Rails & Trails Pages

Wednesday, October 30, 2013

KCS Train Ride

On Saturday, October 26, 2013, I had a special train ride on the Kansas City Southern Railroad's executive train.  I was in Kansas City for a railroad convention and the KCS graciously provided us a great ride.  We would leave the beautifully restored KC train station.  This awesome station was built in 1914 and was the third largest depot in the US and served 12 railroads.  It fell into non-use and disrepair but was renovated and now hosts 6 Amtrak trains, many shops, restaurants, museums, theaters, a model railroad room, and our Lexington Group!  Here is the station.  The large water fountain in the front was not being used.
Some inside views.  The first shot is the large waiting room which would have been filled with benches with passengers awaiting their trains.

The ceiling, during the day:
And at night:
The model railroad room has 5 layouts with many different gauge tracks.
Note the large erector set in this shot.
Two nights previously we had eaten steaks at the Fred Harvey Restaurant.  Here are Peter Espey, George Forero, and Barry Karlberg, my dinner partners.
Inside the restaurant, which was pretty dark and hard to get a good picture.
The original Fred Harvey restaurants were built to serve a hungry passenger base.  Before there were dining cars, hungry passengers had to try and find food at towns where they passed through.  There often wasn't time to get a meal and they were charged exorbitant prices.  Paul Harvey built restaurants along the way that were able to handle the crowds, at reasonable rates.  It's a fascinating history to explore.  Here's a painting of what one would look like.
I think I have now seen almost all of the famous railroad stations in the US, with the exception of Portland.  I've been to Grand Central and Penn Central in New York City, Washington, Boston South Station, Philadelphia, Chicago, St. Paul, St. Louis, Kansas City, Los Angeles, and Seattle.  Am I missing any?  Anyone want to go to Portland with me??
 
At the station there is an overhead walkway bridge over the railroad tracks allowing people to watch trains and access the shopping district on the other side.  This bridge was moved here from the east and west bottoms in 2006 and the tracks see 180 trains a day.
Here is our train for today.  It has 3 diesels and 11 cars.  It is called the Southern Belle.  The original Southern Belle train ran from 1940 to 1969.
Inside views of some of the cars:
Even though I was one of the first people in the cars, the small dome was already full.
That's Matt Van Hatten, senior editor of TRAINS, who I have gotten to know at these Conventions.
Yours truly in the Theater Car.
These cars are definitely First Class and KCS treated us royally with hors d'hoeurves and lunch of sandwiches and salads.  But with over 250 people aboard, we were packed and almost had to stay in any seat we could find.  We took a 52-mile ride, one way, to Amsterdam.  The bright sun made a lot of reflection on the windows.
Here's the BNSF Flyover into their large Argentine Yard, with a coal train on it.
At Amsterdam there is a wye for turning our train.
There is oil in Missouri!
KCS purchased a runway area of an abandoned Air Force base and constructed its intermodal facility here.  Here's the lead to it.
It's always fun going over bridges.
We pass a large scrapyard where they grind up steel and ship it in gons.
Good-bye to Kansas City.
My hotel was the Crowne Plaza.
KC--A great place.  I need a reason to go back and see more.  Let's see--the Kansas City Royals play baseball there . . . .












2 comments:

  1. This comment has been removed by the author.

    ReplyDelete
  2. My brother suggested I might like this web site. He was totally right. This post actually made my day. You cann't imagine just how much time I had spent for this information! Thanks! shipping container sizes and prices

    ReplyDelete