Prairie Marksman

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Prairie Marksman
Prairie Marksman at East Peoria, August 1981.jpg
The Prairie Marksman at East Peoria in August 1981
Overview
Service type Inter-city rail
StatusDiscontinued
Locale Illinois
Predecessor Peoria Rocket
First serviceAugust 10, 1980
Last serviceOctober 4, 1981
Former operator(s) Amtrak
Route
Termini Chicago, Illinois
East Peoria, Illinois
Stops1
Distance travelled149 miles (240 km)
Average journey time3 hours 15 minutes
Service frequencyDaily
Train number(s)311, 312, 314
On-board services
Class(es) Unreserved coach
Catering facilitiesOn-board cafe
Technical
Rolling stock Amfleet coaches
Track gauge 4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm)
Track owner(s) Illinois Central Gulf Railroad
Toledo, Peoria and Western Railway
Route map
Dist.
Station
BSicon KBHFa.svg
0 mi
Chicago
BSicon BHF.svg
37 mi
60 km
Joliet
BSicon BHF.svg
Eureka
BSicon KHSTe.svg
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 .

Contents

History

Prior to the creation of Amtrak Peoria was served by the Rock Island's Peoria Rocket out of the Rock Island's Rock Island Depot. 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, the Peoria Rocket and Quad Cities Rocket, than hand them to Amtrak. The two trains continued running until December 31, 1978, each providing one daily round trip between Chicago's LaSalle Street Station and Peoria and Rock Island, respectively, via Joliet. [1] [2] 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) and Southwest Limited (Chicago-Kansas City-Los Angeles) successors to the Santa Fe's Texas Chief and Super Chief, respectively 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] 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 was intended as a one-year pilot project. However, the train only attracted 65 passengers per day, not even half of the 150 per day needed to justify making it permanent. Amtrak added service to Eureka, Illinois on July 25, 1981. [5] Amid losses of $120,000, Illinois withdrew its support for the train, and the Prairie Marksman made its last run on October 4, 1981. [6]

With the end of the Prairie Marksman, the Peoria area's only intercity link was the Southwest Limited later renamed the Southwest Chief in Chillicothe. However, Amtrak rerouted the Chief away from Chillicothe in 1996. Since then, the nearest Amtrak station is at Normal's Uptown Station, 40 miles (64 km) to the east, which is served by the Lincoln Service and Texas Eagle. Amtrak operates Amtrak Thruway service between Peoria and Normal.

Proposed revival in September 2011

The Illinois Department of Transportation formally requested Amtrak to conduct a study to analyze the feasibility of initiating inter-city passenger train service between Chicago and Peoria. A number of possible alternate routes were identified and reviewed at a high level, and these results are summarized and discussed in a document published by Amtrak in September 2011.

With the successful application by the State of Illinois for federal stimulus funding to upgrade the Chicago-St. Louis Corridor to a maximum speed of 110 miles per hour (180 km/h), the study request was modified to one route that would provide the Peoria area with connectivity to certain Amtrak corridor trains. After an initial review of the various routes, it became apparent that instead of a complete route feasibility study between Chicago and Peoria, either a rail or bus shuttle between the Peoria area and Normal, Illinois, utilizing the recently-constructed multi-modal transportation station in the Uptown Normal neighborhood, would be the most expedient way to meet the goal of the IDOT.

A decision was made by IDOT that no through-train frequencies between Peoria and Chicago were to be considered. In lieu of Chicago-Peoria through train service, IDOT directed Amtrak to explore a shuttle feeder system that would provide guaranteed corridor train connections at Normal with the Lincoln Service and thus permit morning and evening departures from Peoria and Chicago. 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. [7]

Notes

  1. Glischinski 2007 , pp. 77–78
  2. Schafer, Welsh & Holland 2001 , p. 136
  3. Goldberg 1981 , p. 88
  4. "American Railroad Freight Train Names 1948" . Retrieved March 8, 2009.
  5. Sanders 2006, p. 251.
  6. "Amtrak cut". Southeast Missourian . September 1, 1981. Retrieved September 6, 2010.
  7. Amtrak (September 26, 2011). "Feasibility Report of Proposed Amtrak Service: Chicago - Peoria" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on January 20, 2013.

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References

External image
Searchtool.svg Amtrak on the TP&W in the 80's