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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 ...
The Southern Pacific Railroad Locomotive No. 1673 is a standard gauge 2-6-0, ... Map Showing the Line of the True Southern Pacific Railway, c. 1881. References
Sunset Limited route map. For most of its existence, the Sunset Limited route was owned by the Southern Pacific Railroad. The name Sunset Limited traces its origins to the Galveston, Harrisburg and San Antonio Railway, a Southern Pacific subsidiary which was known as the Sunset Route as early as 1874.
The name traces its origins to the Galveston, Harrisburg and San Antonio Railway, a Southern Pacific Railroad subsidiary which was known as the Sunset Route as early as 1874. [citation needed] The line was built by several different companies and largely consolidated under Southern Pacific, with completion at the Colorado River in 1883. [3]
Map of the Southern Pacific Railroad's different routes into Los Angeles from the north. The track is a standard gauge railroad constructed in 1887 by the Southern Pacific Branch Railway Company (a company controlled by and later absorbed into the Southern Pacific Railroad) through the Santa Clara River Valley in Ventura County, California. [1]
This is a route-map template for the Shasta Daylight, a former Southern Pacific Railroad passenger train.. For a key to symbols, see {{railway line legend}}.; For information on using this template, see Template:Routemap.
The Pengra Pass rail route, also known as the Natron Cutoff, the Cascade Subdivision, or the Cascade Line, is a Union Pacific Railroad line (originally a Southern Pacific Railroad line) connecting Eugene, Oregon, with Klamath Falls, Oregon. Construction of the line began in 1905 and was completed in the mid-1920s.
The East Bay Electric Lines were a unit of the Southern Pacific Railroad that operated electric interurban-type trains in the East Bay region of the San Francisco Bay Area. [1] [2] Beginning in 1862, the SP and its predecessors [a] operated local steam-drawn ferry-train passenger service in the East Bay on an expanding system of lines, but in 1902 the Key System started a competing system of ...