Floridian (train)

Floridian

The Floridian at Winter Park in 1973.
Overview
Service type Inter-city rail
Status Discontinued
Locale Eastern United States
Predecessor South Wind
First service November 14, 1971
Last service October 9, 1979
Former operator(s) Amtrak
Route
Start Chicago, Illinois
Stops 32
End St. Petersburg, Florida
Miami, Florida
Distance travelled 1,597 miles (2,570 km) (Miami)
1,481 miles (2,383 km) (St. Petersburg)
Average journey time 38 hours 40 minutes (Miami)
38 hours 33 minutes (St. Petersburg)
Service frequency Daily
Train number(s) 56, 57
On-board services
Class(es) Sleeping cars and reserved coach
Catering facilities Dining car and on-board cafe
Observation facilities Dome coach
Technical
Track gauge 4 ft 8 12 in (1,435 mm)
Track owner(s) LN, SCL
Route map
Legend
Dist.
Station
0 mi Chicago
Illinois/Indiana border
118 mi
190 km
Lafayette
221 mi
356 km
Bloomington
Indiana/Kentucky border
330 mi
531 km
Louisville
438 mi
705 km
Bowling Green
Kentucky/Tennessee border
511 mi
822 km
Nashville
Tennessee/Alabama border
629 mi
1012 km
Decatur
713 mi
1147 km
Birmingham
810 mi
1304 km
Montgomery
928 mi
1493 km
Dothan
Alabama/Georgia border
1020 mi
1642 km
Thomasville
1062 mi
1709 km
Valdosta
1122 mi
1806 km
Waycross
Georgia/Florida border
1193 mi
1920 km
Jacksonville
1303 mi
2097 km
DeLand
1319 mi
2123 km
Sanford
1336 mi
2150 km
Winter Park
1341 mi
2158 km
Orlando
1359 mi
2187 km
Kissimmee
1402 mi
2256 km
Lakeland
1433 mi
2306 km
Tampa
1456 mi
2343 km
Clearwater
1480 mi
2382 km
St. Petersburg
1251 mi
2013 km
Waldo
1297 mi
2087 km
Ocala
1323 mi
2129 km
Wildwood
1388 mi
2234 km
Winter Haven
1429 mi
2300 km
Sebring
1531 mi
2464 km
West Palm Beach
1549 mi
2493 km
Delray Beach
1560 mi
2511 km
Deerfield Beach
1574 mi
2533 km
Fort Lauderdale
1581 mi
2544 km
Hollywood
1601 mi
2577 km
Miami

The Floridian was a train operated by Amtrak from 1971 to 1979 that ran from Chicago to Miami and St. Petersburg, Florida. Its route mainly followed that of several former Louisville & Nashville Railroad (L&N) passenger trains, including the Humming Bird (CincinnatiLouisvilleNew Orleans). Originating in Chicago, the train served Lafayette and Bloomington, Indiana; Louisville and Bowling Green, Kentucky; Nashville, Tennessee; Decatur, Birmingham, Montgomery and Dothan, Alabama; and Thomasville, Valdosta and Waycross, Georgia. At Jacksonville, Florida, the train split to serve the separate routes of St. Petersburg, Florida (via Orlando) and Miami (via Winter Haven). These two legs crossed each other near Lakeland, Florida.

The Floridian was notorious for lackluster on-time performance, owing to the poor condition of equipment inherited from the private railroads, and equally poor track conditions. The train used the lines of L&N (in Indiana, over the former Monon Railroad, which merged into the L&N shortly before the formation of Amtrak), and Seaboard Coast Line. All are now part of CSX Transportation; some parts of the former route have since been abandoned by CSX.

Amtrak discontinued the Floridian in October 1979, leaving Louisville and Nashville without passenger train service, two of the largest such cities in the nation to have this distinction. (Louisville briefly regained Amtrak service with the Kentucky Cardinal, which operated 1999–2003.)

History

Pre-Amtrak

The Floridian as conceived by Amtrak was a combination of the Pennsylvania Railroad's (PRR) South Wind, which operated over PRR track from Chicago to Louisville via Logansport and Indianapolis, Indiana; then L&N from Louisville to Montgomery, Alabama; the Atlantic Coast Line (ACL) from Montgomery via Waycross to Jacksonville; and then either the Florida East Coast Railway (FEC) to Miami or the Atlantic Coast Line to St. Petersburg.[1]:79–80

Amtrak

Amtrak restored the South Wind—later renamed Floridian—as a through daily Chicago-Miami train. However, the train was rerouted away from Logansport to the James Whitcomb Riley route via Indianapolis, changing its northern terminus to Chicago's Central Station (owned by Illinois Central Railroad [IC]), which it shared with Amtrak's Panama Limited (the renamed City of New Orleans and not the original all-Pullman flagship) until that facility was vacated later in favor of consolidating all services at Chicago's Union Station. The Floridian began using Union Station on January 23, 1972.[1]:82

The new Floridian had to contend with Penn Central's (PC) poor track conditions, which resulted in occasional use of MoPac (former Chicago & Eastern Illinois) and L&N (former Chicago, Indianapolis & Louisville: Monon) routes north of Louisville. In January 1977, the Floridian was cancelled for two weeks due to severe winter weather in Chicago.[2]

Amtrak, which came into being May 1, 1971, also began serving the west coast of Florida by splitting the now-daily South Wind at Auburndale, with a section to St. Petersburg via Tampa. During Amtrak's tenure, it continued to utilize E-units from many railroads before replacing them with the SDP40Fs which began arriving in the mid 1970s. Unfortunately, these engines had a tendency to derail, especially on rickety PC trackage. The train suffered abominable time keeping and frequent derailments, including one at 10 mph. The consists remained steam-heated.

The Floridian was briefly combined with the LouisvilleSanford run of Auto-Train. The success with the original LortonSanford Auto-Train did not replicate itself on the Louisville-Sanford run, in part due to the poor timekeeping of the Floridian and this train was discontinued before Auto-Train itself finally succumbed to financial difficulties in the early 1980s. As part of this move Amtrak stopped serving Union Station in Louisville on November 1, 1976, instead using Auto-Train's suburban station. This continued until the Floridian's discontinuance.[1]:221

A similar end would come for the Floridian as it ceased operations in 1979, along with the National Limited, North Coast Hiawatha, Lone Star, and Champion, thus helping to roll back some of the key parts of the original Amtrak system and gains made since its May 1, 1971 founding. The discontinuance was the outgrowth of a DOT report compiled during the Carter Administration that recommended the reduction of services on several routes that did not meet a metric for cost coverage. This report also recommended the discontinuance of the ChicagoOakland (San Francisco) San Francisco Zephyr—which, as the California Zephyr, has become one of Amtrak's most popular trains.

Proposed revival

There has been no concrete effort to re-establish a Chicago-Miami service, either on the route of the South Wind/Floridian or on that of its partners the City of Miami and Dixie Flagler. During the early 2000s, Amtrak extended the Kentucky Cardinal to a re-opened Louisville Union Station, then discontinued the train again.

While there have been no proposals to restore Amtrak service to Nashville, there have been repeated calls from residents.[3] However, in 2007 Tennessee state officials said resumption of service was unlikely due to scarce federal funding. "It would be wonderful to say I can be in Memphis and jump on a train to Nashville, but the volume of people who would do that isn't anywhere close to what the cost would be to provide the service," said Ed Cole, chief of environment and planning with the Tennessee Department of Transportation.[3] Ross Capon, executive director of the National Association of Railroad Passengers, said rail trips would catch on if routes were expanded, but conceded that it would be nearly impossible resume to Amtrak service to Nashville without a substantial investment from the state.[3]

Motive power

In the diesel era, the South Wind was originally powered by PRR engines. Later, when a second train set was added, the train was typically headed by the E-units of the PRR on one set, and ACL on the other set. Though the train used the L&N for a significant portion of its run, a run-through agreement between the PRR and ACL provided that L&N units were only used in emergencies.

Soon after the Central of Georgia (CofG) took delivery of E8s 811 and 812, they were sent to Chicago and repainted in IC colors, returning to the CofG only on diesel run-throughs of IC power. They were used on the IC system. As a result, the IC supplied power to the City of Miami from Chicago to Miami and in the mid-1960s on the Seminole between Chicago and Columbus, Georgia. These engines were returned to the CofG after Amtrak came into being, but were retired from service.

The Dixie Flagler was originally steam powered with each railroad supplying their own power. Some had specifically designated streamlined engines.

References

  1. 1 2 3 Sanders, Craig (2006). Amtrak in the Heartland. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press. ISBN 0-253-34705-X.
  2. "Amtrak Floridian Back In Service". Retrieved 2013-11-22.
  3. 1 2 3 Howard, Kate (July 2, 2007). "Fans of rail want Amtrak here; Nashville not ready to support train service, state says". The Tennessean. Retrieved October 30, 2012.
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