Cameron Connector

The Cameron Connector is a section of track built in 1995–1996 which connects the former Burlington Northern Railroad and the former Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway tracks, both which are currently part of the BNSF Railway, to each other near Cameron, Illinois.

Background and Construction

In 1854, the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad (CB&Q) arrived in the town of Galesburg, Illinois,[1] nine miles northeast of Cameron, followed by the Santa Fe Railway in the second half of the 1880s. The two railroads had two separate stations in Galesburg, with the Burlington station, which serviced trains such as the Nebraska Zephyr, Denver Zephyr and California Zephyr, being located on Seminary St. and the Santa Fe station, which serviced trains including the Super Chief and El Capitan, being located a few blocks northwest on N. Broad St. Continuing west, the two tracks intersected at Cameron, with the Santa Fe, heading southwest, crossing over the Burlington route, which headed directly west. In 1996, the Burlington Northern Railroad, which was itself the product of a 1970 merger of the CB&Q, Great Northern, Northern Pacific and Spokane, Portland & Seattle Railways, merged with the Santa Fe to form the Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railway, later renamed the BNSF Railway.

With the anticipated Burlington Northern and Santa Fe merger, it became necessary to connect the BN's Ottumwa Subdivision to the Santa Fe's Chilicothe Subdivision, the latter of which became part of the BNSF's Southern Transcon Route. Work began in 1995, and was completed on May 29, 1996.

Route and infrastructure

Both ends of the Connector, which cuts through former farmland, have wyes along with signals that regulate the flow of train traffic that passes through the Connector. Trains traveling on the former ATSF tracks enter the wye at a southwest-northeast angle.At the south end of the northern wye, the two tracks converge to one track, briefly traveling southeast, before the two tracks diverge to form the northern part of the southern wye, through which trains enter the former Burlington tracks, which travel directly east-west.

Impact

The Connector has resulted in a direct connection between the BNSF rail yard in Galesburg to the Southern Transcon.

The line has also had a significant impact for Amtrak. Prior to the building of the Connector, the Southwest Chief, Amtrak's successor to the Chicago-Los Angeles trains operated by the Santa Fe, operated on the Chilicothe Subdivision to Galesburg, via Joliet, Streator and Chilicothe. The building of the connector enabled the Southwest Chief to be rerouted onto the BNSF's Mendota Subdivision, used by the California Zephyr and a couple of short-distance inter-city Amtrak trains via Naperville, Mendota and Princeton, and Amtrak service was dropped through Streator and Chilicothe, although Joliet continues to see Amtrak service. The rerouting of Amtrak's Southwest Chief enabled passenger service to also operate through one station in Galesburg instead of two, and the station building along the former Santa Fe line was demolished.

References

  1. Wilson, Tom (June 28, 2014). "Tom Wilson: Galesburg's first 'Railroad Day' was 160 years ago". The Register-Mail. Retrieved June 30, 2014.
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