route_title_fill
herald_hrails amtk_logo3
Amtrak Route Scrapbooks

California Zephyr

Scrapbooks ▾

poster_californiazephyr egyptian he original California Zephyr was a deluxe passenger train that ran between Chicago, Illinois, and San Francisco, California, via Omaha, Denver, Salt Lake City, and Sacramento. It was jointly operated by three regional carriers: the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy (CB&Q), the Denver & Rio Grande Western (D&RGW) and the Western Pacific (WP) railroads. Each carrier contributed to a shared pool of stainless steel Budd passenger equipment that made each entire trip, while each used their own colorful diesel consists for their respective portions of the route.

The California Zephyr was conceived after World War II to compete with deluxe transcontinental trains of competitors Santa Fe and Union Pacific. The CZ debuted as "the most talked about train in America" on March 19, 1949, with the first departure the following day. Because the Rockies and the Sierra Nevadas adversely affected its schedule, the three railroads knew they could not compete with parallel trains based on time alone; as such, the routing was billed more as a scenic land cruise and was scheduled in such a way as to pass through its most spectacular scenery on its route in the daylight. This approach proved profitable for much of its 20+ year operation, but like all passenger service it could not compete in the West automobile travel and airline schedules.

drgw_sign The original transcontinental California Zephyr ceased operation in 1971 with the advent of the national Amtrak network, although the D&RGW continued to operate its own passenger service — dubbed the Rio Grande Zephyr — between Denver and Salt Lake City until 1983, using some of the original equipment. Amtrak had intended to include the original route in its debut offerings, but the Rio Grande's choice to hold out forced the new carrier to route its Chicago to San Francisco trains around Colorado via the Union Pacific — eventually titled the San Francisco Zephyr.

In 1983, the Rio Grande gave up on its regional passenger service, and a second iteration of the California Zephyr was created by Amtrak to operate over most of the original route. Today's CZ uses the original routing between Chicago and Salt Lake City and on to Winnemucca, Nevada. From there west, the current CZ follows the Union Pacific's Overland Route through Reno and across the Sierra Nevada Mountains. The original CZ followed the Western Pacific's scenic Feather River Route via Gerlach, Nevada, and Portola, California. Today's trains, numbered Amtrak 5 and 6, make use of the carrier's equipment consists typical of the western routes based in Chicago: a pair or trio of locomotives leads a baggage car, a crew dormitory, two or more sleepers, a dining car, a Sightseer lounge, and 2 or 3 coaches. All equipment but the baggage car are in the double-level Superliner series.

tag_quote

german xperienced travelers say the California Zephyr is one of the most beautiful train trips in all of North America. As you climb through the heart of the Rockies, and further west through the snow-capped Sierra Nevadas, you may find it hard to disagree. The Zephyr runs daily between Chicago and San Francisco, coursing through the plains of Nebraska to Denver, across the Rockies to Salt Lake City, and then through Reno and Sacramento into Emeryville/San Francisco. Connections in to San Francisco and Oakland stations via Thruway Bus Service at Emeryville, California.

Amtrak

zephyr_map1

Zephyr route map under Amtrak / web

zephyr_banner
zephyr_brochure1967

1967 brochure / collection


zephyr_amtk_logo
zephyr_timetable2017

2017 timetable / collection

zephyr_vistadome

1959 ad / collection

zephyr_original_logo
zephyr_map1967

1967 brochure map / collection

tag_quote

I am going to try and convince you that you should get off at Chicago Airport, head downtown, and catch the "California Zephyr", a train which snakes across 2/3rds of the United States and over the course of 55 hours will give you an experience you'll never forget. Taking this train is truly travelling, not commuting. By the end of it you'll feel like some sort of pioneering explorer. Two years ago I took the California Zephyr all the way from San Francisco to Chicago, and out of all the travelling I have done in the States, I think this train ride beats everything else to a pulp. Over the course of two and a bit days you will pass through California countryside, the perma-snowy Sierra Nevada, the Nevada Desert, the dramatic upper Rockies and then rural USA all the way to Chicago. It really is amazing to sit there is comfort as an awe inspiring, and at times literally jaw-dropping.

Ed Fidgeon-Kavanagh
Why you need to take this 55 hour train from San Francisco to Chicago

cbq_time1966
drgw_time1966
wp_time1967
journal_rwh

cz_ticket5 In the winter of 1968, my parents took a trip aboard the westbound California Zephyr. My father was scheduled to deliver a paper at an electrical engineering meeting in Sacramento, California, and he did not pass on the opportunity to ride the famed Zephyr. They departed in a Pullman sleeper from Chicago on the 9th of February, going as far west as Sacramento ... less than 100 miles from the end of the route in Oakland. However, as more pictures indicate, they did find time at the end of his business to drive on over to San Francisco. En route, especially in the Rockies, dad obviously pulled out his Twin Reflex 120 film camera, as the photos in our Central scrapbook show some terrific scenes snapped from both their sleeper compartment window and from several of the Vista Dome coaches. A variety of motive power consists can be seen on the point along the way, including an impressive 6-unit lashup in one photo. One image seems to show a sister Cali Zephyr in the other direction, having just passed their train in a meet. As it turns out, I'm glad they made their 187 dollar and 71 cent pilgrimage on the Zephyr's western wings when they did. Just two years later, in 1970, the silver legend was annulled.

cz_ticket1
cz_ticket2
cz_ticket3
cz_ticket4
tag_quote

german he protean CZ: it certainly was a train that meant different things to different people. For the Interstate Commerce Commission it was a puzzlement and perhaps their hardest "train-off" decision ever. The railroads felt it a thorn in their collective sides, although for rail enthusiasts it was the great hope, the proof-positive of the popularity of the well-run passenger train. Newsmen and editorialists found in it a cause ill-starred, the best kind. Thousands of Americans whose sense of transportation esthetics had not been dulled by the jet age saw it as a straw to clutch. To children it was heaven, to the unions, gravy. And to me? To me it was the final and ultimate train, the point where schedulers and designers, surveyors and engineers, dietitians and personnel men should have said "Stop! We've got it."

Karl R. Zimmerman / The Story of the California Zephyr

Scrapbooks

Publications

zephyr_brochure1967a

1967 CZ brochure / collection

zephyr_brochure1967b

1967 CZ brochure / collection

cbq_timetable1966a

1966 Burlington Route timetable / collection

drgw_timetable1966

1966 Rio Grande timetable / collection

drgw_time1959

1959 timetable / collection

drgw_photo1959

collection

drgw_letter1959

collection

drgw_timetable1959a

1959 timetable / collection

drgw_timetable1959b

1959 timetable / collection

wp_timetable1967a

1967 timetable / collection

wp_tiemtable1967c

1967 timetable / collection

wp_timetable1967b

collection

tag_lagnLagniappe

zephyr_lagn19a zephyr_lagn19b

Here She Comes ... There She Goes

Palisade, Co / May 2023 / RWH

zephyr_lagn56a zephyr_lagn56b zephyr_lagn56c

This Land is Our Land

Sep 2023 / RWH

tag_snapSnapshots

Links / Sources

This page was updated on 2023-11-08