![]() ![]() Happier days were ahead for this pair however as they were rescued by the newly formed Canon City & Royal Gorge Railroad in June of 1998. ![]() The remaining F7’s became surplus, many succumbing to the scrapper’s torch. Tagging onto a popular CNW slogan of the period claiming “400 miles in 400 minutes – as the distance between Chicago and Minneapolis, many passenger F7’s were renumbered into the 400 series, including these two units becoming 421 and 422 in March of 1972 and then finally re-numbered to current 402 and 403 for the same railroad in 1982. The 402 was built as CNW 4075A and 403 built as CNW 4079C. Our pair of F7’s were built for the Chicago & Northwestern (CNW) in October of 1949. Although originally promoted by EMD as a freight-hauling unit, the F7 became one of the most iconic passenger hauling locomotives of the last Golden Age of railroad travel in the 50’s and 60’s pulling such famous trains such as the Santa Fe Railway’s Super Chief or El Capitan and the CB&Q-D&RGW- WP’s combined California Zephyr. The EMD F7 was a diesel-electric locomotive produced between February 1949 and December 1953 by the Electro-Motive Division of General Motors and General Motors Diesel. It was during this last rebuild that the locomotive was renumbered to V20, serving that line until late 2012 before coming to Colorado to proudly haul thousands of passengers through the majestic soaring cliffs of the Royal Gorge. and Northern Virginia communities on the newly formed Virginia Railway Express. as Seaboard System 6648 until merging with Chessie in 1986 to become the CSX Railroad Corporation.Īfter 6 years, 6648 was acquired for a rebuild to serve a new life hauling commuter passengers between Washington D.C. These locomotives, numbered 723-733, represented the most modern power the railroad would own, until its absorption into the Seaboard System in 1983, where it ran throughout the Southeastern U.S. Originally numbered 728, this locomotive was one of eight GP-40 locomotives built for the Royal Gorge Railroad between 19. Since then, several locomotives have been a part of Canon City’s railroad, and even to this day some still operate! Take a look at the Royal Gorge history of our train cars and equipment used throughout the years. In 1880, the first rails reached Leadville and sparked the beginning of a new era for the Royal Gorge area. The Royal Gorge Route Railroad has been a part of the rich history of Canon City for over 100 years. ![]()
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