Katana VentraIP

Southern Pacific Transportation Company

The Southern Pacific (reporting mark SP) (or Espee from the railroad initials) was an American Class I railroad network that existed from 1865 to 1996 and operated largely in the Western United States. The system was operated by various companies under the names Southern Pacific Railroad, Southern Pacific Company and Southern Pacific Transportation Company.

"Southern Pacific" redirects here. For other uses, see Southern Pacific (disambiguation).

The original Southern Pacific began in 1865 as a land holding company. The last incarnation of the Southern Pacific, the Southern Pacific Transportation Company, was founded in 1969 and assumed control of the Southern Pacific system. The Southern Pacific Transportation Company was acquired in 1996 by the Union Pacific Corporation and merged with their Union Pacific Railroad.


The Southern Pacific legacy founded hospitals in San Francisco, Tucson, and Houston. In the 1970s, it also founded a telecommunications network with a state-of-the-art microwave and fiber optic backbone. This telecommunications network became part of Sprint, a company whose name came from the acronym for Southern Pacific Railroad Internal Networking Telephony.[1]

- 4-2-2

T.D. Judah

- 4-2-4T

C.P. Huntington

E class - Eight Wheeler/American (various (inc. Gov. Stanford, Jupiter, Leviathan))

4-4-0

A class - Atlantic (A-1 – A-6)

4-4-2

S class - Switcher (S-1 – S-22)

0-6-0

M class - Mogul (M-1 – M-4 (SP 1673), M-6 (SP 1744) – M-22)

2-6-0

Pr class - Prairie (Pr-1)

2-6-2

MM/AM-class /4-6-6-2 - Cab forward Mallet/Articulated Mogul (MM-1, MM-2/AM-2, MM-3; Convention on the SP was that Mallet referred to compound expansion, while Articulated referred to simple expansion.)

2-6-6-2

T class - Ten Wheeler (T-1 – T-31 (SP 2353, SP 2355) – T-58)

4-6-0

P class - Pacific (P-1 – P-8 (SP 2467, SP 2472) – P-10 (SP 2479) – P-14)

4-6-2

Se class - Switcher (Se-1 – Se-4)

0-8-0

C class - Consolidation (C-1 – C-8 (SP 2706, SP 2718), C-9 (SP 2579) – C-32)

2-8-0

Mk class - Mikado (Mk-2, Mk-4, Mk-5 (SP 745, SP 786) – Mk-11;

2-8-2

MC/AC class - /4-8-8-2 - Cab Forward Mallet/Articulated Consolidation (MC-1/AC-1, MC-2/AC-2, AC-3, MC-4/AC-4, AC-5, MC-6/AC-6, AC-7, AC-8, AC-10, AC-11, AC-12 (SP 4294))

2-8-8-2

- 2-8-8-4 - Yellowstone/Articulated Consolidation

AC-9

TW-class - Twelve Wheeler (Mastodon, TW-1 – TW-8)

4-8-0

Mt-class - Mountain (Mt-1 – Mt-5)

4-8-2

GS-class - Golden State/General Service ((GS-1, GS-2, GS-3, GS-4 (SP 4449), GS-5, GS-6 (SP 4460), GS-7, GS-8)

4-8-4

D-class - Decapod (D-1)

2-10-0

F-class - Fourteen Wheeler (F-1 (SP 975, SP 982) – F-5; Usually called the Santa Fe, but since the ATSF was SP's primary rival, they refused to use the name.)

2-10-2

- 4-10-0

El Gobernador

SP-class - Southern Pacific (SP-1 (SP 5021))

4-10-2

a young Southern Pacific employee, was injured c. 1888 while coupling cars in the railroad yard in Fresno. He accused the company of not providing him with medical care while he was recuperating from his on-the-job injury and then not rehiring him when he had healed. He soon turned to a life of crime (mostly train robberies) and died of gunshot wounds and tetanus in the Fresno jail in 1893 aged 32 years.[10]

John Sontag

(Mk-5, 2-8-2), owned by the Louisiana Rail Heritage Trust, operated by the Louisiana Steam Train Association, and based in Jefferon (near New Orleans), Louisiana

745

(Mk-5, 2-8-2), owned by the City of Austin, leased to the Austin Steam Train Association. Currently under full mechanical restoration in Austin, Texas.[23]

786

(Mk-5, 2-8-2), the last Mikado built for the Texas and New Orleans Railroad in 1916 out of spare parts in their Houston shops. It currently resides with cosmetic restoration at San Antonio Station, San Antonio, Texas, but plans are to restore it to operating condition.

794

(F-1, 2-10-2), tender located at the Heber Valley Railroad in Heber City, Utah, main locomotive located in Houston, Texas.[24]

982

(EMD SD7), former EMD demonstrator 990 and first SD7 built, located at the Illinois Railway Museum, Union, Illinois

1518

(M-6, 2-6-0), components slowly being gathered at Brightside, California for a restoration to operating condition on the Niles Canyon Railway.

1744

Puffy (T-1, 4-6-0), operated by the Grapevine Vintage Railroad, but is currently pending for a 1,472-day overhaul required by the FRA in Grapevine, Texas.

2248

(T-31, 4-6-0), on display at the Pacific Southwest Railway Museum in Campo, California.

2353

(P-8, 4-6-2), owned and operated by the Golden Gate Railroad Museum, Redwood City, California

2472

U25B owned and operated by the Orange Empire Railway Museum,[25] Perris, CA

3100 (former SP6800 Bicentennial)

(C-19, 2-8-0), owned by El Paso Historic Board, stored at Phelps Dodge copper refinery, El Paso, Texas

3420

3709 (), being restored to operation at Pacific Southwest Railway Museum in Campo, California

EMD GP9

3769 (), On display and used as a switch engine for the Utah State Railroad Museum in Ogden, Utah.

EMD GP9

(GS-4, 4-8-4), formerly located at the Brooklyn Roundhouse before being relocated to the Oregon Rail Heritage Center in June 2012, Portland, Oregon

4449

5119 (), Operational and awaiting paint restoration to SP colors at Pacific Southwest Railway Museum in Campo, California

GE 70-ton switcher

7304 (), on display awaiting restoration at Pacific Southwest Railway Museum in Campo, California

ALCO RS-32

7457 () the first GM Electro-Motive Division SD45 diesel-electric road switcher locomotive to be built for that railroad in 1966. It last saw service on Donner Pass. It was donated to the Utah State Railroad Museum in 2002.

EMD SD45

There are many Southern Pacific locomotives still in revenue service with railroads such as the Union Pacific Railroad, and many older and special locomotives have been donated to parks and museums, or continue operating on scenic or tourist railroads. Most of the engines now in use with Union Pacific have been "patched", where the SP logo on the front is replaced by a Union Pacific shield, and new numbers are applied over the old numbers with a Union Pacific sticker, however some engines remain in Southern Pacific "bloody nose" paint. Over the past couple years, most of the patched units were repainted into the full Union Pacific scheme and as of January 2019, less than ten units remain in their old paint. Among the more notable equipment is:

Honorary tribute[edit]

On August 19, 2006, UP unveiled a brand new EMD SD70ACe locomotive, Union Pacific 1996, as part of a new heritage program. It was the final unit in UP's Heritage Series of locomotives, and was painted in a color scheme inspired by the "Daylight" and "Black Widow" schemes.

(1890–1893)

Leland Stanford

(vacant 1893–1909)

(1909–1913)

Robert S. Lovett

(1913–1925)

Julius Kruttschnitt

(1925–1928)

Henry deForest

(1928–1932)

Hale Holden

Los Angeles, California, City Council member, 1925–33

Carl Ingold Jacobson

employee in New Orleans office, along with his father, John Martin Lee Jr., before serving in the Louisiana House of Representatives[26]

W. Burch Lee

President of Georgia Tech, United States Army officer and hydraulic process inventor

Blake R. Van Leer

land surveyor for the railway, before becoming a botanist

Charles Wright

novelist

Jack Kerouac

singer-songwriter, The Big Rock Candy Mountains[27]

Harry K. McClintock

Father of Country Music, singer-songwriter

Jimmie Rodgers

History of rail transportation in California

El Paso and Southwestern Railroad

Long Wharf (Santa Monica)

Mussel Slough Tragedy

Pacific Fruit Express

Santa Fe–Southern Pacific merger

Southern Pacific 7399

Southern Pacific 4449

Southern Pacific Depot

St. Louis Southwestern Railway

Texas and New Orleans Railroad

(Total Operations Processing System), rolling stock management system jointly developed with IBM and Stanford University and used by SP until 1980, still used by British Rail and successor system

TOPS

Sphts.org: Southern Pacific Historical & Technical Society

Harvard Business School, Lehman Brothers Collection: "History of the Southern Pacific Transportation Company"

Union Pacific Railroad.com: Union Pacific History

1937 article.

"Across the Great Salt Lake, The Lucin Cutoff"

.

Abandoned Rails.com: History of the Santa Ana and Newport Railroad

(1946 film)

This Is My Railroad