Golden Rocket (train)
The Golden Rocket was a proposed named passenger train of the Rock Island (CRIP) and Southern Pacific (SP) railroads.


In February 1946, the Rock Island and Southern Pacific Railroads planned on jointly introducing a high-speed, tri-weekly passenger train that would run between Chicago, Illinois and Los Angeles, California.[1] Two 11-car consists were to have been placed into service on the new line, one owned by the CRIP and the other by the SP. However, just as Pullman-Standard neared completion on the Rock Island trainset in 1947, and in the midst of an aggressive advertising campaign, the Southern Pacific abruptly withdrew from the project.[2] Rock Island took delivery of its rolling stock: a baggage-dormitory car, three coaches, a coffee shop-bar-lounge car, four sleeping cars, and a sleeper-lounge-observation car (with barbershop).
The Rock Island consist for the Golden Rocket:[3]
- Baggage-dormitory #820
- Coach Valle Verde
- Coach Valle Vista
- Coach Valle Mar
- Coffee-shop lounge El Café
- Diner El Comedor
- 4-double bedroom, 4-compartment, 2-drawing room sleeper La Quinta
- 22-roomette sleeper La Costa
- 12-double bedroom sleeper La Jolla
- 12-double bedroom sleeper La Palma
- 2-double bedroom, 1-drawing room sleeper buffet lounge-observation La Mirada
The proposed Southern Pacific consist for the Golden Rocket that was never built:[4]
- Baggage-dormitory
- Coach Valle Rio Grande
- Coach Valle del Sol
- Coach Valle Imperial
- Coffee-shop lounge El Café Frontero
- Diner La Fonda
- 4-double bedroom, 4-compartment, 2-drawing room sleeper Monte Chiricahua
- 22-roomette sleeper Monte Santa Rita
- 12-double bedroom sleeper Monte San Jacinto
- 12-double bedroom sleeper Santa Catalina
- 2-double bedroom, 1-drawing room sleeper buffet lounge-observation La Galleria
The units arrived bearing the ill-fated Golden Rocket's eye-popping livery, painted bright vermilion on top and bare stainless steel on the bottom. The cars also retained the festive Mexican-themed interiors originally intended for the Golden Rocket.[5] Rock Island immediately placed the cars into service on the Golden State, its other transcontinental train (jointly operated with Southern Pacific).[6]
The Golden State's cars and locomotives retained the Golden Rocket colors well into 1953, after which time the locomotives were repainted in the SP's well-known red-and-orange Daylight livery. Both railroads advertised the Golden Rocket. It was promoted as "America's Newest, Most Beautiful Streamliner"; instead, it became "the train that never was."
See also
- El Comedor
- Passenger trains on the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad
- Passenger trains on the Southern Pacific Railroad
References
- Dubin, Arthur D. (1964). Some Classic Trains. Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA: Kalmbach. p. 220.
- Dubin, Arthur D. (1964). Some Classic Trains. Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA: Kalmbach. p. 221.
- Dubin, Arthur D. (1964). Some Classic Trains. Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA: Kalmbach. p. 220.
- Dubin, Arthur D. (1964). Some Classic Trains. Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA: Kalmbach. p. 220.
- Dubin, Arthur D. (1964). Some Classic Trains. Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA: Kalmbach. p. 220.
- Dubin, Arthur D. (1964). Some Classic Trains. Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA: Kalmbach. p. 221.
- Schafer, Mike; Welsh, Joe (1997). Classic American Streamliners. Osceola, Wisconsin: MotorBooks International. pp. 73–74. ISBN 978-0-7603-0377-1.
- Dubin, Arthur D. (1964). Some Classic Trains. Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA: Kalmbach