Meadowlark (train)

Last updated
Meadowlark
Chicago and Eastern Illinois RDC.png
The Meadowlark in 1957, after a Budd Rail Diesel Car replaced the streamlined equipment.
Overview
First serviceOctober 6, 1946
Last serviceJanuary 5, 1962
Former operator(s) Chicago and Eastern Illinois Railroad
Route map
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0 mi
0 km
Dearborn Station (Chicago)
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6.6 mi
10.6 km
Englewood-63rd Street
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26.6 mi
42.8 km
Chicago Heights
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49.9 mi
80.3 km
Momence
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77.5 mi
124.7 km
Watseka
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125.9 mi
202.6 km
Glover
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145.1 mi
233.5 km
Villa Grove
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153.4 mi
246.9 km
Tuscola
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164.7 mi
265.1 km
Arthur
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176.1 mi
283.4 km
Sullivan
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193.9 mi
312.1 km
Shelbyville
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218.9 mi
352.3 km
Altamont
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224.6 mi
361.5 km
St. Elmo
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242.2 mi
389.8 km
Kinmundy
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253.8 mi
408.5 km
Salem
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275.7 mi
443.7 km
Mt. Vernon
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298.0 mi
479.6 km
Benton
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305.0 mi
490.8 km
West Frankfort
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310.7 mi
500 km
Johnston City
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316.6 mi
509.5 km
Marion
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339.7 mi
546.7 km
West Vienna
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354.4 mi
570.4 km
Cypress
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363.3 mi
584.7 km
Joppa

The Meadowlark was a streamlined passenger train operated by the Chicago and Eastern Illinois Railroad between Chicago, Illinois and Cypress, Illinois. It operated from 1946 to 1962. The Meadowlark was the C&EI's last train to Southern Illinois.

Contents

History

The Meadowlark was one of two new streamliners introduced by the C&EI in late 1946, the other being the short-lived Whippoorwill which served Evansville, Indiana. The C&EI billed the train as a "Chicago-liner" and promised "quieter, smoother, roomier lounge-car luxury." The new streamliner made the 345-mile (555 km) journey from Chicago to Cypress, Illinois in seven hours. The train departed Cypress at 5:15 AM, arriving at Chicago's Dearborn Station at 12:25 PM. Five hours later the train began the journey back to Cypress, arriving after midnight. [1] Writing in 2006, railroad historian Joe Welsh called the Meadowlark "inviting" while noting that the destination of Cypress was "obscure." [2] On the train's first anniversary the C&EI claimed total ridership of 150,000 passengers and that the train had "girdled the globe 10 times in her daily travels." [3]

In the early 1950s the Meadowlark continued south to Joppa, on the Ohio River, [4] but by the middle of the decade it was cut back to West Vienna, Illinois, 6 miles (9.7 km) north of Cypress. [5] The C&EI discontinued the Meadowlark altogether on January 5, 1962, ending the railroad's service to Southern Illinois. [6] [7]

Equipment

Pullman-Standard delivered four cars for the original Meadowlark: a baggage/mail/grill car (the Sparhawk Inn) and three 60-seat coaches. [8] In 1956 the C&EI replaced the streamlined equipment with a Budd Rail Diesel Car (RDC). [9] In a 1957 company publication C&EI touted the "comfort and speed" of the RDC and touted its suitability for operation in "sparsely settled areas." While the language echoed earlier advertisements, the downgrade was obvious. [10]

Notes

  1. Trains 1946 , p. 16
  2. Welsh, Boyd & Howes 2006 , p. 68
  3. Chicago Heights Star 1947 , p. 13
  4. Timetable 1953
  5. Vandervoort2
  6. Sanders 2008 , p. 121
  7. Gassen 1993
  8. Vandervoort
  9. Vandervoort2
  10. Chicago and Eastern Illinois Railroad 1957 , pp. 6–7

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References