Choctaw Rocket

Choctaw Rocket route[1]
Legend
Milepost Station
0 Memphis Central Station
Mississippi RiverTennessee/Arkansas border
45 Forrest City
69 Brinkley
Arkansas River
133 Little Rock
252 Booneville
Arkansas/Oklahoma border
295 Howe
336 Wilburton
367 McAlester
411 Holdenville
432 Seminole
448 Shawnee
487 Oklahoma City Union Station
513 El Reno
562 Weatherford
Washita River
579 Clinton Junction
609 Elk City
627 Sayre
Red River
Oklahoma/Texas border
664 Shamrock
761 Amarillo

The Choctaw Rocket was a named passenger train operated by the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad between Memphis, Tennessee, Little Rock, Oklahoma City, and Amarillo. Initially designated as train No. 51 (westbound) and train No. 52 (eastbound), it was the first diesel powered streamliner to operate out of Memphis, Tennessee, as well as the first streamliner service in the state of Arkansas.

History

The Choctaw Rocket followed a railway built by the Choctaw, Oklahoma and Gulf Railroad between 1900 and 1902, informally known as the Choctaw Route. The CO&G and its railways were purchased by the Rock Island railroad in 1902.

After an inaugural tour at cities along the route, the Choctaw Rocket entered regular service on November 17, 1940.

Ad for the new Choctaw Rocket by the train's builder, Pullman-Standard.

The original locomotive and car assignments for the two Choctaw Rocket sets of equipment included E6 locomotives 628 and 629, modernized heavyweight railway post office-baggage cars 702 and 703, coaches 350-Amarillo, and 351-Oklahoma City, sleepers 622-Seminole, and 623-Wewoka, and dining-parlor-observation cars 430-Memphis, and 431-Little Rock. The coaches, sleepers and observation cars were all streamlined cars ordered from Pullman Standard Manufacturing Company, specifically for use on the Choctaw Rocket.[2]

The Railway Mail Service utilized the Choctaw Rocket for United States mail transportation, sorting and distribution along the route. One railway post office crew worked between Memphis, TN and McAlester, OK, while a second crew operated between McAlester and Amarillo.

By 1952, the Choctaw Rocket had lost its Rocket designation, Rock Island's identification for the company's premier passenger trains, reflecting the route's downgrade to secondary train status. In August 1953, the conventional locomotive-pulled trains were replaced by self-propelled Budd rail diesel cars and the trains were renamed the Choctaw Rockette, a name which lasted until mid-1958.

After the discontinuance of Western Pacific's rail diesel car trains 1-2 (Salt Lake City-San Francisco) in 1960, the Rock Island's Memphis - Amarillo RDC route held the distinction of being the longest such route in the United States.[3] Declining patronage and a desire by the Rock Island to close many small town depots resulted in the discontinuance of this route, now designated as unnamed trains 23-24, with last runs occurring on August 8, 1964.[4]

Notes

  1. Rock Island Lines, Public Timetable, January 7, 1941.
  2. Randall, W. David. (1990). Official Pullman Standard Library, Vol. 8 - Rock Island.
  3. Duke, Donald. (1990). RDC, The Budd Rail Diesel Car. ISBN 0-87095-103-3
  4. Interstate Commerce Commission Finance Docket No. 23015; July 27, 1964. 324 ICC 729.

References

  • Goen, Steve Allen (2002). Down South on the Rock Island. ISBN 1-885614-55-1. 
  • Stout, Greg (1997). Route of the Rockets; Rock Island in the Streamlined Era. ISBN 0-9659040-0-8. 
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