EMERYVILLE, Calif.
(AP) - The journey east on Amtrak's California Zephyr train is as good
as the destination. Riding the rails from the San Francisco Bay area to Reno,
Nev., offers beautiful views and a tangible sense of history on the
route over the Sierra Nevada mountain range that helped bring America
together after the Civil War.
Marking 30 years of service this year, the Amtrak train leaves Emeryville, Calif., every morning. The Zephyr's ultimate destination, 51 hours later, is Chicago. Between Sacramento and Reno, a five-hour trip, it follows the same course as the historic Transcontinental Railroad, according to the California State Railroad Museum
in Sacramento. The rail path through the mountains was a 19th century
engineering feat that bolstered the nation's western expansion.
A hundred and forty-four years
after the Transcontinental Railroad's completion, train-loving children
and picture-happy tourists pack the train's observation car to take in
the Sierra Nevada and the mountain passage known as Donner Pass, which was once thought impossible to cross by locomotive.
Prior to federally subsidized Amtrak taking over the route in 1983, the California Zephyr
was privately run by three train corporations. From 1949 to 1970, the
so-called "Silver Lady" boasted five sightseeing cars topped by
semi-circular glass domes, with fine china and real silver in the dining
cars. It also featured young hostesses in uniform, known as
Zephyrettes, tasked with making the trip between Chicago and California more pleasant by doing everything from helping families with young children to announcing scenic spots along the way.
"Amtrak is nothing like the historic Zephyr," said Cathy von Ibsch,
63, who worked as a Zephyrette when the private service came to an end
in 1970. "It (Amtrak) didn't have the same class or same feel. They
modernized it."
The original train traveled a
different eastward route through California and Nevada on its way to
Salt Lake City called the Feather River Route, which did not offer views
of the bays north of San Francisco. From Salt Lake City to Chicago, the routes of the original Zephyr and the modern Amtrak trains remain the same.
I recently rode the Amtrak train for the first time. My husband and I
were enthusiastically led onto the platform by our 4-year-old son, a
train fanatic. We boarded the train just after 9 a.m. in the small city
of Emeryville, 11 miles (18 kilometers) east of San Francisco. It's the
Zephyr's departure point on the 236-mile (380-kilometer) journey to
Reno. The train wasn't packed, which meant we could occupy a few extra
seats, spread out and relax. This made for a much better experience than
air travel (no airport security either), which is often crowded and
uncomfortable. During the 2012 fiscal year, the Zephyr's ridership
increased to 376,459 passengers as compared to 355,324 in 2011,
according to data from Amtrak.
The first leg of the seven-hour journey to Reno took us along the
water northeast of San Francisco. We witnessed the morning light dancing
off San Pablo Bay, a tidal estuary that extends north from the San
Francisco Bay. Roughly an hour into the journey, while crossing the
Benicia-Martinez bridge, we saw the so-called "mothball fleet" in Suisun
Bay. There, dozens of World War II-era decommissioned warships are
still afloat.
By mid-morning, we were rolling across flat farmland and orchards. We
arrived in Sacramento, the state capital, just after 11 a.m. There,
volunteer docents from the California State Railway Museum - who serve
in pairs from Sacramento to Reno and back every day - boarded. Later we
heard their voices over the public address system, detailing the history
of Donner Pass and the Transcontinental Railroad.
Donner Pass, the passage over the Sierra Nevada, received its name
from the infamous group of pioneers from the Midwest who attempted to
reach California during the winter of 1846-47. The pioneers were
stranded on the eastern side of the pass, obstructed by snow. Of the 87
travelers, only 48 survived, with some resorting to cannibalism.
The construction of the
Transcontinental Railroad over Donner Pass got under way after President
Abraham Lincoln signed the Pacific Railway Act of 1862. It took six
years and the labor of more than 12,000 Chinese workers who laid track
eastward from Sacramento, according to the Harvard University Library
Open Collections Program. The Central Pacific Railroad blasted 15
tunnels through the Sierra Nevada, and the Union Pacific Railroad laid
rails heading west from Omaha, Neb. Finally in 1869, the 1,776 miles
(2,858 kilometers) of track, one from the east and the other from the
west, joined together in Promontory Summit, Utah, and the
Transcontinental Railroad was born.
Riding through the tunnels toward Reno, it was hard not to imagine the backbreaking labor that went into creating them.
"Tunnels were pushed forward using hand drills to create the holes in
which to load black powder (and later, nitroglycerine)," said Paul
Hammond, director of the California State Railroad Museum. "Working in
very hard granite still meant that progress was often measured in inches
per day."
Lucky for us, in the 21st century, all we have to do is hop onboard and enjoy.
If You Go...
ZEPHYR: Amtrak train from Emeryville, Calif., near San Francisco, to
Chicago. Rates vary for unreserved coach fare for the California Zephyr
route (Emeryville to Reno, Nev.), with fares as low as $49 and $61
depending on time of year. Some trips do sell out;
http://tickets.amtrak.com .