Lubbock, Texas is not the only place to call itself
the "Hub City," but it has a better claim than some. Railroad
lines radiate outwards from Lubbock County towards the eight principal
points of the compass, resembling the spokes of a wheel.
The Santa Fe's line southwestward from Lubbock
to Seagraves is one of the more interesting spokes. In earlier times,
this branch enjoyed heavy livestock traffic. Though the years, cotton
and grain have been mainstays. The line serves an oil field as well,
and in recent years has carried a variety of chemical compounds
in specialized cars. A fleet of unique cars assigned to this branch
added a distinctive flavor to West Texas railroading.
Track
Lubbock officially became a railroad town on January
9, 1910, when the Santa Fe's Operating Department took control of
the line recently constructed into town from the north. Construction
continued in a southeast direction towards a connection with the
Gulf, Colorado and Santa Fe Railway. This connection was opened
late in 1911. Meanwhile, a branch was run southwards, opening between
Slaton and Lamesa in the Fall of 1910. The last line constructed
by the Santa Fe-affiliated Pecos and Northern Texas Railway opened
in 1914 between Lubbock and Texico.
Lubbock County by 1914 possessed Santa Fe lines
radiating in four directions and the city itself was boasting of
being the "Hub City." The following year an independent
eastward line entered the Santa Fe family.
In 1910, Crosby County had envied Lubbock's good
fortune. Despite vigorous efforts, Crosby County had failed to attract
a railroad line of its own. Now, with a railroad just a county away,
the citizens resolved to construct a line themselves. On April 6,
1910, they obtained a charter for the Crosbyton-Southplains Railroad.
The little railroad, with Santa Fe encouragement, constructed a
line between Crosbyton and Lubbock. Regular service began June 13,
1911.
The line did well, but on August 1, 1915, the owners
sold the line to the Santa Fe. Shortly, Santa Fe surveyors began
working from Crosbyton to Seymour, the terminus of the Gulf, Texas
and Western Railway, which the ATSF attempted to purchase. Obtaining
this line and the Weatherford, Mineral Wells and Northwestern Railway
and closing the gap between Crosbyton and Seymour would have given
the Santa Fe a direct connection between Lubbock and Fort Worth.
However, the owner of the GT&W held out for too much money and
the Santa Fe abandoned the project.
Santa Fe attention now turned towards the area
southwest of Lubbock. This developing section was using Tahoka on
the Lamesa branch as a shipping point. The business grew to the
extent that the depot was enlarged. Other railroads were also interested.
The Pecos Valley Southern had its heart set on connecting Lubbock
with the Rio Grande, but it only constructed a few miles south of
Pecos. The Midland and Northwestern laid wobbly rails as far as
Seminole.
The Santa Fe, however, had greater plans than merely
building a railroad. It planned to settle the place. A few years
earlier, a Santa Fe-affiliated land company had purchased a large
body of land in southwestern Kansas. Having learned from experience,
the railroad sold land to actual settlers at reasonable rates. Speculators
were not welcome. The Santa Fe had built a branch to serve the new
settlers, and things had gone well.
The Santa Fe now desired to repeat this success
in Texas. For weeks rumors told of a mysterious buyer purchasing
huge tracts of undeveloped land in the upper Panhandle and also
southwest of Lubbock. The buyer's representative was Harry McGee,
a former surveyor and track builder for the Santa Fe, who had more
recently worked for real estate companies associated with the Santa
Fe. The land was conveyed to Thomas Spearman, of the Spearman Land
Company, a Santa Fe company later renamed the Willard Land company.
In Gaines, Terry, and Yoakum counties near Lubbock, 267 sections
were purchased, the heart of it being 200,000 acres purchased from
S. J. Blythe.
The Blythe land was the destination of Santa Fe
surveys, which were the work of J. W. Stewart, assisted by J. C.
Bye. The first ran westward from Lamesa. Then a line was run northeastward
to near the center of Terry County. From there, lines radiated out
to Tahoka, Slaton, and Lubbock. Final surveys were complete on August
18, 1916. On the day before, the charter of the Crosbyton-Southplains
had been amended to include a line from Lubbock to Gaines County.
Also, the company's name became the South Plains and Santa Fe Railway.
Rancher M. V. Brownfield met with Santa Fe officials
with a promise of free right of way and station grounds through
Terry County, and residents of Lubbock County made a similar pledge.
As the year passed, a variety of Santa Fe officials,
mostly from the Engineering Department, visited the area. Construction
Engineer S. E. Ross, praised the chosen route. "There is not
a draw, swag, or lake between Lubbock and Primrose <Ropes>,
and <this> is the luckiest survey the Santa Fe has ever made.
All we have to do is scrape it out."
Grading began on new Year's Day of 1917 and took
almost ten months to complete. Laying of #85 rails began March 1
and the last rail was spiked on November 30. After depots, fences,
surfacing and other necessary tasks were completed, the Operating
Department accepted the line on July 1, 1918. Previously, the Construction
Department had provided haphazard revenue service.
The tracklaying machine, flying an American flag
from its top girder, had been lavishly welcomed at all points along
the line. Also the first passenger train. Brownfield for instance,
hosted a grand barbecue at which some 900 autos and uncounted rigs
appeared. There was dancing and roping and orating for the entertainment
of all, and plenty of food, even for the 4,000 who attended.
One of the featured speakers was Professor J. D.
Sanderfer, President of Simmons College at Abilene. A decade earlier,
Abilene, Texas, had blown an assured Santa Fe main line by encouraging
the Colorado & Southern to extend a branch to that town. The
C&S had proceeded to build upon the Santa Fe survey, and the
big company decided it had better things to do than to build a railroad
that was already built. Perhaps Sanderfer's words carried a certain
sadness. "You people are not only to be congratulated on getting
a railroad," he said, "but you are more to be congratulated
on getting the Santa Fe, for it is able to do things and do them
right."
The line ran southwestward from Lubbock in a long
tangent passing through the little town of Wolfforth, named for
George C. Wolffarth and recorded for all time misspelled.
Primrose siding in the corner of Hockley County
became a cattle shipping point before any facilities were constructed.
Cow hands made holding pens from lariats and this gave the place
the new name Ropes. Texas already had a town with a similar name,
so the Post Office insisted on Ropesville. This is how it appears
on highway maps, but the natives and the railroad call it by its
true name.
The tangent would have passed through Gomez, the
oldest community in Terry County, but the line diverted slightly
to pass through Brownfield instead.
The town of Meadow moved from its 1904 location
to be on the railroad.
End of track was originally called Blythe, but
there was another such place so it was renamed for colonization
agent C. L. Spearman.
Spearman and Brownfield became trading centers
for a large area to the west, extending into New Mexico.
In 1925, the SP&SF constructed from Doud, near
Lubbock, westward to the state line at Bledsoe. Some thought was
given to extending this line to Roswell, but it never occurred.
A Burlington line opened to Lubbock in 1928. Now, with lines radiating
in all directions, Lubbock could now truly call itself the Hub City.
Oil was discovered in Lea County, NM, in 1927.
The Santa Fe quickly petitioned the Interstate Commerce Commission
for permission to extend the SP&SF into Hobbs, NM, and thence
southward. Second thoughts caused the withdrawal of the proposal
because it would develop only the oil field. A new plan was then
submitted which would not only tap the oil field, but would also
preserve the cattle trade and encourage agriculture. This involved
a 46 mile line to Lovington with a 43.5 mile branch leading southward
through Lea County.
At the same time, a subsidiary of the Texas &
Pacific Railroad, the Texas-New Mexico Railway, applied for permission
to enter Lea County from the south. The oil companies had long patronized
the T&P, which owned an oil company, and they supported the
T-NM. The cattlemen supported the Santa Fe. The Santa Fe offered
direct service to Kansas City but not to Fort Worth. The T&P
offered the reverse. The T-NM promised to develop a potash deposit
while the SP&SF would encourage agriculture. The I.C.C. felt
that both proposals possessed virtually equal merit and in December
of 1929 granted both lines permission to enter Lovington. The Santa
Fe, however, would have to drop plans for its southward branch.
The Great Depression having begun, the SP&SF did not construct
its new line, even though the T-NM was completed.
In 1937, oil was discovered near Seagraves, easing
the hard times.
Service
Today, ordinary people have little contact with
railroads. They know it only as a dirty, noisy eyesore--an inconvenience
at grade crossings. It used to be otherwise. The railroad's relationship
with the wayside population was more than passenger service or a
wave from the train. It was family.
The railroad's primary contact with the general
public was the local station force. The chief salesman and public
relations man was the agent. A good agent knew everybody and made
friends easily. He could charm the rattles off a snake. He learned
the business of all current and potential customers. Agents were
members of virtually every civic organization and often held public
office. It was quipped at Slaton that the city would be better off
renting out city hall and conducting city business at the depot
since the city officers were already there. The same could be said
of any number of towns.
A good agent was a valuable commodity. If the railroad
wished to transfer an established agent, it had to counter the objections
of local citizens. It also had to give him a raise, and a truly
desirable man would receive other compensations as well.
The agent and his staff were not above bending
the rules. The mixed train carried milk to the dairy in Lubbock
in five and ten gallon cans. Although the personnel and equipment
were the same, the milk traffic was handled by two competitors:
the railroad and the express company. Station personnel knew who
signed their paychecks. The railroad's milk cans sat in the shade
of the depot with the lids iced. REA cans sat in the sun with no
ice. Nature having taken its course in the metal cans, milk shipped
via REA arrived in an undesirable condition. Sometimes something
more spectacular occurred. A can might be sitting quietly in the
Texas sun when suddenly the lid would shoot skyward, propelled by
a geyser of foaming white. Frequently, the vibration from an arriving
train set off a milk bomb. Train crews hoped that if a can was going
to blow, that it would do so before it entered the shaky environs
of the baggage compartment. As it was, combines acquired a distinctive
odor.
Train service consisted of mixed trains supplemented
by specials as needed. Branch line mixed trains usually were scheduled
on an in and out basis for the convenience of passengers. An early
morning departure from the end of the line and an evening return
allowed people along the line to spend a day in Lubbock and to be
home that night. The train stayed overnight at Seagraves, where
the railroad furnished an engine house, fuel and water facilities,
and other necessities, including personnel.
The South Plains and Santa Fe had a peculiar twist
to this plan. The mixed operated between Crosbyton and Seagraves,
with a long layover at Lubbock enroute. Two trains were involved,
departing opposite terminals in the morning, remaining away from
home overnight, and returning to the home terminal the next evening.
This gave branch crews a daily run of 102.5 miles, about the same
as main line crews. After the Bledsoe line opened, the Crosbyton
train operated to Bledsoe and the Seagraves line had its own operation.
This operating method lasted only a few years.
Bus competition arose, offering several schedules daily. By the
Thirties, the Seagraves mixed was operating out and in from Lubbock.
The end-of-branch engine terminals were abandoned.
Crews on branch trains, and locals on the main,
tended to be senior men. The heavy enroute switching needed experienced
men, but that is not why these men bid for these jobs. The work
was harder, but it was nice to be in one's own home every night.
Let the young, inexperienced men ride the through trains and not
see home for days at a time!
The mixed trains handled freight, passengers, express,
and mail and a good many things unheard of in the company headquarters.
On the SP&SF line to Crosbyton, coal was "accidentally"
dropped on the ground as the train rattled past snow-bound cabins.
The conductor would hold the train if requested or if he saw the
dust of a buggy hurrying down the road to town. All business stopped
when fires swept the grasslands. The locomotive screamed the alarm
and firefighters climbed aboard for a rushed ride to the flames.
Stories abound of railroaders delivering newspapers,
medicine, and other things to trackside houses. Often regular train
crews knew and were known by trackside observers almost as family.
Out on the lines west of Lubbock, conductor John Burton's train
was often flagged between stations so housewives could pass pies
or cakes to the crew. Sometimes, whole chickens were given to each
crewman to take home to their families. And sometimes, the trackside
people gave something more.
One day Burton's train stopped with the combine
next to a pair of youngsters who had faithfully waved as the train
passed each day. Noting the open mouths and wide eyes as the train
stopped, Burton, on a humorous impulse, leaned out and asked, "Are
you coming home with me?" The pair hoped and raced home. To
the conductor's surprise, they quickly reappeared with their mother
hurriedly stuffing clothes in a bag. They were the first of many
South Plains children to be entrusted to him in those more innocent
times. Often the trip to his home was a child's first real journey,
certainly the first made alone. For a couple of days they played
with Burton children, examined souvenirs from coast to coast rail
voyages, and leafed through books thick with photos of distant places.
The effects of this introduction to the world can only be imagined.
Passing by the same houses every day, the crew
not only recognized the people, but also their routines. If something
did not seem right, like no one stirring about the place for a day
or two, the train stopped and the crew investigated. Usually, there
was no problem, but now and then they found someone sick or injured
who had no help on the lonely plains except for watchful--nosey
if you insist--railroaders.
Blizzards were another cause for railroaders to
check on people. Sometimes special trains were dispatched for the
purpose. The crews were volunteers, as were the doctors, lawmen,
and others who rode along to help the serious cases. As late as
the Sixties, even trains on the transcontinental main line had standing
orders to rescue motorists stranded by blizzards.
Informal operation occasionally resulted in embarrassing
moments. The lady who owned a little store in Meadow was noted for
her excellent fried pies. You just didn't go through Meadow without
getting some pies. One day, the train crew was in a hurry and conductor
Burton trekked to the store while the crew switched. True to the
time and place, the purchase was accompanied by coffee and chat.
Suddenly, the train whistled and departed. The lady exclaimed, "Your
train is leaving!" Unruffled, Burton sipped his coffee and
replied, "Don't worry. They'll come back." Within minutes,
the train was backing into town. Not only had the crew missed their
conductor, they had missed their bag of pies.
Mixed trains had to run more or less on schedule,
so when cattle had to be loaded usually a special train took the
task. Usually, these operated out of Slaton, running on the main
line to Lubbock before turning onto the branch.
On one occasion, conductor Phil Nickel's crew took
engine and caboose to Amarillo to pick up empty stock cars. They
carried 120 of them to Brownfield, where they tied up for the night.
When they came on duty the next day, cattle covered the countryside.
Railroaders and cowhands sweated for hours at the loading chutes.
Another crew rolled in from Slaton, sandwiched 60 loaded cars between
engine and caboose, and puffed off for Amarillo. Most of the day
had passed before Nickel's crew was able to take the remaining cars
northward. When they reached Lubbock, the Hog Law was threatening,
so another crew continued to Amarillo.
Another time, a crew was called to go to Brownfield
for thirty cars. The fireman had enjoyed Slaton's night life a little
too much and failed to appear. Rather than call another fireman,
the engine watchman, who had just spent the night tending engines
on the ready track, was recruited for the trip. Some while later,
the train reached Brownfield and loading commenced. Engineer B.
H. Botlinger watched the boiler while his makeshift fireman got
some sleep. Eventually, Botlinger had to leave the cab. He shook
the fireman and cautioned him to watch the pressure. Within minutes,
however, the eyes were closed and the rising needle on the pressure
gauge went unheeded. When the safety valve popped with a shriek,
the cattle still unloaded made toothpicks of the pen and hightailed
it for the horizon, pursued by swearing men on horseback. It took
three days to round them up, but Botlinger had taken his train out
as quickly and quietly as possible and was not seen in not seen
in Brownfield for awhile.
Stock loading continued for many years. One of
the cowhands at Ropes was Max Evans, who later drew from his experiences
for his book: The Rounders.
During the oil boom, special trains ran regularly
to handle nothing but oil patch business. They ran out from Lubbock
with supplies for the field and returned with empties, transacting
no other business enroute.
In season, small towns were mightily proud of the
sports teams fielded by the local schools. They still are. Chartered
buses now serve the need, but in earlier days special trains carried
teams and fans to neighboring communities for games. Teenagers and
sports fans have changed little through the years, so the cars on
these specials were not the finest equipment on the railroad. In
fact, they were the oldest cars that could still run in regular
passenger service. Generally, they were all-wood or wood-bodied,
steel-underframed cars. Bulls patrolled the trains, along with any
local or state officer willing to come along. The cars were inspected
for damage before and after each trip, and the bull made a written
report afterwards. As a rule, this included the score of the game.
Sports pride was also displayed after the foundation
of Texas Technological College at Lubbock. The football stadium
is close to the Seagraves District tracks. The railroad put in a
cinder platform where special cars and trains unloaded. When Lubbock
obtained a pro baseball team, the Hubbers, that stadium was located
near the platform, but not so close. The cindered area is still
used when Tech plays, but special trains stopped using it long ago.
The area is fenced and fans can rent parking space on the right
of way. The railroad takes pains to run trains several hours before
or after game time so no one is injured or cars damaged.
The railroad also brought entertainment to West
Texas. The Santa Fe hired entertainers to tour for employees, but
usually the public was welcome. At other times, traveling entertainers
exchanged performances for free transportation.
South Plains residents had to travel to Lubbock,
Slaton, or Plainview to see big name stars, but lesser lights, paying
their own passage, made the rounds of the branches. These small
troupes often carried tents, seats, lights, and other paraphernalia
from town to town. Usually plays were presented, but there was at
least one shoestring operation that consisted of one man carrying
tent, seats, movie projector, and one film from town to town. Harley
Sadler ran West Texas' most popular troupe. Art Names used Meadow
as his base. These small troupes soon abandoned the railroad for
the less-expensive Model T.
Circuses also came by rail. The big shows, like
Barnum and Bailey, seldom ventured out on the branches. However,
a dying breed, the one ring show with maybe a dozen performers,
visited the small towns.
For years, the Santa Fe sent agricultural experts
on lecture tours, and on several occasions entire trains carried
displays from place to place. The arrival of a display train was
a major event. A crowd was on hand, school bands played, barbecues
were held, sometimes beauty contests, and other events greeted the
trains. After a tour, the railroad usually saw increased orders
for fertilizer and seed, and increased crops.
This being the Santa Fe, branch line maintenance
was excellent and continued into the Seventies. A major tie-replacement
program was pursued in 1966. Outfit trains, weed controllers, and
Jordan spreaders made occasional visits. The spreaders spent much
time clearing sand from the roadway south of Brownfield. Train crews
occasionally found sand dunes blocking the tracks, whereupon in
later years a brakeman would hitch-hike to town and arrange for
a bulldozer to clear the way. In places, sand has been repeatedly
shoved aside until, mixed with tumbleweeds and other vegetation,
permanent dunes flank the rails. In places these dunes extend for
miles and give the impression that the railroad is in a long cut,
although the roadbed is actually above the level of the surrounding
plain.
In the Fifties, the Santa Fe announced plans to
discontinue passenger service between Lubbock and Amarillo. A storm
of protesting letters came from residents of the South Plains. Impressed,
the railroad decided not only to keep the train, but also to improve
it. The resulting streamlined consist included a Pullman that ran
through between Lubbock and Chicago. During the week prior to revenue
operation, the new train toured the lines radiating from Lubbock.
The special visited the Seagraves branch February
15, 1955. It was an event. While the train paused at Wolfforth,
population 200, over 700 people tramped down its aisles, the first
of the day's total of 5,562. Actually, the train made two stops
in Wolfforth: At the depot and at the school.
Schools let out all along the line, and schools
at off-line towns bused their students to see the streamliner. The
high school band played at Brownfield, but Seagraves mustered not
only the local band, but also the band from Seminole. Sheriff's
Posses, mounted parade units, appeared in full regalia. At the lunch
stop in Brownfield, Santa Fe officials detrained to find a horse-drawn
chuck wagon rolling up to them.
One lucky little girl at Brownfield was having
a birthday. She and several friends had a party aboard the train
as it rolled southwards. For the trip around the wye at Seagraves,
the train bulged with humanity.
Agents dressed in full uniform. Flags waved and
autos honked. Sprinkled through the throngs were people who had
been present when the first train had arrived decades before.
The visit of the Lubbock Streamliner is still remembered.
At least one model railroader in the Lubbock area obtained his love
of railroading that day.
In the early Seventies, the Seagraves line could
boast of a 40 MPH speed limit, and track anchors were being installed.
Daily trains in season were sometimes fifty cars long. Shippers
along the line were being supplied with ATSF cars specially modified
for the service, and railroaders scrambled when a customer had a
problem.
But the railroad and the public drifted apart.
Station forces were reduced and eventually eliminated. Outsiders
who had occasional contact with railroaders often considered them,
as a group, to be surly and grouchy. Even the insiders, the customers,
were alienated. One of the encroaching problems was crew attitude.
If upon reaching Brownfield it was discovered that the Lubbock switcher
had improperly placed a Brownfield car in the train, the crew was
not obligated to switch that car out. It would be hauled to Seagraves
and maybe left there in the block of Seagraves cars. Or it would
be taken back to Lubbock, through Brownfield, where, hopefully,
it would not be "out of block" the next day. In other
times, the crew would have switched out the car because it was the
right thing to do.
Certainly, part of the problem is the general decay
of society, but other matters contribute. One rank-and-file railroader
expressed his opinion thusly: "When the management was filled
with real estate people, bankers, financiers, etc. and railroad
people <were> removed from management, all that was past.
The only thing that mattered was profit, and railroads were profited'
out of business. They were dependent on good will and friendship
as well as good service for their business, and when service was
curtailed the people went to whomever would handle their needs."
Specials and passenger service disappeared. Train
length decreased. In the Eighties came the distressing sight of
five car trains creeping down the Seagraves district at a speed
equal to the car count, and not a track gang in sight. Such an operation
was a loser, and the railroad that still called itself "Santa
Fe" resolved to rid itself of this line.
SWGR
Late in the Eighties, a group of Santa Fe employees
approached the railroad with an offer to buy the branches west of
Lubbock. One of them privately expressed a desire to do "some
real railroading." The railroad declined, but placed the lines
to Seagraves and Whiteface (The track between Whiteface and Bledsoe
had been abandoned in 1984.) up for sale. Also for sale were the
Lubbock-Crosbyton line, the Slaton-Lamesa branch, and the Plainview-Floydada
connection.
The South Plains Association of Governments proposed
to purchase and operate the orphaned Santa Fe lines and also the
Burlington Northern line northeast of Lubbock. When it came to raising
the money however, several member county governments balked. A purchaser
had to be found elsewhere.
On March 30, 1990, Amerail, a new subsidiary of
freight car lessor Tempco, purchased the lines to Seagraves, Whiteface,
and Floydada. The three lines were organized into two companies:
The Floydada and Plainview Railroad and the Seagraves, Whiteface
and Lubbock Railroad.
Amerail purchased four former MKT GP7s, and immediately
began having trouble with them. MKT had boosted the horsepower,
but not the tractive effort. The engines were bad about spinning
wheels. They had also been poorly maintained and Amerail had neither
facilities nor personnel to correct problems. The diesels had a
nasty habit of setting the right of way on fire--frequently. After
a spectacular fire near Wolfforth that burned 1,200 acres and occupied
the fire departments of five towns, legal action was threatened
if the problem was not corrected. Eventually, a half dozen or so
GP9s that had worked previously for C&NW and SP and a man who
could tinker with them relieved the problem.
The Seagraves, Whiteface, and Lubbock runs into
Santa Fe's Upper Yard to pick up a string of cars and takes it to
Doud to make up its trains. Unfortunately, Doud is a poor location
for switching of this kind. The tracks are too short and too few
in number. The lack of space means that often cars are switched
thirty or more cars from the engine. Aggravating the problem, busy
grade crossings are at both ends of the siding. With long strings
of cars being switched, these crossings frequently are blocked for
long periods.
Amerail inherited a physical plant cursed by deferred
maintenance, which used to be anathema on the Santa Fe. Ties are
failing and the gravel ballast that had been applied in the Sixties
has been driven into the mud. Weeds hide the rails, ties sink as
trains pass, and crossing signals malfunction.
Despite problems, traffic levels rose. The trains
composed of a mere handful of cars like in the last days of Santa
Fe operation are rarely seen today. Fifty cars is more normal, and
once an 85 car string of grain hoppers was run. Three diesel units
on one train is not uncommon. Pleased, Amerail attempted to buy
other Santa Fe lines running out of Hutchinson, Kansas.
The SWGR (Seagraves, Whiteface and Lubbock) has
plans for a TOFC facility west of Lubbock and Tempco plans to put
in a car shop. However, these plans and others are on hold until
the darkest shadow over the company is removed.
During the Sixties, an east-west freeway through
Lubbock was proposed. It was to run on the right of way of US Highways
62/82, but the project was laid aside because it would have required
removal of the adjacent railroad. The project was revived and approved
two decades later, when the railroad was declining. It was thought
possible to relocate the Seagraves line to a junction with the main
line northwest of Lubbock.
However, the area west of Lubbock has undergone
rapid development almost to the county line. The residents strenuously
object to the construction of a railroad in this area.
The objectors have a variety of motives, from people
concerned about property values to a group that routinely opposes
every move made by Lubbock's City Council. Their arguments are equally
varied. The most frequently appearing topic concerns child safety.
Grade crossings are dangerous to school buses and to driving teenagers.
Much was made of a recent incident where unsupervised children tried
to hop a moving train, and one was killed. A railroad, it is claimed,
has no business being close to children.
In the face of many objections vigorously expressed,
the Highway Department drew up plans to run the tracks over, under,
or down the median of the freeway. None of these plans worked well,
so the railroad must be relocated before construction of the freeway
can begin. Dozens of routes have been proposed, and none has been
acceptable.
Objectors to the relocation attempted to halt the
freeway project. Failing in that, they are trying to have the entire
railroad abandoned. Safety regulations, tax and land records, financial
statements, and other public documents have been examined in attempts
to legally cripple the SWGR and declare it insolvent. It is claimed
that the railroad is hauling around empty cars to make itself appear
profitable. Volunteers are examining tracks and recording what they
consider to be safety violations.
Meanwhile, citizens of Brownfield, Seagraves, Levelland,
and other area towns are trying to keep the railroad running. And
the TOFC facility, car shop, switching yard, and track improvements
are on hold until the railroad is certain that the investment will
not be wasted. Nothing will be done until the matter is settled.
Cars
The first major commodity shipped on the Seagraves
District was cattle. For a time, Seagraves was the largest shipping
point of cattle in the world. In 1919, Gaines County shipped 31,485
head and Terry County, 25,563. The bovines came not only from the
immediate area, but also from New Mexico. Many of the ranches in
New Mexico were actually closer to the Texas and Pacific Railroad.
However, a belt of sand stretched north of the T&P tracks, making
the driving of cattle difficult. It was easier to trail to the closest
Santa Fe rails. This traffic continued for decades, but faded as
fences and farms cut the range and as trucks and highways grew to
a size to handle the need.
Not just cattle, but hogs and chickens where shipped.
Reportedly, herds of wild antelope were rounded up and loaded aboard
the Santa Fe cars in the early days.
The Santa Fe set about populating its land holdings
with farmers. Cotton was the first major crop and remains so today.
Indian corn was popular, and the favorite grain was kafir. Kafir
was used to feed livestock.
Little wheat was grown in early years--little enough
that a decade after the railroad line had opened no elevators had
been erected at Seagraves and Brownfield. There were several cotton
gins, though.
Eventually, elevators appeared. They were small
wooden structures, often veneered with metal to reduce the fire
hazard. One still stood near the Brownwood depot in the early Eighties,
though by then unused. Walther's offers a line of elevators. Model
Railroading of July/August 1984 tells how to scratchbuild a wooden
elevator. The next issue takes this elevator through the decades,
showing how it changes and grows into a facility that can be used
today.
When the line to Bledsoe opened in 1925, the Santa
Fe-affiliated Terminal Building Corporation of Texas built round,
steel elevators along this line. Most of them are still in service.
The wooden elevators along the Seagraves line were
supplanted by the huge concrete structures that serve today. The
operators are Goodpasture Grain and Milling, and Anderson Grain.
The Anderson elevators are of a fairly ordinary appearance, but
those of Goodpasture are more distinctive. They are more angular,
somewhat art decco. Also, the grain driers are capped by oversized
metal hoods.
The Goodpasture facility at Brownfield is immense.
The large elevator is surrounded by warehouses, silos, tanks, and
various buildings. Company colors are white and aqua. (An amazing
number of businesses, private homes, and even the Boy Scout building
in Brownfield wear these same colors.) The company has a tiny switch
engine in Brownfield, and the Lubbock elevator--not on the Seagraves
line--uses a former Santa Fe switcher, 2352, still in full Santa
Fe paint.
In 1937, oil was discovered on both lines west
of Lubbock. Although the boom was not as large and messy as other
booms, it still brought a good bit of business to the tracks. Many
oil companies operated near Seagraves. Among the more familiar names
are Magnolia (Mobil), Shell, Mid-Continent, Sun, Humble, Atlantic,
Standard, and Texas and Pacific Oil, an affiliate of the railroad
of the same name. These were accompanied by a variety of oil field
service companies, such as Halliburton.
Halliburton uses concrete to seal the sides of
wells. The cement is shipped in covered hoppers. MDC offered a model
of these cars, but the colors should be grey and red instead of
white and red. Also, the prototype more closely resembled the car
formerly offered by E & B Valley Railway. Halliburton also used
acid to break up limestone. the acid came in tank cars. Modeling
of a Halliburton facility, including trucks and hopper cars was
covered in Railroad Model Craftsman, December 1983 and January
1984.
After World War Two, pipelines were built in the
area. The sections of pipe arrived aboard Milwaukee gondolas. These
were various classes of 40 and 50 foot drop bottom composite cars,
sample numbers being 361766, 80669, 85305, and 82501.
The mid to late Forties was also marked by massive
highway paving projects on the plains. Periodic tankcars of asphalt
were accompanied by many gondolas of sand and gravel. These were
Burlington cars, mostly of class GS-5. They were loaded near Quitaque,
on the Burlington line northeast of Lubbock. Models of CB&Q
GS-5 gondolas are available from Sunshine Models.
Goodpasture Grain and Milling sold anhydrous ammonia
under the trade name "Sol-U-Phos," at a facility on the
south edge of Brownfield. For shipping the fertilizer, tank cars
GGMX 201-205 were aquired. They were painted and lettered in Goodpasture's
white and aqua colors at the Roscoe, Snyder and Pacific Railway's
shops. Athearn's chemical tank car will model the cars, but the
unusual lettering (typical of an RS&P design) will be difficult
to duplicate.
Columbian Carbon's plant at Seagraves shipped packaged,
palletized carbon black aboard assigned ATSF cars 62076-62090 and
62136-62143. These were fifty-foot, double-door box cars drawn from
several classes, but most were FE-25s. This class had some unusual
features, and modeling them was described in the Santa Fe Modeler
of November/ December 1984.
Smaller shipments went by SFTT, but bulk shipments
rolled in Columbian Carbon's own fleet of covered hoppers. CCX used
several types of covered hopper, but no model duplicates any of
them. However, one popular design can be approximated by fitting
the body of Walther's 50 foot Air-Slide hopper over the underframe
and hopper bottoms of Walther's PS-2 CD covered hopper. The prototype's
hopper bottoms are more rounded, so the bottoms of Walther's Pressure
Differential covered hopper can be cut and fit to the Air-Slide
body for a better match, but leave off that over-thought plumbing!
The PD bottoms can also be applied to a Center Flow hopper for a
different type of carbon black car. The January 1997 Model Railroad
Craftsman contained drawings of another common type of car.
In the mid-Sixties, Ozark Mahoning began shipping
salt cake from both Brownfield and Seagraves. The Santa Fe assigned
70-ton PS-2 covered hoppers similar to Concor's model to this service,
then almost immediately assigned cylindrical covered hoppers of
the GA-131 class.
GA-131s were unlike anything else on the railroad.
They were an early, more rounded version of ACF's Center Flow design.
Few cars were built to the early design, and most of them were fifty-footers.
Almost none measured 43 feet. The GA-131 class did.
Ozark Mahoning might ship 100 cars in a month;
not in long cuts, but in individual consignments, a car or two to
a customer at a time. They traveled nation-wide, but were stenciled
for return to Brownfield and Seagraves.
In West Texas, they seemed to be everywhere. Their
round sides and grey color made them standouts. Every train and
yard seemed to have one. Lubbock was full of them. Brownfield and
Seagraves seemed to be growing the things. I used to think the class
contained thousands of cars. It contained only two hundred, and
only 145 were assigned to this service.
GA-131s hauled salt cake for three decades. In
the mid Eighties, their salt-corroded sides began sending them to
scrap. The last one I saw in revenue service was in 1995. That summer,
the few survivors waited at Brownfield for a call to duty that may
never come.
Several cylindrical hopper models are available,
but they are all fifty foot cars. Further, the only one with the
correct early-ACF tank ends is Model Power's. The Model Power car
can be shortened, but the best model of a GA-131 would be made by
saving the shortened tank and underframe, throwing the rest away,
and applying better trucks, ladders, platforms, walkways, and hatches.
If you cannibalized a PD hopper for a carbon black car, you have
many of the needed parts at hand.
<Late Report: Atlas is releasing a 50-foot version
of the ACF car. I have not examined one, but this may be a better
starting point for modeling a GA-131.>
Today, Ozark Mahoning ships primaraly in short,
two-bay Center Flow cars marked ACFX. ATSF GA-136s are also in this
service. They are PS-2 CDs with a different roof arrangement. Instead
of trough hatches, these cars have ten round hatches ranged along
both sides of a central walkway, like older covered hoppers. Brand
new PD hoppers, lettered GPFX and exactly like the Walther's model,
have recently come to serve Ozark Mahoning.
Trains presently operating carry various types
of modern tanks and hoppers with a healthy selection of boxes.
Many shippers and the cars they used have escaped
mention here, but the ones mentioned give this branch a distinctive
appearance.
Steam locomotives known to have operated on this
branch at one time or another include 1012, 1077, 1096, 1815, 1822,
2519, and 2548. RSD-5 diesels worked the Lubbock branches in the
Fifties, and PA 56 hauled freight to Seagraves in 1960. The late
Sixties and early Seventies found GP7s, CF7s, and occasionally Fs.
By then, two units operated in multiple on the Bledsoe line. Tonnage
did not require two units, but since the train was no longer going
to line's end, there was no way to turn the power.
By the late Seventies, single units of the 3600
and 6300 classes were assigned. Locomotives on the Bledsoe line
returned to Lubbock long hood forward. Just before the line was
sold, GP-30s were used.
SWGR uses a variety of GP-7s and GP-9s formerly
owned by MKT, C&NW, and SP, in various states of repair. Paint
is mismatched and sometimes three units are assigned to one train.
Layout
If anywhere resembling the prototype, a model of
branch line operation is, by nature, a switching layout. Regular
trains have work to do at virtually every location. Sometimes, a
siding must be switched twice a day as cars are emptied or filled.
Main line locals are much the same, except they rarely are mixed
trains and they have through traffic to dodge. Most locals also
resemble branch lines by operating out and back from terminals as
"turns."
The Seagraves branch does not need to be modeled
exactly to prototype. It could be a turn on a main line, operating
as far west as Seagraves on a route to Roswell or El Paso. The Santa
Fe did consider extending the SP&SF westward to Roswell and
east from Crosbyton to Fort Worth or Ardmore, Oklahoma.
Nor do the track or structures need to duplicate
the actual locations. Since this is a switching layout, there is
little need to model wide open spaces--however nice--between stations.
The next town can begin where the last one ends. One modeler in
Lubbock has modeled the South Plains & Santa Fe Railway in this
manner. For Upper Yard, he copied a plan from a magazine and freelanced
the rest. It is U-shaped and fits easily into his garage.
The SP&SF could even be a switching job within
a single city, shuffling stock cars, carbon black hoppers, and GA-131s
around various industrial areas. The industries on David Barrow's
"Lubbock" in Model Railroad Planning 1996 can be renamed
for the Seagraves branch.
However, following the prototype and modeling a
recognizable location can be rewarding.
Upper Yard is an interesting prototype. The through
trains and most of the industrial switchers are handled in Lower
Yard. Smaller, older Upper Yard is where the branch trains were
made up. Passenger trains switched here, too. A rip track was near
the steel tanks that marked the locomotive servicing track. Adjacent
were the small boiler house and the boxcars used for offices and
bunkhouses.
Upper Yard was surrounded by a variety of industries
served by rail. Among these at different times were Swift and Armour
meat retailers, produce warehouses, ice plant, power plant, cotton
gins, oil company warehouses, cotton compress plant, large wooden
grain elevator, livestock dealer, circus-type TOFC ramp, Post Office,
and many others. Also nearby was the South Plains Fair grounds,
but it can hide behind the power plant with only the sign visible.
Next to the depot was a street underpass.
Northwest (compass direction) of Upper Yard is
Lubbock Junction (now renamed "Canyon Junction"). Lines
radiate in five directions from here and it would be a monster to
model. However, by moving the big concrete Burris Grain elevator
a short distance, the junction need not be modeled at all. The main
line--double-tracked, high-ballasted, clean right of wayed, cantilever
signal-bridged. junction- signed--would disappear behind one end
of the elevator. What would emerge from the other side would be
the shabby branch line. However, something genuine could happen
behind that elevator.
The main line could vanish behind or below the
Seagraves District into a staging or a fiddle yard. Not only would
this be a place for main line trains to go, it also provides a destination
for the other branch line mixed trains. Possibly the hidden track
could turn back, passing under Upper Yard, then turn back again
to become visible at the other end of the yard. Such an arrangement
would allow a certain amount of through traffic and connections
for the branch trains.
Virtually all of the Seagraves line's spurs within
Lubbock have been abandoned and disconnected. However, the passenger
platform at Texas Tech remains, and there is an interesting campus
road underpass.
On the Tech campus next to the tracks is the Ranching
Heritage Center. For the last couple of decades, this museum has
been building a collection of genuine ranch buildings ranging from
dugouts to a multi-story mansion. The Ropes depot is here, alongside
a loading pen and a short train of Santa Fe and Burlington equipment.
I suggest modeling three stations beyond Lubbock:
Ropes, Brownfield, and Seagraves. Each is a different size and offers
a different flavor. I would choose trackside structures with care,
to avoid duplication.
Ropes has a small concrete elevator and stock pen.
The early rope pen was replaced with a wooden pen. Terra Chemicals
has a modern fertilizer facility here, served with Terra's tank
cars. This is also a good place for a section gang headquarters.
A company house survives here and has recently been converted into
a restaurant.
Brownfield is the largest town and the only county
seat besides Lubbock. Goodpasture's giant elevator dominates the
town. Across the street is a contrasting tiny wooden elevator. Cars
stored all over town await delivery to the small but traffic-generating
Ozark Mahoning facility at the north edge of town. Also located
here is Halliburton, a scrap yard, and the SOL-U-PHOS fertilizer
facility.
Immediately south of the Goodpasture elevator is
a large trestle over Lost Draw. Here I would model the SP&SF's
crossing of Blackwater Draw, on the Crosbyton branch in Lubbock.
It looks much the same except for the inclusion of a unique old
highway underpass. It is too good to leave out.
For miles south of Brownfield, the track is flanked
by high, permanent sand dunes.
Seagraves is more of an oil town. Various oil company
docks are served. An oil-loading rack would be proper here, and
although I do not know of one at this location, I wouldn't squawk
if you put in a refinery. The Columbian Carbon plant's plume of
smoke soots up the entire town. The stock pens are fairly large.
Cotton warehouses line the yard. A grounded bunk car converted from
an old box car decays near the concrete elevator.
The southwestern spoke of the Lubbock railroad
hub offers the modeler a mix of loads and unusual cars that identify
this as a specific location, and the stations and other facilities
are pure Santa Fe standard. It is an excellent prototype, with one
glaring exception: The land resembles a pancake. So much the better
for farmers and loaded grain hoppers!
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