If I had the choice I would take every trip by train, but these journeys would undoubtedly be on the trains of yesteryear, not the modern high speed trains of Europe or the poorly serviced Amtrak trains of the United States.
My grandfather was an auditor for the Kansas City Terminal
Railway from the time he was 20 until he retired at 65. The Terminal was a joint operation of the
trunk railroads that served our metropolitan area and at one time was the
second largest national hub. He worked
at the beautiful Union Station but I never saw his office or actually knew what
he kind of position he held other than “auditor.” What I do know is that he was granted a
lifetime pass on the trains and also received discount tickets for his
family. In the beginning years of my
life all my trips were either by motor car or train.
Dad loved automobiles but had a healthy reverence for
trains, too. As a young man (he didn’t
marry until well into middle age) he had traveled across the United States by
rail. He had wonderful stories of
getting off the train in Yellowstone Park and staying at the wooden lodge’s
there. He had seen all the west and most
of the east. He never traveled south
though until he married Grandfather’s only daughter and managed to produce the
only grandchild.
In the early 1950’s Grandfather took us by train to Miami,
Florida. It was a two night journey and
Grandfather sprang for two bedrooms in the Pullman cars: one for himself and Granny and one for
Mother, Dad, and me. We made that trip
twice, once in 1953 and once again in 1954.
The bedrooms were so interesting to a small kid, with the tiny washrooms
and two bunks that pulled out at night for sleeping. I always got the top bunk and I could peer
down into the huge window and watch the towns flying by. The sound and rhythm of the wheels on the
rails was incredibly comforting and exotic at the same time. Even better were the fabulous meals in the
dining car. The service was incredible
and the waiters offered up menus where you could select your own food. I always chose the fried chicken for dinner
because it was followed by a bowl of warm water called a finger bowl. The bowl was line with a filly white paper
cup and because I was so entranced by the notion of washing one’s fingers
following a fried chicken dinner, I was always given extra paper cups to take
back to the bedrooms. My dad loved the
observation cars and then later, some trains had domed observation cars. Stairs would go up to the dome and down to
the lower level, with the lower level below the dome usually offering restrooms
or a small lounge area, while the upper portion had a "bubble" of
glass on the car's roof. Passengers in the upper portion of the dome were able
to see in all directions from a vantage point above the train's roofline. Dad could sit up there for hours and I’d go
for a bit, but I liked exploring and coloring in the bedrooms best.
Dining Car |
Santa Fe Finger Bowls |
Day room of the Pullman Bedroom |
Observation Car |
In 1955 Grandfather sprang for a trip to Hawaii and we rode the train to California. From there we took a boat, the Lurline of the Matson line across the Pacific to Honolulu. Dad only got a three week vacation so Grandfather flew us from Hawaii back to Los Angeles where again we caught the train and rode home. In 1955 I didn’t know a single kid that had ever been on an airline, much less one that flew over the ocean. Now I don’t know a single kid that has been in a Pullman Car bedroom (or roomette – if you were traveling alone) or has eaten in real meal in a dining car.
In 1956 Dad drove Mother and me to his favorite place on
earth: Green Mountain Falls, Co. Dad had stories of driving across Kansas on
dirt roads in the old luxury touring cars of the 1920’s; in those days it would
take three to five days to travel the 618 miles into Colorado Springs and then
up Ute Pass to the cabin his family had bought in 1910. By 1956 the Griffith cabin had been sold, but
a distant aunt offered up her home to the family. The next year Grandfather and Grandmother
came to Colorado to see what all the fuss was about – and from then on, nearly
all the vacations were in Green Mountain.
Grandfather even went so far as to repurchase the Griffith cabin and
bring it back into the family, making my dad happier than I’ve ever know
him.
Lake at Green Mountain Falls, in the foothills of Pike's Peak |
In the early 1963 Grandfather and I went to Chicago together
over the Easter weekend. We rode the
train, of course – but this time we rode in the coach car because we weren’t on
the train overnight. Still there was a
domed observation car and we spent most of the trip riding above the rails
through Missouri and Illinois.
So my last real train trip was back in 1956, complete with dining car,
porters, and bedrooms. I still dream of
traveling like that and wish I could climb aboard a well-equipped, well-accoutered
train to cross the United States or go from coast to coast in Canada. Even better, my own personal dream is a trip
on the 1920’s Orient Express, the iconic train trip of luxury and intrigue from
Paris to Istanbul.
The Orient Express bedroom |
Now this is luxury train travel -- Orient Express |
2 comments:
I do love trains and have ridden in my fair share, but not as many as you. When I was a child, our church did a "Snow Train" which went up in the mountains and stopped at a few cities to sightsee. It was quite an adventure and magical to me. I liked the trains in Europe, but that high speed train made me really nauseated. (don't look out the window!) My husband's family took a dinner/wine tasting train to Seattle once and that was very special too.
I found your blog through Googling for train photos and what a nice post to find!
Thanks, Milly!
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