The Santa Fe de Luxe was the first extra-fare named passenger train on the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway.
The de Luxe (meaning something luxurious, or elegant) was inaugurated on December 12, 1911 on a seasonal weekly schedule between Chicago, Illinois, and Los Angeles, California. It was the first of Santa Fe's passenger trains to carry the slogan "Extra Fast - Extra Fine - Extra Fare." The train was conceived by company president Edward Payson Ripley as the Santa Fe equivalent to the highly renowned 20th Century Limited (New York Central) and Broadway Limited (Pennsylvania Railroad).
The trip between the two terminals took 63 hours, and the sixty passengers paid a surcharge of $25 each way. Passengers could only board at the terminal points, in Kansas City, or at the Williams, Arizona, station (where those heading to the Grand Canyon disembarked and boarded a train of the Grand Canyon Railway in order to reach their destination).
Upon arriving at Summit Station at the crest of Cajon Pass in California, eastbound passengers were presented with orchid corsages (for the ladies) and engraved pigskin wallets (for the men). On the westbound run, ladies received a bouquet of flowers and a basket of California oranges, while the men received the customary wallet.
With the outbreak of World War I, the Santa Fe sought to eliminate its redundant lines. As the de Luxe was not considered essential to the war effort, it was withdrawn from service on May 1, 1917.
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It took the Pullman Company almost a year to design and build the 12 heavyweight all-steel underframe cars that comprised the two identical consists of the de Luxe, one of which was as follows:
The cars were lavishly furnished, and were outfitted with "ice-activated" air conditioning (the first passenger train in the United States to be so equipped) and electric lighting. Drawing room passengers slept in brass beds, as opposed to the usual berths.
The trains were pulled by 4-6-2 "Pacific"-type steam locomotives.