Iowa's Railroads , livre ebook

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A rich photographic record of Iowa's railroad history


At one point in time, no place in Iowa was more than a few miles from an active line of rail track. In this splendid companion volume to Steel Trails of Hawkeyeland (IUP, 2005), H. Roger Grant and Don L. Hofsommer explore the pivotal role that railroads played in the urban development of the state as well as the symbiotic relationship Iowa and its rails shared. With more than 400 black-and-white photographs, a solid inventory of depots and locations, and new information that is sure to impress even the most well-versed railfan, this detailed history of the state's railroads—including the Chicago & North Western, Cedar Rapids & Iowa City, and the Iowa Northern—will be an essential reference for railroad fans and historians, artists, and model railroad builders.


Chapter 1: Age of Steam
Chapter 2: Under the Wire
Chapter 3: Down at the Depot
Chapter 4: Shipping by Rail
Chapter 5: Working on the Railroad
Chapter 6: Diesel Revolution
Chapter 7: In Recent Times

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Date de parution

01 juin 2009

Nombre de lectures

0

EAN13

9780253013767

Langue

English

Poids de l'ouvrage

13 Mo

IOWA S RAILROADS

IOWA S
RAILROADS

AN ALBUM

H. ROGER GRANT DON L. HOFSOMMER
INDIANA UNIVERSITY PRESS
Bloomington Indianapolis
This book is a publication of
Indiana University Press
601 North Morton Street
Bloomington, IN 47404-3797 USA
http://iupress.indiana.edu
Telephone orders 800-842-6796
Fax orders 812-855-7931
Orders by e-mail iuporder@indiana.edu
2009 by Donovan L. Hofsommer and H. Roger Grant All rights reserved
No part of this book may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying and recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher. The Association of American University Presses Resolution on Permissions constitutes the only exception to this prohibition.
This book is printed on acid-free paper.
Manufactured in the United States of America
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Grant, H. Roger, date
Iowa s railroads : an album / H. Roger Grant and Don L. Hofsommer.
p. cm. - (Railroads past and present)
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN 978-0-253-31425-3 (cloth : alk. paper) - ISBN 978-0-253-22073-8 (pbk. : alk. paper) 1. Railroads-Iowa-History. I. Hofsommer, Don L. II. Title.
TF24.I8G73 2009
385.09777-dc22
2008037048
1 2 3 4 5 14 13 12 11 10 09
The maps reproduced on title pages, pages 118-119, and pages 252-253 are used courtesy of the Iowa Department of Transportation.
For
William F. Armstrong
William W. Kratville
William D. Middleton
Each one an intrepid, talented, and generous visual recorder of Iowa s railroad experience
CONTENTS

~ INTRODUCTION

1 THE AGE OF STEAM
2 UNDER THE WIRE
3 DOWN AT THE DEPOT
4 SHIPPING BY RAIL
5 WORKING ON THE RAILROAD
6 THE DIESEL REVOLUTION
7 IN RECENT TIMES

~ SELECTED READINGS
INTRODUCTION

This album of Iowa railroads offers a pictorial record of a variety of scenes that range from steam-powered passenger trains to small town depots. An effort has been made to capture the essence of the railroad experience in the Hawkeye State for more than a century. Iowa provides a wonderful opportunity to visually explore the impact of the iron horse on the Midwest and to a lesser degree on the nation. Although no American state is most representative of the Railway Age, with its assortment of big and small steam and electric interurbans or so-called juice roads, Iowa arguably comes as close as any state in achieving this distinction.
Iowa possesses a rich railroad past. Not only did some of the initial railroad building west of the Mississippi River take place in the state, but the first transcontinental railroad, the legendary Union Pacific, had its starting point in Council Bluffs. Within a year after the wedding of the rails, that landmark event held on May 10, 1869, at Promontory, Utah Territory, three connecting roads funneled freight and passenger traffic to and from the combined Union Pacific-Central Pacific system. It did not take too many more years before three additional trunk roads linked Chicago, America s railroad mecca, with Council Bluffs. Other east-west arteries crossed the state as did several strategic north-south roads. By the zenith of the Railway Age in 1916, when the nation boasted more than 254,000 miles of trackage, Iowa, with more than 10,000 miles, had a variety of other major and minor carriers that made the railroad map resemble a plate of wet spaghetti. The piercing sound of the locomotive whistle could be heard throughout the state.
As part of the Railway Age an assortment of electric interurbans or juice roads appeared, with Cedar Rapids and Des Moines as the principal centers. Several of these interurbans were traditional passenger-carrying operations while others, in fact the majority, handled standard freight equipment in addition to often having a brisk passenger business. If the Interurban Era had lasted longer, likely more of these under the wire carriers would have been built. Several dozen lines were projected before the triumph of the automobile and truck, and the good roads movement ended interest in this formerly popular mode of intercity transportation.
In the more recent past Iowans have experienced considerable change, feeling the impact of railroad consolidations and also becoming the epicenter of line abandonments. In the process mega roads and new regional and shortline carriers emerged that reshaped the railroad landscape. As a result of merger madness, regulatory reforms, shifting patterns of transport, replacement technologies, and other factors, more than half of the state s considerable rail mileage disappeared. Line rationalization made for a radically different railroad map of the Hawkeye State.
The altered nature of railroads in Iowa over time is illustrated in the more than four hundred images included in this book, augmented by their informational captions. Each of the seven sections of the album features an introduction that places the specific topic in historical perspective. The state s railroad heritage provides a visual feast that should satisfy anyone interested in the saga of American railroading.

A project such as this one prospers only by way of marvelously generous people who are willing to share their visual collections or even rich treasures of their own photographic art. We gratefully acknowledge fine contributions from Rex C. Beach, Richard Billings, Cecil F. Cook, James Davis, William L. Heitter, Dennis E. Holmes, John F. Humiston, Michael P. Joynt, William S. Kuba, Wilson B. Lemberger, Gordon Lloyd, Louis A. Marre, Roger B. Natte, George Niles, Henry Posner, III, Peter J. Rickershauser, Brian Root, James L. Rueber, Daniel R. Sabin, Arnold Schager, Lou Schmitz, Warren F. Scholl, Ronald D. Sims, and Edward F. Wilkommen. Three people-William F. Armstrong, William W. Kratville, and William D. Middleton-were especially tolerant of our incessant pleadings and inevitably responded in expansive fashion. To these and to all others who assisted us in various ways we offer our humble and cordial thanks.
IOWA S RAILROADS

1
THE AGE OF STEAM

Much of the history of Iowa is associated directly with the Railway Age. No one would deny that the railroad evolved into a magnificent means of long distance transportation, both for freight and passengers. The process began in the United States at about the point when the first Euro-American settlement occurred in the future territory and later the state of Iowa. By the time residents gained admission into the federal union in 1846, the railroad had emerged from its initial demonstration period. Notions about roadbed design and rails had been largely established, and motive power and rolling stock resembled equipment that for decades would dominate rail operations. As the state matured, so too did railways. On the eve of the Civil War railroad mileage in Iowa had reached 655 miles, but by 1890 trackage had soared to an astonishing 8,366 miles that fully covered the state.
Iowa was well suited for railroad construction. The general terrain in this Beautiful Land between the mighty Mississippi and Missouri rivers offered no major impediments for shaping paths for the iron horse. Of course, not all of the state was as flat as a floor, but the hills of the northeast, the pot and kettle sections elsewhere, especially in the southern tiers of counties, and the steep loess hills along the banks of the Missouri did not make for painfully difficult and costly construction, conditions that often confronted railroad builders in other sections of the country. After all, crossing the spine of the Allegheny Mountains, for example, had been time consuming and expensive, forcing such roads as the Baltimore Ohio and the Pennsylvania to drive and maintain costly tunnels, deep cuts, and monumental bridges.
Moreover, Iowans wanted-even demanded-the steam car civilization. The existing means of transportation left much to be desired. While geography blessed the state with navigable rivers, most notably the Mississippi and Missouri, other natural waterways were problematic, including the Cedar, Des Moines, Iowa, and Sioux but especially the Maquoketa, Skunk, Wapsipinicon, and several of the lesser streams. Most farms and settlements were too far from flatboat, keel-boat, and most of all steamboat travel. The fact that a shallow-draft steamboat, propelled by a small high pressure engine, once reached the present site of Fort Dodge on the upper stretches of the Des Moines River really did not mean much for those who complained about the tyranny of isolation.
Roads, too, were hardly an acceptable solution to problems of inadequate transportation. The frequently vicious and viscous Iowa soil did not make for easy, inexpensive roadway construction and maintenance. Residents might joke that during wet weather their roads were as deep as they were wide, but that was also the painful reality. Such conditions made travel by animal-powered carts and wagons slow if not impossible. The several efforts before the Civil War at building graded and planked roads were not particularly successful and, like water transport, ultimately gave way to railroads. It would not be until the twentieth century that a good roads movement took hold in Iowa, but only after a revolution had occurred in vehicle technology and highway building techniques.
The all-weather railroad wholly met the transportation expectations of Iowans and in time altered their views about time, distance, and convenience. Furthermore, the iron horse seemed wonderfully suited to what that perceptive French visitor of the 1830s, Alexis de Tocqueville, aptly called the restless temper of Americans. Iowans considered themselves to be movers and shakers and they wanted to exploit their opportunities. To be successful, good, dependable, and inexpensive transport was essential.
For Iowans the coming of the rails was surely too slow, but at

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