Cardinal (train)
Cardinal |
Eastbound Cardinal stopped in Prince, WV |
Overview |
Service type |
Inter-city rail |
Locale |
Midwestern United States |
Predecessor |
James Whitcomb Riley |
First service |
October 30, 1977 |
Current operator(s) |
Amtrak |
Average ridership |
342 per train
107,053 total (FY10)[1] |
Route |
Start |
Chicago, Illinois |
End |
New York City |
Distance travelled |
1,146 miles (1,844 km) |
Service frequency |
Thrice-weekly |
Train number(s) |
50/51 |
On-board services |
Class(es) |
First class (sleeper) and reserved coach |
Seating arrangements |
Airline-style |
Sleeping arrangements |
Roomettes and bedrooms |
Catering facilities |
Diner/lounge |
Baggage facilities |
Checked baggage available at selected stations |
Technical |
Gauge |
4 ft 8 1⁄2 in (1,435 mm) |
Track owner(s) |
Amtrak, CSX, BB, NS, CN, UP, and Metra |
|
The Cardinal is a congressionally mandated passenger train route operated by Amtrak, connecting New York Penn Station with Chicago Union Station three days a week via Philadelphia, Wilmington, Delaware, Washington, D.C., Charlottesville, Virginia, Cincinnati, Ohio, and Indianapolis, Indiana. The length of the route is 1,146 miles (1,844 km) for a travel time, end-to-end, of 26.5 hours.[2] The Hoosier State provides service the other four days on the 196-mile (315 km) section from Chicago to Indianapolis.[3]
During fiscal year 2010, the Cardinal carried a total of 107,053 passengers, a 1.4% decrease from FY 2009's total of 108,614 passengers.[1] The train had a total revenue of $6,375,560 in FY 2010, a 0.2% increase from FY 2009's total of $6,364,295.[1]
History
The Cardinal is the successor of several previous trains, primarily the New York Central/Penn Central James Whitcomb Riley and the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway (C&O) George Washington. The James Whitcomb Riley was a daytime all-coach train which operated between Chicago and Cincinnati (via Indianapolis), while the George Washington was a C&O sleeper which ran east from Cincinnati to Washington, DC and Newport News, Virginia. Up until the late 1960s the Riley would carry the Washington's sleeper cars between Cincinnati and Chicago.[4] Both routes survived until the formation of Amtrak in 1971.[5]
Amtrak, upon its 1971 commencement of operations, kept service mostly identical at first.[6] Through Washington-Chicago and Newport News-Chicago coaches began operating July 12, and a through sleeping car began September 8.[7] Throughout the 1970s Amtrak would drop the George Washington name re-route the train off the rapidly deteriorating Penn Central track in Indiana.[7] The Newport News section ended in 1976, replaced by the New York—Newport News Colonial.[8]
The James Whitcomb Riley was renamed the Cardinal on October 30, 1977, as the cardinal was the state bird of all six states through which it ran. But the train was subjected to more than just a name change in the 1970s. Owing to the poor quality of the Penn Central trackage in Indiana, the train was rerouted numerous times, first over various Penn Central/Conrail routings, and then in 1980 being shifted to the former Baltimore and Ohio route via Cottage Grove, Indiana.[9]
The Cardinal was discontinued September 30, 1981 (by then having been extended to New York from Washington) and brought back by Congressional mandate on January 8, 1982. Upon its return, the Cardinal was brought back on yet another new Indiana route, the former Chesapeake and Ohio route via Richmond and Muncie. This arrangement lasted until April 27, 1986, when the train was finally moved to its current route via Indianapolis.[9]
Hoosier State
With the Indianapolis re-route the Cardinal began operating jointly with the Chicago—Indianapolis Hoosier State, an arrangement which continues, off and on, to the present. The Hoosier State ran to Indianapolis on the four days of the week on which the Cardinal did not operate. This pattern ended on October 25, 1987, then resumed again on July 19, 1998. On December 17, 1999 Amtrak extended the Hoosier State to Jeffersonville, Indiana (and later to Louisville, Kentucky) and renamed the train the Kentucky Cardinal. This new train was a daily service, and on days when the Cardinal operated the two trains ran combined between Indianapolis and Chicago. Amtrak discontinued the Kentucky Cardinal on July 4, 2003.
Future plans
In the July 2010 issue of Trains magazine, the Cardinal was noted as being one of five routes under consideration for performance improvement.[10] For the Cardinal, the proposed changes include:
- Daily operation from tri-weekly
- Conversion back to Superliner equipment
- Changing the western terminus to St. Louis
In addition, Railfan and Railroad magazine suggested that the train be rerouted to St. Louis as well, with a decoupled section or diesel multiple units headed towards Chicago.
In early October 2010, Amtrak released a report detailing plans to increase the Cardinal's service from three trains a week to daily service, as well as increasing the train's on-time performance and food service.[11] The January 2011 issue of Trains later revealed that that Amtrak would scrap re-routing and Superliner conversion and instead adopt not only daily service, but also purchasing dome cars to be used along the Chicago-D.C. portion of the trip. Furthermore, the routing into Chicago Union Station would be changed and station platforms along the route containing coal dust would be scrubbed and cleaned.[12]
However, obstacles to a daily Cardinal persist. In its January 2012 issue, Trains magazine reported that due to a lack of sidings long enough to accommodate long CSX trains of of empty coal hoppers, there is insufficient capacity on Buckingham Branch trackage to support a daily passenger train. This problem likewise applies to the future Greenbrier Presidental Express train, which would also traverse that trackage on a weekly basis. The Buckingham Branch requires outside funding to expand these sidings before allowing additional service.[13]
Train consist
In the early 1990s, the Cardinal ran with the usual Amtrak long-distance consist of two F40s/E60 plus several MHC and material handling baggage cars, followed by several Amfleet coaches, an Amfleet lounge, a Heritage diner, two or three Heritage 10-6 sleepers, a slumbercoach, and finally, a baggage dormitory car. Following the delivery of the Superliner II fleet, however, the Cardinal was re-equipped with Superliner cars in 1995.[14] As a result, its route was truncated to end in Washington D.C. as the Superliner equipment could not run into Penn Station, New York, due to low clearances there. With the Superliner equipment, the consist would usually be two Superliner sleeping cars, a diner, a Sightseer Lounge, a baggage coach, and a coach.
In 2002, two derailments on other routes took numerous Superliner cars out of service. Because of this, insufficient Superliner equipment was available for use on the Cardinal. The Cardinal was re-equipped with a consist of single-level long-distance cars, including dining, lounge, sleeping, and dormitory cars. Subsequent fleet shortages shortened the Cardinal further, and at one point, the train was running with two or three Amfleet II coaches and a combined diner-lounge car. While the sleeping car was later restored, the Cardinal has not had a dormitory car or a diner since. Similarly, though the baggage car was also removed, it was restored in response to an upturn in patronage in mid-2010. The Cardinal currently runs with a single General Electric P42DC engine, a Heritage fleet baggage car, a single Viewliner sleeping car, three (sometimes four during peak travel periods) Amfleet II long-distance coaches, and a single diner-lounge car.
Route details
The Cardinal operates over Amtrak, CSX Transportation, Norfolk Southern Railway, Buckingham Branch Railroad, Canadian National Railway, Union Pacific Railroad, and Metra trackage:
- Amtrak Northeast Corridor, New York to Washington
- CSX RF&P Subdivision, Washington to Alexandria
- NS Washington District, Alexandria to Orange
- BB Orange Subdivision and North Mountain Subdivision, Orange to Clifton Forge
- CSX Alleghany Subdivision, New River Subdivision, Kanawha Subdivision, Russell Subdivision, Northern Subdivision, Cincinnati Subdivision, Cincinnati Terminal Subdivision, Indianapolis Subdivision, Indianapolis Terminal Subdivision, Crawfordsville Branch Subdivision, and Monon Subdivision, Clifton Forge to Munster
- CN Elsdon Subdivision, Munster to Thornton
- UP Villa Grove Subdivision, Thornton to 81st Street
- Metra SouthWest Service, 81st Street to Chicago
Station stops
State/Province |
Town/City |
Station |
Connections |
Illinois |
Chicago |
Chicago Union Station |
Amtrak: Blue Water, Capitol Limited, Carl Sandburg, California Zephyr, City of New Orleans, Empire Builder, Hiawatha Service, Hoosier State, Illini, Illinois Zephyr, Lake Shore Limited, Lincoln Service, Pere Marquette, Saluki, Southwest Chief, Texas Eagle, Wolverine, Thruway Motorcoach
CTA Buses: 1, 7, 14, 19, 20, X20, X28, 56, 60, 120, 121, 122, 123, 124, 125, 126, 128, 129, 130, 151, 156, 157, 192
CTA Subway Stops: Clinton Blue Line, Quincy Brown, Orange, Pink, and Purple Lines
Megabus: M1, M2, M3, M4, M5, M6, M7
Metra: North Central Service, Milwaukee District/North Line, Milwaukee District/West Line, BNSF Railway Line, Heritage Corridor, SouthWest Service |
Indiana |
Dyer |
Dyer Amtrak Station |
EasyGo Lake Transit: Red Route (at Main/Calumet intersection) |
Rensselaer |
Rensselaer Amtrak station |
None |
Lafayette |
Lafayette Amtrak Station |
Greyhound Lines
CityBus: 1A, 1B, 2A, 2B, 3A, 4A, 4B, 5, 6A, 6B, 7 |
Crawfordsville |
Crawfordsville Station |
None |
Indianapolis |
Indianapolis station |
Amtrak: Thruway Motorcoach (Burlington Trailways)
IndyGo: Route 16 |
Connersville |
Connersville station |
None |
Ohio |
Cincinnati |
Cincinnati Union Terminal |
SORTA: Route 1 |
Kentucky |
Maysville |
Maysville station |
Maysville Transit |
South Shore |
South Portsmouth-South Shore |
None |
Ashland |
Ashland Transportation Center |
Greyhound Lines
ABS: All routes |
West Virginia |
Huntington |
Huntington Amtrak station |
Tri-State Transit Authority: 2, 4, 5, 6, 10 |
Charleston |
Charleston Amtrak station |
KRT: Route 18 |
Montgomery |
Montgomery station |
None |
Thurmond |
Thurmond station |
Prince |
Prince depot |
Hinton |
Hinton Amtrak Station |
Alderson |
Alderson station |
White Sulphur Springs |
White Sulphur Springs station |
Virginia |
Clifton Forge |
Clifton Forge station |
Staunton |
Staunton Amtrak station |
Staunton Free Trolley: Green Route
CATS: 250 Connector (at Staunton Visitor Center) |
Charlottesville |
Charlottesville Union Station |
Amtrak: Crescent, Northeast Regional, Thruway Motorcoach to Richmond, Washington D.C.
Greyhound Lines
CAT: T, 7 |
Culpeper |
Culpeper |
Amtrak: Crescent, Northeast Regional |
Manassas |
Manassas |
Amtrak: Crescent, Northeast Regional
VRE: Manassas Line
PRTC: Manassas Metro Direct, OmniLink Manassas |
Alexandria |
Alexandria Union Station |
Amtrak: Crescent, Northeast Regional, Silver Meteor, Silver Star
VRE: Fredericksburg Line, Manassas Line
Metro: Blue Line, Yellow Line |
District of Columbia |
Washington |
Washington Union Station |
Amtrak: Capitol Limited, Carolinian, Crescent, Palmetto, Northeast Regional, Silver Meteor, Silver Star, Vermonter, Thruway Motorcoach to Charlottesville, Virginia
MARC Train: Brunswick Line, Camden Line, Penn Line
Metro: Red Line
Metrobus Loudoun County Commuter Bus
OmniRide
VRE: Manassas Line, Fredericksburg Line |
Maryland |
Baltimore |
Baltimore Penn Station |
Amtrak: Carolinian, Crescent, Palmetto, Northeast Regional, Silver Meteor, Silver Star, Vermonter
MARC Train: Penn Line
MTA Maryland: Light Rail, 3, 11, 61, 64 |
Delaware |
Wilmington |
Wilmington Station |
Amtrak: Carolinian, Crescent, Palmetto, Northeast Regional, Silver Meteor, Silver Star, Vermonter
DART First State: 2, 6, 7, 10, 11, 12, 20, 21, 28, 32, 301
SEPTA Regional Rail: Wilmington/Newark Line |
Pennsylvania |
Philadelphia |
30th Street Station |
Amtrak: Acela Express, Carolinian, Crescent, Keystone Service, Palmetto, Pennsylvanian, Silver Meteor, Silver Star, Vermonter
NJ Transit: Atlantic City Line
SEPTA City Transit Division: Market-Frankford Line, SEPTA Subway-Surface Trolley Lines (Route 10, Route 11, Route 13, Route 34, Route 36), 9, 30, 31, 44, 62, 121, 316
SEPTA Suburban Transit Division: 124, 125
SEPTA Regional Rail: Airport Line, Warminster Line, Wilmington/Newark Line, West Trenton Line, Media/Elwyn Line, Lansdale/Doylestown Line, Paoli/Thorndale Line, Manayunk/Norristown Line, Cynwyd Line, Trenton Line, Chestnut Hill East Line, Chestnut Hill West Line, Fox Chase Line |
New Jersey |
Trenton |
Trenton Rail Station |
Amtrak: Acela Express, Carolinian, Crescent, Keystone Service, Pennsylvanian, Silver Star, Silver Meteor, Vermonter
NJ Transit: Northeast Corridor Line, River Line, 409, 418, 600, 601, 604, 606, 608, 609, 611, 619
SEPTA Regional Rail: Trenton Line
SEPTA Suburban Transit Division: Route 127 |
Newark |
Newark Penn Station |
Amtrak: Acela Express, Carolinian, Crsecent, Keystone Service, Pennsylvanian, Silver Meteor, Silver Star, Vermonter
NJ Transit: Newark City Subway, Newark Light Rail, North Jersey Coast Line, Northeast Corridor Line, Raritan Valley Line, 1, 5, 21, 34, 40, 62, 67, 70, 71, 72, 73, 75, 76, 78, 79, 108, 308, 319
PATH: NWK-WTC
Coach USA: 31, 44 |
New York |
New York City |
Penn Station |
Amtrak: Acela Express, Adirondack, Carolinian, Crescent, Ethan Allen Express, Keystone Service, Lake Shore Limited, Maple Leaf, Northeast Regional, Palmetto, Pennsylvanian, Silver Meteor, Silver Star, Vermonter
LIRR: Main Line
NJ Transit: North Jersey Coast Line, Northeast Corridor Line, Gladstone Branch, Montclair-Boonton Line, Morristown Line
NYC Subway: 1 2 3 A C E trains
NYC Transit buses: M4, M7, M20, M34 / M34A Select Bus Service, Q32 |
References
- ^ a b c "AMTRAK SETS NEW RIDERSHIP RECORD, THANKS PASSENGERS FOR TAKING THE TRAIN (link to PDF download)". Amtrak. 11 October 2010. http://www.amtrak.com/servlet/ContentServer/Page/1237608337144/1237608345018?passedMonth=October&passedYear=2010. Retrieved 24 November 2010.
- ^ "Cardinal / Hoosier State". Amtrak. http://www.amtrak.com/servlet/ContentServer?c=AM_Route_C&pagename=am/Layout&cid=1241245652448. Retrieved 19 December 2011.
- ^ "Cardinal / Hoosier State". Amtrak. http://www.amtrak.com/servlet/ContentServer/AM_Route_C/1241245652448/1237405732511. Retrieved 5 May 2010.
- ^ Schafer, Mike; Joe Welsh (1997). Classic American streamliners. MBI. ISBN 0760303770. http://books.google.com/books?id=e-jEOg16QX8C.
- ^ Sanders, Craig (2003). Limiteds, locals, and expresses in Indiana, 1838-1971. Indiana University Press. ISBN 0253342163. http://books.google.com/books?id=X9IoXE2tSK0C.
- ^ "Amtrak's First Trains and Routes". Mark D. Bej. http://broadway.pennsyrr.com/Rail/Amtk/routes_1971.html. Retrieved 5 May 2010.
- ^ a b Lynch, Peter E. (2004). Penn Central Railroad. MBI. ISBN 0760317631. http://books.google.com/books?id=42UU-GN2xiYC.
- ^ "PRR CHRONOLOGY 1976". The Pennsylvania Railroad Technical & Historical Society. http://www.prrths.com/Hagley/PRR1976%20Nov%2005.pdf. Retrieved 5 May 2010.
- ^ a b Schafer, Mike, Bob Johnston and Kevin McKinney. All Aboard Amtrak. Piscataway NJ: Railpace Co., 1991
- ^ "Amtrak Trains Under the Microscope in 2010", Trains, July 2010, 20.
- ^ "More trains: Amtrak plans to dailify the Cardinal". The Hook. 2 October 2010. http://www.readthehook.com/blog/index.php/2010/10/02/more-trains-amtrak-plans-to-dailify-the-cardinal/. Retrieved 5 October 2010.
- ^ "Amtrak's Improvement Wish List", Trains, January 2011, 20-21.
- ^ "Bob Bryant's Big Little Railroad", Trains, January 2012, 51.
- ^ "Central Virginia Railfan Page--Amtrak Service". TrainWeb. http://www.trainweb.org/varail/amtrak.html. Retrieved 7 May 2010.
Further reading
External links