Prairie Marksman

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Prairie Marksman
Overview
Service type Inter-city rail
Status Discontinued
Locale Illinois
Predecessor Peoria Rocket
First service August 10, 1980
Last service October 4, 1981
Former operator(s) Amtrak
Route
Start Chicago, Illinois
Stops 1
End East Peoria, Illinois
Distance travelled 149 miles (240 km)
Average journey time 3 hours 15 minutes
Service frequency Daily
Train number(s) 311, 312, 314
On-board services
Class(es) Unreserved coach
Catering facilities On-board cafe
Technical
Rolling stock Amfleet coaches
Track gauge 4 ft 8 12 in (1,435 mm)
Track owner(s) ICG, TPW
Route map
Legend
Dist. Station
0 mi Chicago
37 mi 
60 km 
Joliet
149 mi 
240 km 
East Peoria

The Prairie Marksman was a daily passenger train operated by Amtrak between Chicago's Union Station and East Peoria, Illinois. The route was an indirect successor to the Rock Island's Peoria Rocket.

History

Prior to the creation of Amtrak Peoria was served by the Rock Island's Peoria Rocket. Then in serious financial distress, the Rock Island opted out of Amtrak in 1971: the company decided it was cheaper to keep running its remaining passenger trains than to join Amtrak. The Peoria Rocket and the Quad Cities Rocket continued running until December 31, 1978, providing one round-trip each day between Chicago's LaSalle Street Station and both Peoria and Rock Island, Illinois via Joliet, Illinois.[1][2]:136 With the demise of the Rock Island Peoria's nearest railroad connection was at Chillicothe, Illinois, 20 miles (32 km) to the north, where Amtrak's Lone Star (Chicago-Kansas City-Houston) stopped daily. The Lone Star, however, fell victim to budget cuts and was discontinued in October 1979.

The Prairie Marksman began on August 10, 1980, as a joint venture between Amtrak and the state of Illinois.[3]:88 Eschewing the Rock Island route, the Prairie Marksman used the old GM&O line between Chicago and Chenoa, Illinois, and then traveled west over the Toledo, Peoria & Western to East Peoria. The name was derived from a TP&W freight train which once operated over that route between Webster, Illinois and Keokuk, Iowa.[4]

The Prairie Marksman ended on October 4, 1981, after Illinois withdrew its support for the train. The train carried an average of 65 passengers per day, well below the 150 needed to justify a continuation.[5]

Proposed revival

Amtrak, at the request of the Illinois Department of Transportation, conducted a feasibility study for restoring service to Peoria which was published in September 2011. This study recommended a "rail shuttle" to Normal, Illinois which would connect with the Lincoln Service. Like the Prairie Marksman this shuttle would stop in East Peoria and not Peoria proper: the railroad bridge over the Illinois River is of the moveable span type and opens 1020 a day. The shuttle would use the Norfolk Southern Railway to reach Normal. Amtrak estimated start-up costs at $106 million, mostly for a new connecting track in Normal which would permit the trains to bypass a Union Pacific Railroad yard there.[6]

Notes

  1. Glischinksi (2007), 77-78.
  2. Schafer, Mike; Joe Welsh, Kevin J. Holland (2001). The American Passenger Train. Saint Paul, MN: MBI. ISBN 0760308969. OCLC 48693895. 
  3. Goldberg, Bruce (1981). Amtrak--the first decade. Silver Spring, MD: Alan Books. OCLC 7925036. 
  4. "American Railroad Freight Train Names 1948". Retrieved 2009-03-08. 
  5. "Amtrak cut". Southeast Missourian. September 1, 1981. Retrieved 2010-09-06. 
  6. Amtrak (September 26, 2011). "Feasibility Report of Proposed Amtrak Service: Chicago - Peoria". 

References

External links

External images
Amtrak on the TP&W in the 80's
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