Grand Canyon Railway

Grand Canyon Railway
Logo for the Grand Canyon Railway with the copyrighted G and the words "Grand Canyon Railway & Hotel Est. 1901"
Locomotive No. 4960 on the Grand Canyon Railway
Locale Coconino County, Arizona, USA
Terminus Grand Canyon Village
Grand Canyon Railway (interactive map)
Commercial operations
Built by Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway
Original gauge 4 ft 8 12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Preserved operations
Owned by Philip Anschutz
Operated by Grand Canyon Railway
Reporting mark GCRY
Preserved gauge 4 ft 8 12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Commercial history
Opened 1901
Closed to passengers 1968
Closed 1974
Preservation history
1988 Max and Thelma Biegert Ownership
1989 reopened
2006 Xanterra ownership
2008 Transition to steam operation
2008 Expansion proposals
2008 Philip Anschutz ownership
Headquarters Williams
Website
http://www.thetrain.com

Route map

Legend
63.7 Grand Canyon Depot
59.9 National Park Boundary
57.2 Coconino
52.0 Imbleau (formerly Apex)
50.0 Hopi
44.8 Anita
43.8 Woodin
37.7 Willaha
29.0 Valle
20.0 Quivero
9.0 Red Lake
7.8 Pitt
1.3 BNSF flying junction
1.0 Grand Canyon Railway Shops
Interstate 40
0.0 Williams Depot
Williams Junction Station
BNSF junction
BNSF to Phoenix continues

The Grand Canyon Railway (reporting mark GCRX), is a passenger railroad which operates between Williams, Arizona, and Grand Canyon National Park South Rim.

History

Santa Fe Ownership

Inaugural run, September 1901
Grand Canyon Historic Railroad Depot, Winter 1938

In 1901, the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway completed a branch line from Williams to Grand Canyon Village at the South Rim. The first scheduled train to carry paying passengers of the Grand Canyon Railway arrived from Williams on September 17 of that year. The 64-mile (103-kilometer) long trip cost $3.95, and naturalist John Muir later commended the railroad for its limited environmental impact. To accommodate travelers, the Santa Fe designed and built the El Tovar Hotel, located just 20 feet (6.1 meters) from the Canyon Rim. El Tovar opened its doors in January 1905.

Competition with the automobile forced the Santa Fe to cease operation of the Grand Canyon Railway in July 1968 (only three passengers were on the last run), although Santa Fe continued to use the tracks for freight until 1974.

Plans by entertainer Arthur Godfrey to resume service in 1977 fell through. In addition, two other companies attempted to resurrect the line in 1980 and 1984, with each attempt helping to maintain interest in preserving the line and saving it from scrapping.

Max and Thelma Biegert Ownership

In 1988, the line was bought by a Phoenix, Arizona, couple, Max and Thelma Biegert. The railway was restored and in 1989 began operations as a separate company, independent of the Santa Fe. The first run of the restored railroad was on September 17, 1989, commemorating the September 17 debut of the original railroad.[1]

The Biegerts, a couple originally from Nebraska, had made their fortune in crop dusting through Biegert Aviation, founded in 1947, which had a large federal government contract for its B-17 and later C-54 fleet.[2] After leaving the crop-dusting business, they operated a for-profit day care business in Houston, Texas, which became the Children's World Learning Center and is now part of KinderCare Learning Centers. The Biegerts never intended to get into the rail business. They had loaned money secured by the tracks to another person for the rail line. When they defaulted the Biegerts took over the line.[3] In conjunction with the start up, the Biegerts were principal investors in the short-lived Farwest Airlines which was an air taxi service intended to bring tourists from California, Las Vegas and Phoenix to Flagstaff where the passengers would then take the rail line.[4]

GCRX Engines 29 and 4960 at Grand Canyon Depot, 2005.

The railroad carries hundreds of passengers to and from the canyon every day, totaling about 240,000 passengers in 2006.

The restored Santa Fe Railway Station in Williams now serves the Grand Canyon Railway's daily Williams Flyer (Williams to/from Grand Canyon), Seasonal Polar Express, and is the terminus for other special events trains operated by the railway. The Williams Depot also offers twice daily Amtrak Thruway Motorcoach service connecting to/from Amtrak's Southwest Chief trains at Williams Junction.

The Grand Canyon Depot, owned by the National Park Service, remains the northern terminus for passengers of the line.

The railroad operates reconditioned 1970s (EMD F40PH) Diesel locomotives year-round. Passengers ride to/from the Grand Canyon in 1950s climate-controlled coaches. The railroad adds to the Old West experience by having actors dressed as bandits stage a mock train robbery during the return trip from the Grand Canyon to Williams.

During the winter season (November - January), the line runs The Polar Express from Williams to the 'North Pole', a station about 17 miles (30 km) north of town. The Polar Express service operates with restored 1920s vintage Harriman coaches. In 2008, this winter service carried about 78,000 passengers.

In February 2006, the Grand Canyon Railway announced that it had established a new logo that unifies all of the operating divisions of the company. The new 'glyph' style "G" herald harkens to the native American petroglyphs common in Northern Arizona. As of June 2007, the logo seems to be applied only to merchandise, signs, and official company letterhead, as several cars have come into service or been repainted while retaining the "drumhead" logo on the sides. Even freshly painted locomotives MLW FA-4 #6793 and steam locomotive #4960 have retained the old logo.

EMD F40PH diesel-electric locomotive at Grand Canyon Village

In March 2006, owners Max and Thelma Biegert announced to the media that they were placing the railroad and its associated restaurants, hotels and amenities up for sale. The combined properties had an annual revenue of nearly $40 million. The Biegerts sought a new buyer/operator with a possible theme park background, which would ensure that the railroad, hotels, RV park, restaurants (and a possible new amusement park in Williams) would continue to be operated as one entity.

Xanterra ownership

On September 21, 2006, it was announced that Xanterra Parks & Resorts of Denver, Colorado, submitted the winning bid (for an undisclosed sum) and was selected as the new owner for the Grand Canyon Railway. Xanterra is the corporate name and identity for what was originally known as the Fred Harvey Company, a legendary company with restaurant, hotel and service ties to the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway as far back as 1876.

Xanterra said that it intended to keep all 480 of the railway's current employees, and planned to focus on growing the business and increasing the coordination between the railway and Xanterra's other services in the Grand Canyon National Park's South Rim. In the press release, the railway and Xanterra reported over 225,000 passengers and over $38 million in revenue in calendar year 2005. The purchase of the GCR included all of the railway's assets, land, depots, hotels, RV park, rolling stock, shops and linear pieces of land along the 65-mile (105 km) line. The Biegert family's 480-acre (194.2 ha) ranch near Gonzales Lake in north Williams was not included in the sale to Xanterra.

Transition of steam operation

Steam Locomotive 4960

In September 2008, Trains magazine reported that Xanterra would no longer operate its steam locomotives.[5] The decision came as a result of the 2000s energy crisis and the late 2000s recession conspiring against passenger numbers, although it was claimed to be an environmental decision. The railway's policy of always running a diesel with a steam locomotive as backup however does render the decision environmentally friendly. As part of the end of steam, 20 employees were laid off.[6] Around that time, both steam engines 29 and 4960 were placed on static display on the Williams Depot platform. Limited steam operation returned on September 19, 2009, with the engines being powered by waste vegetable oil. According to the GCR website, the service will be available during the 2011 season [7] with engine 4960. Over the winter of 2011/2012, engine 4960 underwent its 15-year overhaul and inspection, and returned to service in February 2012 for a special Centennial Run on February 14, 2012 celebrating 100 years of Arizona Statehood. Since then, engine 4960 continues to pull GCR excursions once per month during the summer months from May through September, and for special occasions.

Expansion proposals

Also in September 2008, the railway sought to double its number of daily trains. The National Park Service requested public comment on allowing "up to three round-trip passenger trains per day from Williams to the South Rim of the Grand Canyon National Park and one round-trip evening train ride per day from the South Rim to a short distance outside of the park."[8]

Philip Anschutz ownership

On June 24, 2008, it was announced that Philip Anschutz would buy Xanterra. Negotiations for the sale began on June 5[9] and the sale was completed on September 25.[10]

Operations

The Grand Canyon Railway offers one daily round trip from Williams to the Grand Canyon every day except December 25.

Station Train Schedule
Lv Williams 9:30 a.m.
Ar Grand Canyon 11:45 a.m.
Grand Canyon: Enjoy Grand or Freedom

Guided Motor Coach Tour

Lv Grand Canyon 3:30 p.m.
Ar Williams 5:45 p.m.

 

Historic designations

Grand Canyon Railway
Williams Depot
Nearest city Williams, Arizona
Area 1,682 acres (681 ha)
Built 1898
Architectural style Classical Revival, No Style Listed
NRHP Reference # 00000319[11]
Added to NRHP August 23, 2000

The Grand Canyon Railway from Williams to the Grand Canyon National Park was listed in the National Register of Historic Places in 2000.

The Grand Canyon Depot is listed separately.

See also

References

External links

Route map: Bing / Google

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Grand Canyon Railway.
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