Alaska Railroad

Last updated
Alaska Railroad
Alaska Railroad Corp.svg
Alaska Railroad train to Spencer Glacier.jpg
An Alaska Railroad passenger excursion train at Spencer Glacier.
Overview
Owner State of Alaska
Locale Alaska
Website alaskarailroad.com
Service
Type Freight and passenger railroad
Services5
Daily ridership200 (weekdays, Q4 2023) [1]
Ridership226,000 (2023) [2]
History
Commenced1903 (1903)
Purchase by US GovernmentMarch 12, 1914 (1914-03-12)
CompletedJuly 15, 1923 (1923-07-15)
Transfer to stateJanuary 6, 1985 (1985-01-06)
Technical
Line length470 miles (760 km) (mainline)
Track length656 miles (1,056 km)
Track gauge 4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Old gauge 3 ft (914 mm) (former Tanana Valley Railroad)
Signalling Centralized traffic control or track warrant control with positive train control [3]
Alaska Railroad Diagram

Contents

BSicon exENDEa.svg
Delta Junction
BSicon exhKRZWae.svg
BSicon KBSTa.svg
BSicon exSTR.svg
Eielson AFB
BSicon FIGHTER.svg
BSicon dBHF.svg
467 mi
752 km
Fairbanks
BSicon hKRZWae.svg
BSicon HST.svg
411 mi
661 km
Nenana
BSicon dKBSTaq.svg
BSicon ABZgr+r.svg
Clear SFS
BSicon FIGHTER.svg
BSicon HST.svg
358 mi
576 km
Healy
BSicon dBHF.svg
BSicon lNATl.svg
348 mi
560 km
Denali
BSicon hKRZWae.svg
284 mi
457 km
BSicon pHST.svg
284 mi
457 km
Hurricane Darkblue flag waving.svg
BSicon pHST.svg
274 mi
441 km
Chulitna Darkblue flag waving.svg
BSicon pHST.svg
270 mi
435 km
Twin Bridges Darkblue flag waving.svg
BSicon pHST.svg
268 mi
431 km
Canyon Darkblue flag waving.svg
BSicon hKRZWae.svg
BSicon pHST.svg
263 mi
423 km
Gold Creek Darkblue flag waving.svg
BSicon pHST.svg
258 mi
415 km
Sherman Darkblue flag waving.svg
BSicon pHST.svg
248.7 mi
400.2 km
Deadhorse Darkblue flag waving.svg
BSicon pHST.svg
248.5 mi
399.9 km
Curry Darkblue flag waving.svg
BSicon pHST.svg
236 mi
380 km
Chase Darkblue flag waving.svg
BSicon BHF.svg
227 mi
365 km
Talkeetna
BSicon HST.svg
160 mi
257 km
Wasilla
BSicon ABZgl+l.svg
BSicon dKBSTeq.svg
Palmer
BSicon vSHI2gl-.svg
BSicon lvDST-.svg
BSicon STR~L.svg
BSicon ABZgr+r.svg
BSicon dSTR~R.svg
Port of Anchorage
BSicon dSTR.svg
BSicon dBHF.svg
114 mi
183 km
Anchorage
BSicon vSHI2g+l-.svg
BSicon dKHSTaq.svg
BSicon ABZgr+r.svg
Anchorage Int'l Airport
BSicon FLUG.svg
BSicon STRbr.svg
101 mi
163 km
BSicon HST.svg
75 mi
121 km
Girdwood
BSicon HST.svg
64 mi
103 km
Portage
BSicon bvvWSLg+lr.svg
BSicon STR.svg
BSicon TUNNEL1.svg
BSicon STR.svg
BSicon HST.svg
52 mi
84 km
Whittier
Ferry symbol.svg
BSicon STR.svg
BSicon TRAJEKT.svg
Alaska-Rail Marine barge
BSicon STR.svg
BSicon KDSTe.svg
Harbor Island, Seattle
BSicon lNATl.svg
BSicon dHST.svg
55 mi
89 km
Spencer
BSicon lNATl.svg
BSicon dHST.svg
45 mi
72 km
Grandview
BSicon dKBHFe.svg
0 mi
0 km
Seward
Legend
BSicon BHF.svg
staffed station
BSicon HST.svg
stop
BSicon pHST.svg
flag stop
BSicon DST.svg
freight-only depot
BSicon BOOT.svg
ferry
BSicon lNAT.svg
national park/forest
BSicon FLUG.svg
airport
BSicon FIGHTER.svg
military air base

The Alaska Railroad( reporting mark ARR) is a Class II railroad [4] [5] that operates freight and passenger trains in the state of Alaska. The railroad's mainline runs between Seward on the southern coast and Fairbanks, near the center of the state. It passes through Anchorage and Denali National Park, to which 17% of visitors travel by train.

The railroad has 656 miles (1,056 km) of track, including sidings, rail yards and branch lines. The main line between Seward and Fairbanks is over 470 miles (760 km) long. The branch to Whittier conveys freight railcars interchanged with the contiguous United States via rail barges sailing between the Port of Whittier and Harbor Island in Seattle. [6]

Construction of the railroad started in 1903 when the Alaska Central Railroad built a line starting in Seward and extending 50 miles (80 km) north. The Alaska Central went bankrupt in 1907 and was reorganized as the Alaska Northern Railroad Company in 1911, which extended the line another 21 miles (34 km) northward. On March 12, 1914, the U.S. Congress agreed to fund construction and operation of an all-weather railroad from Seward to Fairbanks and purchased the rail line from the financially struggling Alaska Northern. [7]

As the government started building the estimated $35 million railroad, it opened a construction town along Ship Creek, eventually giving rise to Anchorage, now the state's largest city. In 1917, the government purchased the narrow gauge Tanana Valley Railroad, mostly for its railyard in Fairbanks. The railroad was completed on July 15, 1923 with President Warren G. Harding traveling to Alaska to drive a ceremonial golden spike at Nenana. Ownership of the railroad passed from the federal government to the state of Alaska on January 6, 1985.

In 2023, the system had a ridership of 226,000, or about 200 per weekday as of the fourth quarter of 2023. In 2019, the company generated a US$21.6 million profit on revenues of US$203.9 million, holding US$1.1 billion in total assets. [8]

History

A 1915 photograph of the railroad under construction. Railroad construction - ties awaiting rails, Alaska, 1915.jpg
A 1915 photograph of the railroad under construction.

In 1903 a company called the Alaska Central Railroad began to build a rail line beginning at Seward, near the southern tip of the Kenai Peninsula in Alaska, northward. The company built 51 miles (82 km) of track by 1909 and went into receivership. This route carried passengers, freight and mail to the upper Turnagain Arm. From there, goods were taken by boat at high tide, and by dog team or pack train to Eklutna and the Matanuska-Susitna Valley.

In 1909, another company, the Alaska Northern Railroad Company, bought the rail line and extended it another 21 miles (34 km) northward. From the new end, goods were floated down the Turnagain Arm in small boats. The Alaska Northern Railroad went into receivership in 1914.

At about this time, the United States government was planning a railroad route from Seward to the interior town of Fairbanks. President William Howard Taft authorized a commission to survey a route in 1912. The line would be 656 miles (1,056 km) long and provide an all-weather route to the interior. [7]

In 1914, the government bought the Alaska Northern Railroad and moved its headquarters to Ship Creek, in what would later become Anchorage. The government began to extend the rail line northward.

In 1917, the Tanana Valley Railroad in Fairbanks was heading into bankruptcy. It owned a small 45-mile (72 km) 3 ft (914 mm) (narrow gauge) line that serviced the towns of Fairbanks and the mining communities in the area as well as the boat docks on the Tanana River near Fairbanks.

The government bought the Tanana Valley Railroad, principally for its terminal facilities. The section between Fairbanks and Happy was converted to dual gauge to complete the 4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge line from Seward to Fairbanks. The government extended the southern portion of the track to Nenana, and later converted the extension to standard gauge. The Alaska Railroad continued to operate the remaining TVRR narrow gauge line as the Chatanika Branch (the terminus was located near the Yukon River), until decommissioning it in 1930.

An Alaska Railroad steam locomotive crossing the Tanana River on the ice at Nenana just prior to completion of the railroad in 1923. Alaska Railroad engine crossing the Tanana River on the ice at Nenana just prior to completion of the railroad.jpg
An Alaska Railroad steam locomotive crossing the Tanana River on the ice at Nenana just prior to completion of the railroad in 1923.

In 1923 they built the 700-foot (213 m) Mears Memorial Bridge across the Tanana River at Nenana. This was the final link in the Alaska Railroad and at the time, was the second longest single-span steel railroad bridge in the country. U.S. President Warren G. Harding drove the golden spike that completed the railroad on July 15, 1923, on the north side of the bridge. The railroad was part of the US Department of the Interior.

An Alaska Railroad passenger train rolling between Anchorage, Denali National Park and Fairbanks. The Alaska Railroad.jpg
An Alaska Railroad passenger train rolling between Anchorage, Denali National Park and Fairbanks.

The Alaska Railroad's first diesel locomotive entered service in 1944. The railroad retired its last steam locomotive in 1966.

In 1958, land for the future Clear Air Force Station was purchased. (Clear is about 15 kilometers (9.3 mi) south of Nenana.) Approximately 40,000 feet (12 km) of track were diverted, and later a spur was constructed to deliver coal to its power station.

The railroad was greatly affected by the Good Friday earthquake, which struck southern Alaska in 1964. The yard and trackage around Seward buckled and the trackage along Turnagain Arm was damaged by floodwaters and landslides. It took several months to restore full service along the line. [9]

In 1967, the railroad was transferred to the Federal Railroad Administration, an agency within the newly created United States Department of Transportation.

In 1975-76, an infusion of $15 million from the DOT enabled various capital improvements including those to facilitate hauling materials for the Alaska Pipeline. [10]

On January 6, 1985, the state of Alaska bought the railroad from the U.S. government for $22.3 million, based on a valuation determined by the US Railway Association. [11] [12] The state immediately invested over $70 million on improvements and repairs that compensated for years of deferred maintenance. The purchase agreement prohibits the Alaska Railroad from paying dividends or otherwise returning capital to the state of Alaska, unlike the state's other quasi-corporations: the Alaska Permanent Fund, the Alaska Housing Finance Corporation, and the Alaska Industrial Development and Export Authority.

A northbound Alaska Railroad passenger train idles at the Seward, Alaska, depot on June 30, 2010 AlaskaRailroadPassenger.jpg
A northbound Alaska Railroad passenger train idles at the Seward, Alaska, depot on June 30, 2010

Proposed expansion in Alaska

Anchorage Yard, ca. 1940s Alaska - Anchorage - NARA - 23937491 (cropped).jpg
Anchorage Yard, ca. 1940s

Northern Rail Extension to Delta Junction

An extension of the railroad from Fairbanks to Delta Junction over a bridge spanning the Tanana River was envisioned as early as 2009.[ citation needed ] The 2011 Alaska state budget would provide $40 million in funding for the bridge, which initially be only for vehicular use. The United States Department of Defense would provide another $100 million in funds, as the bridge and a subsequent rail line would provide year-round access to Fort Greely and the Joint Tanana Training Complex. [13] Groundbreaking ceremony for the Tanana River Bridge took place on September 28, 2011, [14] and the new bridge was opened (for military road traffic only) in 2014. [15]

Point MacKenzie Line

On 21 November 2011, the Surface Transportation Board approved the construction of a new 25-mile (40 km) line between Port MacKenzie and the existing main line at Houston, Alaska. [16] As of May 2023 this spur line had not been completed.[ citation needed ]

Anchorage Vicinity Service

A spur line was built to Ted Stevens International Airport in 2003, along with a depot, officially named after Bill Sheffield. The line never received scheduled service but cruise lines charter trains to convey passengers between ships and the airport. [17] The railroad currently leases the depot to citizens for private events such as conferences, seminars, and corporate functions. [18]

There are plans to provide commuter rail service within the Anchorage metropolitan area (Anchorage to Mat-Su Valley via Eagle River, north Anchorage to south Anchorage); additional tracks would be necessary to accommodate the heavy freight traffic.[ citation needed ]

Proposed connection to the contiguous 48 states

In 2001 federal legislation, sponsored by Republican U.S. senator (and later Alaska governor) Frank Murkowski, formed a bilateral commission to study feasibility of building a rail link between Canada and Alaska; [19] Canada was asked to be part of the commission, but the Canadian federal government did not choose to join the commission or commit funds for the study. However, the Yukon territorial government did show some interest.[ citation needed ]

A June 2006 report by the commission recommended Carmacks, Yukon, as a hub, with three possibilities: A line could go northward to Delta Junction, Alaska (Alaska Railroad's northern end-of-track). Another line could go from Carmacks to Hazelton, British Columbia (which is served by the CN), passing through Watson Lake, Yukon, and Dease Lake, British Columbia. The third line could go from Carmacks to either Haines or Skagway, Alaska. The latter path by way of Whitehorse, Yukon, [20] [21] [22] [23] the northern terminus of the 3 ft (914 mm) (narrow-gauge) White Pass and Yukon Route Railroad). However, currently the latter's trains only reach Carcross, Yukon, because service has not been completely restored following a 1982 embargo of the entire line.

Following the demise of the ill-fated Keystone XL Pipeline project, the Alaska Canada Rail Link (ACRL) was rekindled as an alternative. [24] In November 2015, the National Post reported that a link between the southern provinces and the Alaska Railroad was again being considered by the Canadian federal government, this time routing to Alberta. In this scenario, the route would originate at Delta Junction and use Carmacks as a hub, as in prior plans. The route would continue through Watson Lake, Yukon, en route to a stop at Fort Nelson, British Columbia. It would continue to Peace River, Alberta, with its southern terminus at Fort McMurray. The route was endorsed by the Assembly of First Nations. [25] [26] It was unclear whether this rail connection would ever be utilized for passenger service.

On September 25, 2020, then President Donald Trump announced he would issue a presidential permit to the Alaska-Alberta Railway Development Corporation (A2A Railway), [27] which had an agreement with Alaska Railway [28] to develop a joint operating plan for the rail connection to Canada. The proposed A2A Railway would have connected to the Alaska Railroad at North Pole, Alaska, and run through Yukon Territory to Fort Nelson, and from there to a terminus at Fort McMurray, Alberta. [29] (The A2A Railway had also been negotiating with the Mat-Su Borough on an agreement to complete the Port Mackenzie Railway Extension.) [30]

Executives

General managers under federal ownership

  • Col. Frederick Mears, 1919-1923 (was originally head of the railroad as chairman of the Alaska Engineering Commission)
  • Col. James Gordon Steese, 1923-1923
  • Lee H. Landis, 1923–1924
  • Noel W. Smith, 1924–1928
  • Col. Otto F. Ohlson, 1928–1945
  • Col. John P. Johnson, 1946–1953
  • Frank E. Kalbaugh, 1953–1955
  • Reginald N. Whitman, 1955–1956
  • John H. Lloyd, 1956–1958
  • Robert H. Anderson, 1958–1960
  • Donald J. Smith, 1960–1962
  • John E. Manley, 1962–1971
  • Walker S. Johnston, 1971-1975 [31]
  • William L. Dorcy, 1975–1979
  • Steven R. Ditmeyer (Acting) 1979-1980
  • Frank H. Jones, 1980–1985

Railroad Corporation Police

The Alaska Railroad Corporation has its own police force [32]


Presidents under state ownership

Routes and tourism

Alaska Railroad
Alaska Railroad route
The Alaska Railroad's "Glacier Discovery" train. AlaskaRailroad.jpg
The Alaska Railroad's "Glacier Discovery" train.
A passenger train pulls into the Denali Station in July 1998. Alaska Railroad Denali station.jpg
A passenger train pulls into the Denali Station in July 1998.

The railroad is a major tourist attraction in the summer. Coach cars feature wide windows and domes. Private cars owned by the major cruise companies are towed behind the Alaska Railroad's own cars, and trips are included with various cruise packages.

Routes

Rolling stock

Freight train featuring open and closed cars with ARR 1093, near Alyeska area, Seward Highway, making a winter run, 2013 Alaska railroad, open and closed cars, near Alyeska area, Seward Highway, making a winter run, 1093, south east of Anchorage, Alaska, USA (11878202086).jpg
Freight train featuring open and closed cars with ARR 1093, near Alyeska area, Seward Highway, making a winter run, 2013

By 1936, the company had rostered 27 steam locomotives, 16 railcars, 40 passenger cars and 858 freight cars. [39]

Active

As of 2022, Alaska Railroad rosters a total of 51 locomotives, two control cab units, and one DMU (self-propelled railcar):

Retired

Other

An older car repurposed as part of an ice plant on the Homer Spit Old AK railroad car.jpg
An older car repurposed as part of an ice plant on the Homer Spit

In 2011 the Alaska Railroad reacquired ARR 557, the last steam locomotive bought new by the railroad [40] and the last steam locomotive used by the railroad, with the intent to refurbish and operate it in special excursions between Anchorage and Portage.

A USATC S160 "2-8-0 Consolidation" engine built in 1944 [41] by Baldwin Locomotive Works, 557 was originally coal-fired but was converted to oil in 1955. It operated until 1964, when it was deemed surplus and sold as scrap. It was purchased by Monte Holm of Moses Lake, Washington and displayed in his House of Poverty Museum. [42]

After Holm's death in 2006, Jim and Vic Jansen bought 557 from the museum and returned it to the Alaska Railroad on the condition that it be restored to operation and put into service. [43]

The locomotive was sold to the non-profit Engine 557 Restoration Company for "One Dollar ($1.00) and other good and valuable considerations" [44] [ full citation needed ] and they have invested (as of January 2019) 77 months and over 75,000 hours of volunteer time in the restoration and overhaul. [45] [ full citation needed ]

See also

Related Research Articles

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tanana Valley Railroad</span>

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<i>Denali Star</i> Passenger and semi-luxury train operated by the Alaska Railroad

The Denali Star is a passenger and semi-luxury train operated by the Alaska Railroad between the cities of Anchorage and Fairbanks, Alaska. It is a seasonal train, only operating between the months of May and September. The Aurora Winter Train operates along the similar route during the rest of the year at a less frequent weekend schedule. The train is ridden by many tourists visiting the Denali National Park. The train consists of single level coaches and dome cars.

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  34. Thiessen, Mark (August 2, 2013). "Alaska Railroad CEO to step down". Miami Herald. Associated Press. Retrieved 2013-08-03.
  35. "Bill O'Leary named president and CEO of the Alaska Railroad". Anchorage Daily News. October 25, 2013. Archived from the original on December 13, 2013. Retrieved October 25, 2013.
  36. "Alaska Railroad: Our Trains - Denali Star Train Information". Alaska Railroad. Archived from the original on 2013-12-21. Retrieved 2013-12-19.
  37. 1 2 "Alaska Railroad: Transit - Schedules". Alaska Railroad. Archived from the original on 2013-12-21. Retrieved 2013-12-19.
  38. "Alaska Railroad: Our Trains - Aurora Winter Train". Alaska Railroad. Archived from the original on 2013-12-21. Retrieved 2013-12-19.
  39. World Survey of Foreign Railways. Transportation Division, Bureau of foreign and domestic commerce, Washington D.C. 1936. p. 1.
  40. engine roster from ARR archives
  41. USATC builder's plate
  42. "Engine 557 Restoration Company". www.557.alaskarails.org.
  43. "Old 557 Returns". Anchorage Daily News. Archived from the original on 2012-01-09. Retrieved 2012-01-05.
  44. 557 Bill of Sale
  45. 557 Restoration Company internal records

General references

Historical references

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