Firefly (train)

Firefly

The steam-powered streamliner Firefly.
Overview
First service December 10, 1939
Last service May 22, 1960

The Firefly was a streamlined passenger train operated by the St. Louis – San Francisco Railway (the "Frisco"). At various times, it served St Louis, Missouri, Tulsa and Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, Kansas City, Missouri, and Fort Scott, Kansas. It operated from 1939 to 1960 and was the Frisco's first streamliner.

History

The Frisco introduced the Firefly on December 10, 1939, over the Kansas CityTulsaOklahoma City route. The Firefly was the Frisco's first streamliner, intended to compete with the Santa Fe, which would soon launch the diesel streamliner "The Tulsan" to compete with it.[1] The train's last run between Fort Scott and Tulsa took on place on May 22, 1960; between Fort Scott and Kansas City it ran combined with the Sunnyland.[2] The Firefly was the last Frisco train serving the Tulsa-Fort Scott route.[3]

Equipment

Two consists were necessary to protect the Firefly's schedule; each was composed of refurbished heavyweight cars. A standard consist included a baggage-mail coach (16 seats), coach (60 seats), and cafe-parlor car.[4] Initially power was supplied by a pair of 1910 Pacific type 4-6-2 steam locomotives, numbers 1026 and 1031, which were refurbished and streamlined in the road's Springfield shops. The driving wheels were enlarged from 69" to 73" by means of extremely thick driver tires, for greater speed. Later the run was powered by various of the road's EMD E-8A locomotives named for racehorses, or by EMD FP-7 locomotives.

References

  1. Schafer, Mike (2003). Classic American Railroads, Volume III. Saint Paul, MN: MBI. p. 125. ISBN 076031649X. OCLC 768623553.
  2. Bartels, Michael M. (May 2010). "Looking Back" (PDF). Great Plains Dispatcher (Wichita: Great Plains Transportation Museum and the Wichita Chapter, National Railway Historical Society) IX (5): 1.
  3. "Frisco 'Firefly' May Be Dropped". Southeast Missourian. December 18, 1959. Retrieved 2010-07-22.
  4. Wayner, Robert J., ed. (1972). Car Names, Numbers and Consists. New York: Wayner Publications. p. 172. OCLC 8848690.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, February 12, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.