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the Salt Lake, Garfield & Western
Railway. The line carried passengers to Saltair and freight to the mining area of Garfield, Utah including Morton Salt located on the shores of the Great Salt Lake. On June 8, 1893, the Saltair Resort was officially opened. Saltair was founded and owned originally by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, but was later transferred to the railroad under the ownership of the Snow Family, and the railroad was sold to the Hogle family in the early 1960s. For many years passenger traffic to the Saltair Resort was the line's biggest source of revenue. The line was electrified in 1916, a project that was completed in 1919. The Garfield Station was built approximately one mile from the Garfield town itself. Service to the Garfield station smelter industry ended in 1930, but continued to Morton Salt and other rail freight customers from Salt Lake City to the shores of the Great Salt Lake. The railroad provided significant passenger tourist traffic, with trains of 12-16 passenger cars leaving to and from Saltair every 45 minutes. in 1933, the Great Salt Lake reached its lowest recorded levels, stranding the Saltair Beach Resort from the waterline. To make up for the loss of patronage due to the low water levels, a roller coaster was constructed, as well as a short railroad from the pavilion to the water using gasoline-powered speeders to carry patrons across the brine flat. in 1955, a fire consumed the bath houses; and in 1957 the roller coaster burned as well. The resort finally closed permanently in 1959, and the Salt Lake, Garfield & Western ceased passenger operations. The first diesel locomotive on the line was purchased in 1951, and was a GE 44-tonner. In July 1954 the railroad leased a GE centercab diesel from U.S. Steel, and this marked the end of electric operations on the Salt Lake, Garfield & Western. The SLGW continues to haul freight to this day along its 16 miles of track with additional sidings for railcar storage, transloading, railcar cleaning, rail served warehousing and other rail-related services.
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in 1906. No. 1 was retired in 1919, and Nos. 2 and 3 were retired in 1921. Until electrification, the SL&LA owned only these three locomotives. During times of peak business, the SLGW leased passenger locomotives from the Rio Grande
Western and the Oregon Short Line to facilitate the operation of extra trains.
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before being placed into revenue service. Numbered 1, it weighed 45 tons, had 17X24-inch cylinders, and 62-inch drivers. A second identical locomotive, numbered 2, was received in April of the following year. A third locomotive, also a 4-4-0 but built by the
Pittsburgh Locomotive Works, was delivered
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The only electric freight locomotive was No. 401, former Salt Lake & Utah 104, purchased in 1946. A total of six powered McGuire-Cummings interurban cars were delivered in 1918, which were also used to haul freight. Two of the MucGuire-Cummings cars, when operated in
Multiple Unit, could pull 40
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The SLGW was incorporated on
September 6, 1891 as the Saltair Railway, with the express purpose of tapping the tourist market visiting the Saltair Beach Resort on the shores of the Great Salt Lake. It was reorganized as the Salt Lake & Los Angeles Railroad in April 1892, and renamed soon after
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A total of thirteen diesel locomotives were owned and operated by the SLG&W during its independent years, starting with D.S. 1 purchased in
December 1951. In addition, motor car MC-3, built by American Car & Foundry and purchased by the SLG&W in 1951, was used to supplement the
162:. Originally incorporated as a dual passenger and freight railroad, it now provides freight-only railcar switching services to industries in Salt Lake City along its sixteen miles of track.
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and is still in operation as M-300. From 2017 until 2019 the line operated three locomotives, D.S. 9 and 10, both ex-Union
Pacific SW10 diesel-electric locomotives; and D.S. 11 an ex-
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broke ground for a new manufacturing shop alongside the SLGW. The factory will be used to build commuter rail units such as the
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fully loaded boxcars. The electric equipment ran on a charge of 1500 volts, delivered via single-suspension double-line poles.
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locomotive which arrived on the railroad June 14, 2017. In late 2019 the railroad acquired an ex-Kennecott Copper
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A Stadler FLIRT DMU, painted in DART Silver Line colors at rest on the Salt Lake
Garfield & Western Railway.
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416:"Stadler breaks ground on railcar manufacturing plant expected to employ 1,000 in west Salt Lake City"
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434:"Patriot Rail Company LLC Finalizes Acquisition of Salt Lake Garfield & Western Railway"
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Boxcar 100, originally used to store animal hides, resides at the Heber Valley
Railroad.
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DS-2, a GE 44-tonner, is on display at the
Western Railway Museum in California.
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locomotive (D.S. 12), retiring the two SW10 locomotives by the end of the year.
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The last SLGW caboose is now a coffee station located in Mount Pleasant Utah.
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After the railroad's purchase by Patriot Rail, D.S. 11 was retired and two
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for use in the United States. In 2021 the railroad was purchased by
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The SLGW is dual-served by the two major mainline U.S. railroads,
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diesel-powered passenger trains. This car was later sold to the
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511:"Salt Lake, Garfield & Western Railway Diesel Locomotives"
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4-4-0, was delivered on May 24, 1892, and was tested by the
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One SLGW open-air passenger car is on display at the
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locomotives, 8201 and 8223 were added to the roster.
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496:"Salt Lake, Garfield & Western Locomotives"
39:The railroad's maintenance facility and offices
296:Two open-air excursion cars are owned by the
376:. Cerritos, California: Interurbans Special.
148:), nicknamed through most of its history as
394:"Salt Lake, Garfield & Western Railway"
460:"Salt Lake Garfield & Western Company"
234:The first SLGW locomotive, a steam-driven
230:SLG&W D.S.9, an ex-Union Pacific SW10
139:Salt Lake, Garfield & Western Railway
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18:Salt Lake, Garfield, and Western Railway
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354:. Salt Lake City, Utah: Western Epics.
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266:locomotive (D.S. 13), and acquired an
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131:10 miles, plus 6 miles secondary track
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480:Gould, William John Gilbert (1995).
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414:Gorrell, Mike (October 13, 2017).
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482:My Life on the Mountain Railroads
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28:Salt Lake, Garfield & Western
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484:. Utah State University Press.
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236:Rhode Island Locomotive Works
543:Railway lines opened in 1891
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288:California Western Railroad
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298:Utah State Railroad Museum
174:The Saltair Resort in 1900
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350:Carr, Stephen L. (1989).
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53:1201 West North Temple
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305:Heber Valley Railroad
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182:On October 13, 2017,
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192:Patriot Rail Company
74:Salt Lake City, Utah
372:Interurbans of Utah
368:Swett, Ira (1974).
281:Surviving equipment
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253:California Western
240:Rio Grande Western
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206:Current operations
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82:1891–Present
79:Dates of operation
55:Salt Lake City, UT
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440:. January 4, 2021
420:Salt Lake Tribune
151:The Saltair Route
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222:Motive power
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184:Stadler Rail
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50:Headquarters
93:Track gauge
532:Categories
330:References
268:EMD MP15DC
260:EMD MP15AC
465:April 11,
87:Technical
399:April 8,
318:See also
290:as M300.
112: in
45:Overview
275:EMD GP9
166:History
107:⁄
516:May 7,
444:May 7,
264:GP39-2
128:Length
71:Locale
518:2023
467:2011
446:2023
401:2011
216:BNSF
214:and
160:Utah
146:SLGW
137:The
66:SLGW
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