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Encyclopedia > Rock island line
Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railroad
Rock Island
Reporting marks CRIP, RI, ROCK
Locale Arkansas, Colorado, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, New Mexico, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Tennessee, and Texas
Years of operation 18511980
Track gauge 4' 8.5"
Headquarters Chicago, Illinois


The Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railroad (AAR reporting mark RI) was a Class 1 railroad in the United States. It was also known as the Rock Island Line, or, in its final years, THE ROCK. Its ancestor, the Chicago & Rock Island Railroad, was incorporated on February 7, 1851 and operated its first train on October 10, 1852. The railroad went into receivership for its third and final bankruptcy in 1975, and after attempts to reorganize failed, the company was liquidated, operating its final train on March 31, 1980.

Contents

Territory

The Rock Island stretched across Colorado, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska, New Mexico, Oklahoma and Texas. The easternmost reach of the system was Chicago, and the system also reached Memphis, Tennessee; west, it reached Denver, Colorado and Santa Rosa, New Mexico. Southernmost reaches were to Galveston, Texas and Eunice, Louisiana while in a northerly direction the Rock Island got as far as Minneapolis, Minnesota.


Major lines included Minneapolis to Kansas City, Missouri via Des Moines, Iowa; St. Louis, Missouri to Santa Rosa via Kansas City; Herington, Kansas to Galveston, Texas via Fort Worth, Texas and Dallas, Texas; and Santa Rosa to Memphis.


The system got its start in Iowa and was always densest there, with a large number of lines serving most cities in the state.


Passenger trains

The Rock Island jointly operated the Golden State Limited (just the Golden State after 1948's modernization) with the Southern Pacific Railroad.


The railroad operated a number of trains known as Rockets serving the Midwest, including the Rocky Mountain Rocket (Chicago—Omaha—Lincoln—Denver—Colorado Springs), the Corn Belt Rocket (Chicago—Des Moines—Omaha), the Twin Star Rocket (Minneapolis—St. Paul—Des Moines—Kansas City—Oklahoma City—Fort Worth—Dallas—Houston), the Zephyr Rocket (Minneapolis—St. Paul—Burlington—St. Louis) and the Choctaw Rocket (Memphis—Little Rock—Oklahoma City—Amarillo).


Song

A song called The Rock Island Line memorializes the railroad. Versions were done by Johnny Cash, Huddie Ledbetter and Lonnie Donegan. The chorus to the old song reads:

 The Rock Island Line is a mighty good road The Rock Island Line is the road to ride The Rock Island Line is a mighty good road If you want to ride you gotta ride it like you find it Get your ticket at the station for the Rock Island Line 

References

  • (1973). Handy Railroad Atlas of the United States. Rand McNally & Co. p.53.

External links

  • History of the railroad (http://rockislandline.homestead.com/rockstory.html)
  • History of the song (http://rockislandline.homestead.com/rockislandsong.html)

See also


Current (operating) Class I railroads of North America

AMTK, BNSF, CN, CP, CSXT, FXE, KCS, NS, TFM, UP, VIA

Former or fallen flag Class I railroads of North America

ACL, AGS, ATSF, BAR, BLE, BM, BN, BO, CBQ, CG, CGW, CNTP, CNW, CO, CR, CRIP, CV, DH, DMIR, DRGW, EJE, FEC, GMN, GN, GTW, IC, ICG, LA, LAT, LN, MEC, MILW, MKT, MP, NKP, NNE, NOTM, NW, NYC, PC, PLE, PM, PRR, SAL, SBD, SCL, SOO, SOU, SP, SSW, STLH, TNO, TP, VGN, WAB, WP YMV


  Results from FactBites:
 
Encyclopedia4U - Island - Encyclopedia Article (532 words)
An island is any piece of land smaller than a continent and larger than a rock that is completely surrounded by water.
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An example is the Hawaiian Islands, from Hawaii to Kure, which extends benearth the sea surface northward as the Emperor Seamounts.
Rock music - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (6769 words)
Rock and roll was seen as commercial pop, but subverted the race barriers in the U.S., and with the British invasion the reverence of groups for fl Rhythm and blues stars brought these stars a wider public.
The culmination of rock and roll as a socially-unifying force was seen in the rock festivals of the late '60s, the most famous of which was Woodstock which began as a three-day arts and music festival and turned into a "happening", as hundreds of thousands of youthful fans converged on the site.
If punk rock was a social and musical phenomenon, it garnered little in the way of record sales (small specialty labels such as Stiff Records had released much of the punk music to date) or American radio airplay, as the radio scene continued to be dominated by mainstream formats such as disco and album-oriented rock.
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