Santa Fe's Raton Pass (Second Edition)
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Santa Fe's Raton Pass (Second Edition)
PRODUCT DETAILS
As the highest point on the vast Santa Fe Railway system, and possessing one of the steepest main line grades in the United States, Raton Pass attracted pioneer railroad photographers like Otto C. Perry, Richard Kindig, Jackson Thode, Les Logue, Clayton Tinkham, Joe Schick, and Preston George who documented the parade of trains over Raton Mountain in the 1930s, 1940s, and 1950s. Raton was also noted for operating many more passenger trains and streamliners than freight trains, as an easier grade, via Amarillo, Texas, and Belen, New Mexico, was used by the majority of freight trains. Triple headers of steam engines were not uncommon. Freights usually had three or four engines on each train, a double header on the front end, and one or two pushers at the rear.
Today the railroad is owned by the State of New Mexico and faces an uncertain future, but the history an operation of Santa Fe's line over Raton Mountain remains, and is indeed the stuff that legends are made of.
Contents:
Preface to the Second Edition and Foreword, pp. 5-12,
On the Road to Santa Fe, pp. 13-30,
Steam Era Operations, pp. 31-92,
Raton Terminal, pp. 93-106,
Trinidad Terminal, pp. 107-118,
The Diesel Age, pp. 119-134,
Epilogue, pp. 135-136,
Modeler's Notebook (Structure plans and detail photographs), pp. 137-157,
List of Stations on Raton Pass from 1878 to 1996, pg. 158,
Bibliography, pp. 159-160.
Santa Fe Railway H&MS, softcover, 160 pages, standard landscape book 10 x 8 in., 240 black & white and 10 color photographs, 9 timetable reproductions, 21 maps, 17 diagrams, Modeler's Notebook, Bibliography.
Publisher: Santa Fe Railway H&MS
Features:
- New
- Softcover
- Jared V. Harper and John R. Signor
- Santa Fe Railway H&M Society






