a b "Amtrak FY15 Ridership & Revenue" (PDF).
  28. ^ "Amtrak FY17 Ridership" (PDF).
  29. ^ a b "Amtrak FY19 Ridership" (PDF).
  30. ^ Luczak, Marybeth (November 23, 2020). "Amtrak Releases FY 2020 Data". Railway Age. New York: Simmons-Boardman Publishing Inc. Retrieved February 18, 2020.
  31. ^ "Amtrak Route Ridership FY21 vs. FY19" (PDF). Amtrak. Retrieved April 19, 2022.
  32. ^ "Amtrak FY22 Ridership" (PDF).
  33. ^ Anderson, Kyle (November 30, 2023). "Amtrak Fiscal Year 2023: Ridership Exceeds Expectations as Demand for Passenger Rail Soars". Amtrak Media. Retrieved January 29, 2024.
  • Goen, Steve Allen (1997). Texas and Pacific Color Pictorial. La Mirada, California: Four Ways West Publications. ISBN 1-885614-17-9.
  • Runte, Alfred (2006). Allies of the Earth, Railroads and the Soul of Preservation. Kirksville, Missouri: Truman State University Press. ISBN 1-931112-52-5.
  • Stout, Greg (1995). Route of the Eagles: Missouri Pacific in the Streamlined Era. Bucklin, Missouri: White River Productions. ISBN 0-9659040-3-2.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Amtrak's Fiscal Year (FY) runs from October 1 of the prior year to September 30 of the named year.

External links edit

  • Official website  
  • Texas Eagle – Amtrak
  • Texas Eagle timetable – July 18, 2022

texas, eagle, former, missouri, pacific, train, train, long, distance, passenger, train, operated, daily, amtrak, mile, route, between, chicago, illinois, antonio, texas, with, major, stops, louis, little, rock, dallas, fort, worth, austin, three, days, week, . For the former Missouri Pacific train see Texas Eagle MP train The Texas Eagle is a long distance passenger train operated daily by Amtrak on a 1 306 mile 2 102 km route between Chicago Illinois and San Antonio Texas with major stops in St Louis Little Rock Dallas Fort Worth and Austin Three days per week the train joins the Sunset Limited in San Antonio and continues to Los Angeles via El Paso and Tucson The combined 2 728 mile 4 390 km route is the longest in the United States and the second longest in the Americas after the Canadian Texas EagleTexas Eagle in Austin 2011OverviewService typeInter city rail higher speed railLocaleMidwest and Southwestern United States daily PredecessorInter AmericanFirst serviceOctober 2 1981 1981 10 02 Current operator s AmtrakAnnual ridership294 439 FY23 16 2 a 1 RouteTerminiChicago IllinoisSan Antonio Texas or Los Angeles CaliforniaStops43Distance travelled1 306 miles 2 102 km to San Antonio 2 728 miles 4 390 km to Los Angeles Average journey time30 3 4 hours San Antonio to Chicago 32 1 4 hours Chicago to San Antonio 61 3 4 hours Los Angeles to Chicago 65 3 4 hours Chicago to Los Angeles 2 Service frequencyDaily tri weekly to Los AngelesTrain number s 21 southbound 22 northbound to San Antonio 321 322 to St Louis 421 422 to Los Angeles On board servicesClass es Coach ClassSleeper ServiceDisabled accessTrain lower level all stationsSleeping arrangementsRoomette 2 beds Bedroom 2 beds Bedroom Suite 4 beds Accessible Bedroom 2 beds Family Bedroom 4 beds Catering facilitiesDining car San Antonio Los Angeles only CafeObservation facilitiesSightseer lounge car San Antonio Los Angeles only Baggage facilitiesOverhead racks checked baggage available at selected stationsTechnicalRolling stockGE GenesisSuperlinerTrack gauge4 ft 8 1 2 in 1 435 mm standard gaugeOperating speed55 mph 89 km h avg 100 mph 161 km h top 3 Track owner s UP BNSF CNRoute mapShow interactive mapLegendEmpire Builder andHiawatha Service0 mi0 km Chicago37 mi60 km Joliet92 mi148 km Pontiac124 mi200 km Normal156 mi251 km Lincoln185 mi298 km Springfield237 mi381 km Carlinville257 mi414 km AltonILMO Mississippi River284 mi457 km St LouisMissouri River Runnerto Kansas City376 mi605 km Arcadia Valley453 mi729 km Poplar BluffMOAR523 mi842 km Walnut Ridge560 mi901 km Newport closed1996634 mi1020 km Little Rock677 mi1090 km Malvern694 mi1117 km Arkadelphia741 mi1193 km Hope774 mi1246 km TexarkanaARTXCrescentto New York proposed840 mi1352 km Marshall864 mi1390 km Longview912 mi1468 km Mineola991 mi1595 km DallasHeartland Flyerto Oklahoma Citybranch discontinued 19951022 mi1645 km Fort Worth1051 mi1691 km Cleburne1125 mi1811 km McGregor1036 mi1667 km Corsicana1150 mi1851 km Temple1152 mi1854 km College Station1188 mi1912 km Taylor1223 mi1968 km Austin1247 mi2007 km Houston1253 mi2017 km San MarcosSunset Limitedto New Orleans1306 mi2102 km San Antonio dailytri weekly1475 mi2374 km Del Rio1601 mi2577 km Sanderson1692 mi2723 km AlpineCentral TimeMountain Time1910 mi3074 km El PasoTXNM1998 mi3215 km Deming2058 mi3312 km LordsburgNMAZ2176 mi3502 km Benson2226 mi3582 km Tucson2312 mi3721 km MaricopaPhoenix discontinued19962477 mi3986 km YumaAZCA Mountain TimePacific TimeIndio closed19982622 mi4220 km Palm SpringsSouthwest Chiefto Chicago2689 mi4328 km Ontario2696 mi4339 km PomonaCoast Starlight to SeattlePacific Surfliner2728 mi4390 km Los Angelesall stops are accessibleThis diagram viewtalkeditShow route diagram mapPrior to 1988 the train was known simply as the Eagle Contents 1 History 1 1 COVID 19 pandemic 1 2 Proposed changes 2 Operation 2 1 Route 2 2 Stations 2 3 Equipment 3 Ridership 4 References 5 Notes 6 External linksHistory editSee also Texas Eagle MP train Amtrak s Texas Eagle is the direct successor of the Missouri Pacific Railroad and Texas and Pacific Railway train of the same name which was inaugurated in 1948 and ultimately discontinued in 1971 The route of Amtrak s Texas Eagle is longer Chicago to San Antonio versus St Louis to San Antonio but much of today s route is historically a part of the original Texas Eagle route St Louis to Texarkana and Taylor Texas to San Antonio travels over former Missouri Pacific Railroad trackage while the Texarkana to Fort Worth segment traverses the former Texas and Pacific Railway The T amp P merged with MoPac in 1982 in turn MoPac was acquired by Union Pacific in 1986 The Eagle began on October 2 1981 as a restructuring of the Inter American which had operated a daily schedule from Chicago to Laredo Texas via San Antonio since 1973 From 1979 onward it operated a section to Houston Texas which diverged at Temple Texas The new Eagle dropped the Houston section while its southern terminus was cut back from Laredo to San Antonio The new train carried Superliner equipment replacing the Amfleet coaches on the Inter American In addition the new train ran on a thrice weekly schedule with a through car on the Sunset Limited to Los Angeles although the latter was not announced until the April 1982 timetable 4 5 6 7 On November 15 1988 Amtrak revived a Houston section this time diverging at Dallas and running over the route of the Southern Pacific s Sunbeam It was the first time passenger traffic had served that route since 1958 Amtrak had intended to operate the Lone Star over this route back in the 1970s but dropped the plan in the face of obstruction from the Southern Pacific 8 9 With the change Amtrak revived the name Texas Eagle for the thrice weekly Chicago San Antonio Houston train while the off day Chicago St Louis train remained the Eagle This section would be discontinued on September 10 1995 10 On April 4 2013 Amtrak opened a new station in Hope Arkansas the hometown of former U S president Bill Clinton 11 Arcadia Valley was added on November 17 2016 serving Iron County Missouri 12 In August 2023 Amtrak approved construction of a new station in De Soto Missouri for trains to stop at between St Louis and Arcadia Valley 13 COVID 19 pandemic edit As part of Amtrak s response to the COVID 19 pandemic resulting in greatly depressed ridership service was reduced to tri weekly throughout the corridor October 11 2020 14 In March 2021 Amtrak announced plans to return the Texas Eagle to its pre pandemic schedule on May 24 2021 15 However the train began operating on a five days per week schedule in January 2022 due to a resurgence of the virus caused by the Omicron variant and remained so until March 2022 15 16 Proposed changes edit In the August 2009 issue of Trains Brian Rosenwald Amtrak s chief of product management noted that the Sunset Limited might be replaced by an extension of the Texas Eagle to Los Angeles We projected the revenue and looked at the logistics and with a little bit of rescheduling came to the conclusion that we can make this happen with the equipment we have and the additional revenue the train earns will more than cover the increased operating costs The move would restore a connection to the Coast Starlight in both directions and move boarding in Maricopa and Tucson Arizona to civilized times We are putting a stake in the ground Triweekly needs to disappear Rosenwald said 17 While the route of the Sunset Limited would not be entirely replaced the performance improvements listed explain what will happen Conversion to daily Chicago Los Angeles train Shortening of the schedule by 9 hours San Antonio New Orleans stub service on a daily basis to connect with this train Use of the Diner Lounge on the stub serviceThese changes would in turn create a through car change similar to that of the Empire Builder Such service would originate from Los Angeles and split at San Antonio and vice versa from New Orleans 18 Operation editRoute edit As of July 2022 update 19 the southbound Texas Eagle train 21 departs Chicago 1 45 pm running between Chicago and its first station stop in Joliet parallel to the Illinois and Michigan Canal along first the Canadian National s Freeport Subdivision and then Joliet Subdivision which is also used by Metra s Heritage Corridor and Amtrak s Lincoln Service From Joliet the train travels along Union Pacific rails often parallel to Interstate 55 making station stops in Pontiac Bloomington Normal Lincoln Springfield Carlinville a flag stop and Alton before crossing the Mississippi River to make its stop at St Louis Gateway Multimodal Transportation Center scheduled for 7 13 pm After St Louis the train skirts the Ozark Mountains stopping in Poplar Bluff Missouri before crossing the state line into Arkansas In Arkansas the train stops in Walnut Ridge the state capital of Little Rock and the stations at Malvern Arkadelphia Hope and Texarkana on the Arkansas Texas border Continuing into Texas the train makes station stops in Marshall Longview bus connection with Houston Mineola Dallas and Fort Worth which has connections to Oklahoma City via Amtrak s Heartland Flyer and from there the train travels on BNSF trackage The train continues on making stops in Cleburne McGregor Temple where the train resumes traveling on the Union Pacific Taylor the state capital of Austin and San Marcos with a scheduled arrival into San Antonio at 9 55 pm the next day A sleeping car and a coach designated internally as train 421 are conveyed to the Sunset Limited on Tuesdays Thursdays and Sundays departing San Antonio at 2 45 am The northbound Texas Eagle train 22 leaves San Antonio at 7 am splitting from the eastbound Sunset Limited train 422 on Tuesdays Fridays and Sundays The train arrives in Chicago at 1 44 pm the next day nbsp Amtrak Texas Eagle route Stations edit Amtrak Texas Eagle stations State Province City StationIllinois Chicago Chicago UnionJoliet JolietPontiac PontiacNormal Bloomington NormalLincoln LincolnSpringfield SpringfieldCarlinville CarlinvilleAlton AltonMissouri St Louis St Louis GatewayIronton Arcadia ValleyPoplar Bluff Poplar BluffArkansas Walnut Ridge Walnut RidgeLittle Rock Little RockMalvern MalvernArkadelphia ArkadelphiaHope HopeTexarkana TexarkanaTexas Marshall MarshallLongview LongviewMineola MineolaDallas DallasFort Worth Fort WorthCleburne CleburneMcGregor McGregorTemple TempleTaylor TaylorAustin AustinSan Marcos San MarcosSan Antonio San AntonioDel Rio Del RioSanderson SandersonAlpine AlpineEl Paso El PasoNew Mexico Deming DemingLordsburg LordsburgArizona Benson BensonTucson TucsonMaricopa MaricopaYuma YumaCalifornia Palm Springs Palm SpringsOntario OntarioPomona PomonaLos Angeles Los Angeles UnionEquipment edit nbsp Amtrak P42DC 69 leading Texas Eagle 421 in Dallas Union StationThe normally assigned consist on the Texas Eagle includes GE Genesis locomotive Superliner Sleeper Superliner Diner Lounge Cross Country Cafe Superliner Coach Superliner CoachThe train once featured a Superliner Sightseer Lounge That car has been removed since October 2020 The decision concerning whether or not it will return remains in question Three times a week one coach and one sleeping car from the Texas Eagle are connected to the Sunset Limited and travel between San Antonio and Los Angeles as train 421 422 20 Additionally to provide extra capacity an additional Superliner coach operates between Chicago and St Louis as train 321 322 As is already happening on all its long distance routes Amtrak will replace the P42DCs with modern Siemens ALC 42 locomotives by 2027 and the Superliner cars with new long distance cars by 2032 21 Ridership editDuring fiscal year 2019 the Texas Eagle carried 321 694 passengers a 4 2 decrease from 2018 22 In FY2016 the train had a total revenue of 22 323 171 an 8 5 decrease from FY2015 23 Ridership by Fiscal Year October September Ridership Change over previous year2007 24 218 321 2008 24 251 518 nbsp 0 15 25 2009 24 260 467 nbsp 0 3 56 2010 25 287 164 nbsp 0 10 25 2011 25 299 508 nbsp 0 4 30 2012 26 337 973 nbsp 0 12 84 2013 26 340 081 nbsp 0 0 62 2014 27 313 338 nbsp 0 7 86 2015 27 317 282 nbsp 0 1 26 2016 23 306 321 nbsp 0 3 45 2017 28 345 679 nbsp 0 12 85 2018 29 335 771 nbsp 0 2 87 2019 29 311 367 nbsp 0 7 27 2020 30 196 078 nbsp 0 37 03 2021 31 151 393 nbsp 0 22 79 2022 32 253 491 nbsp 0 67 44 2023 33 294 439 nbsp 0 16 15 References edit Amtrak Fiscal Year 2023 Ridership PDF Amtrak November 27 2023 Retrieved November 30 2023 Amtrak Timetable Results www amtrak com Retrieved December 20 2021 Johnston Bob May 3 2023 110 mph Schedules Coming for Amtrak Chicago St Louis Corridor Trains Retrieved May 6 2023 Amtrak To Eliminate Unprofitable Routes The Blade Toledo Ohio Associated Press August 26 1981 p 1 Retrieved August 6 2010 National Train Timetables Amtrak October 25 1981 Retrieved August 8 2010 Versaggi Joe M January 17 1982 No headline The New York Times Retrieved August 8 2010 National Train Timetables Amtrak April 25 1982 Retrieved August 8 2010 Smith Griffin August 1974 Waiting For The Train Texas Monthly 2 8 79 83 89 99 Reifenberg Anne September 29 1988 Amtrak Will Link Dallas Houston Dallas Morning News Retrieved August 8 2010 Johnston Bob June 6 2017 Getting the most from the Texas Eagle detour Trains Magazine Retrieved April 9 2019 Amtrak Texas Eagle Adds Stop in Hope Ark PDF Amtrak Retrieved April 16 2013 Jenkins Kevin R November 19 2016 Arcadia Valley welcomes Amtrak Daily Journal Retrieved November 19 2016 Schneider Joey Thomas Mallory August 22 2023 Amtrak Adding New Stop in De Soto Missouri KTVI St Louis Missouri Retrieved August 23 2023 Davis Vincent October 11 2020 Amtrak is cutting the schedule to three days a week San Antonio Express News Retrieved October 12 2020 a b Amtrak to decrease service on most routes Jan 24 to March 27 Trains Retrieved January 26 2022 With Increased Demand and Congressional Funding Amtrak Restores 12 Long Distance Routes to Daily Service March 10 2021 Retrieved March 16 2021 Johnson Bob August 2009 Amtrak s Southwest Expansion Trains p 20 Sunset Limited Marketing Meeting RailPAC June 11 2009 Retrieved January 26 2014 Texas Eagle and Heartland Flyer effective July 18 2022 PDF Retrieved July 18 2022 Amtrak National Consist Book May 1 2008 FY 2022 2027 Service and Asset Line Plans PDF Amtrak 2021 p 133 Amtrak Route Ridership FY19 vs FY18 PDF Amtrak Archived PDF from the original on April 7 2020 Retrieved April 26 2023 a b Amtrak FY16 Ridership amp Revenue PDF Amtrak Archived PDF from the original on August 19 2017 Retrieved April 26 2023 a b c Amtrak Fiscal Year 2009 October 2008 September 2009 compared with Fiscal Years 2008 and 2007 PDF Archived PDF from the original on October 30 2013 Retrieved October 24 2013 a b AMTRAK RIDERSHIP ROLLS UP BEST EVER RECORDS PDF Amtrak October 13 2011 Archived from the original PDF on November 8 2012 Retrieved July 30 2012 a b AMTRAK SETS RIDERSHIP RECORD AND MOVES THE NATION S ECONOMY FORWARD PDF Archived from the original PDF on August 24 2020 a b Amtrak FY15 Ridership amp Revenue PDF Amtrak FY17 Ridership PDF a b Amtrak FY19 Ridership PDF Luczak Marybeth November 23 2020 Amtrak Releases FY 2020 Data Railway Age New York Simmons Boardman Publishing Inc Retrieved February 18 2020 Amtrak Route Ridership FY21 vs FY19 PDF Amtrak Retrieved April 19 2022 Amtrak FY22 Ridership PDF Anderson Kyle November 30 2023 Amtrak Fiscal Year 2023 Ridership Exceeds Expectations as Demand for Passenger Rail Soars Amtrak Media Retrieved January 29 2024 Goen Steve Allen 1997 Texas and Pacific Color Pictorial La Mirada California Four Ways West Publications ISBN 1 885614 17 9 Runte Alfred 2006 Allies of the Earth Railroads and the Soul of Preservation Kirksville Missouri Truman State University Press ISBN 1 931112 52 5 Stout Greg 1995 Route of the Eagles Missouri Pacific in the Streamlined Era Bucklin Missouri White River Productions ISBN 0 9659040 3 2 Notes edit Amtrak s Fiscal Year FY runs from October 1 of the prior year to September 30 of the named year External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Texas Eagle Official website nbsp Texas Eagle Amtrak Texas Eagle timetable July 18 2022 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Texas Eagle amp oldid 1200313543, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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