0 Members and 2 Guests are viewing this topic.
Back to Eric... In your history, I see no motivation for the Denver & Salt Lake to ever dig the Moffat Tunnel, suggesting that the D&RGW Tennessee Pass line is the Pennsy's only real competition over the Divide.
As a shareholder in the PRR in 1903, I would wonder what folly would have my invest in a torturously expensive line that takes our attention from the heart of industrial might of the entire world! Billions would be needed, to do what, pull a few tons lead? There are existing federally funded routes already in place, and the Northern Pacific proves that there already too many.I might support an amalgamation with James J. Hill to coordinate traffic with the Great Northern and CB&Q, but I vote my proxy NO to this mad adventure...
Quite the contrary. The PRR actually tried to merge with the D&SL to get that route, but the Rio Grande stopped it. It wasn’t until the D&SL reached Salt Lake And had that route tied up that the PRR was forced to build the line over Loveland Pads.
@Dave V important point that I neglected to mention, the D&RGW didn’t have a route to Salt Lake. In probably one of the least likely links in the chain, the PRR managed to get control of the original Rio Grande Western that ran from Salt Lake to Grand Junction. The D&RGW needed the western part of the Moffatt Route to link to Salt Lake. Once that was done, building the Moffatt Tunnel still makes sense, since it would cut a lot of time off of the Tennessee Pass route, if that route then had to continue north.
Well, the D&RGW would have gained the link to Salt Lake with the Denver & Salt Lake completing that route in 1914. They got there, just a little later and by a different route.
That's a hard sell for me. In fact, with a transcontinental PRR right through the heart of the Rockies connecting Denver and Salt Lake, why ever bother to build a much slower, more difficult, and less direct Denver & Salt Lake Railroad in the first place?
But then again, as I look at my Retro fleet, I have the sneaking suspicion that somewhere in your collection is a Con Cor gas turbine locomotive emblazoned with DGLE and a Keystone... and without all of this chin scratching, you can't justify keeping it !!Am I right?
When Moffatt started the Denver and Salt Lake, the railroad situation across the Rockies looked exactly like it did historically, just with some different owners here and there. The D&SL was incorporated in 1903, and the PRR didn't gain the final link in the transcontinental route until 1905, and then only with trackage rights in places. Even with those links, from 1905 to 1914, the PRR was trying to use the Midland as its link across the Rockies. The Loveland Pass route didn't open until 1920, six years after the D&SL, under Rio Grande control, linked to Salt Lake. If you look at that scenario on a map, the motivation to drill the Moffatt Tunnel is still very apparent. It would actually be a shorter route than the PRR's from Denver to Salt Lake City.
But... The D&SL not only never made it to Salt Lake, it hadn't even made it to Craig (its eventual final destination) until 1919, and the Dostero cut-off that made it a viable connection with the D&RGW wasn't built until 1931. You could argue D&RGW pressure would have gotten the Dotsero Cutoff built sooner, but you're still in very, very shaky territory there.And the other elephant in the room is that all of the transcontinental routes through Colorado were much more expensive to operate for longer transit times than the original transcontinental route through Wyoming. It made sense for regionals like the Colorado Midland and the Denver & Rio Grande to do it, but I don't understand the PRR's motivation--if ultimately just to get to California--to go through the most difficult terrain in the Intermountain West, when there were routes to the north and to the south that would have been so much cheaper. Colorado was a much less attractive place to build a railroad after the Silver Panic of 1893.