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Calumet (train)

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Status
  
Discontinued

Average journey time
  
1 hour 20 minutes

Last service
  
3 May 1991

End
  
Valparaiso

Former operator
  
Amtrak

Stops
  
7

Distance travelled
  
44 miles (71 km)

Service frequency
  
Daily (weekdays only)

Start
  
Chicago Union Station

First service
  
29 October 1979

Service type
  
Commuter rail

Calumet (train)

Predecessor
  
Unnamed Conrail service; previously Penn Central Railroad, Pennsylvania Railroad

Train number(s)
  
321, 324 (Indiana Connection) 322, 323 (Calumet)

The Calumet, also commonly called the Valpo Local, was a 43.6-mile (70.2 km) passenger train route operated by Amtrak between Chicago and Valparaiso, Indiana. Despite Amtrak's mandate to provide only intercity service, the Calumet was a commuter train. Transferred from Conrail in 1979, the full route was shared with Amtrak's Broadway Limited until 1990; the Calumet was discontinued the next year.

Contents

History

The service first ran August 30, 1869, called the Chicago–Valparaiso Accommodation, though usually colloquially referred to as the "Valpo Local" or "The Dummy", by the Pennsylvania Railroad on its Pittsburgh, Fort Wayne and Chicago Railway, its main line from Pittsburgh west to Chicago. From April 1, 1871, until January 1, 1920, the Pennsylvania Company operated the line. After that it returned to direct operation by the Pennsylvania Railroad until February 1, 1968, when the PRR was merged into Penn Central Transportation. By that point, the route operated as a rush-hour commuter service, with two trains traveling from Valparaiso to Chicago at 5:55 AM and 6:35 AM and two trains returning from Chicago to Valparaiso at 5:00 PM and 5:40 PM

With the May 1, 1971, startup of Amtrak, all Penn Central intercity trains were taken over by Amtrak, but Penn Central continued to run commuter trains in several metropolitan areas, including the Valpo Local.

The bankrupt Penn Central merged into Conrail on April 1, 1976, which continued operations until 1979, at which point Amtrak took over. The route was also served by the daily Broadway Limited to New York City, and on October 1, 1981, the daily Capitol Limited to Washington, DC, began using it. At first the Valpo Local was served by two daily trains, the Calumet and the Indiana Connection; the Indiana Connection was discontinued first.

Due to Conrail's desire to abandon part of the former PRR main line, the Broadway Limited and Capitol Limited were rerouted respectively onto the former Baltimore and Ohio Railroad and New York Central Railroad lines on November 11, 1990, leaving about half of the Calumet route with no other service. Amtrak announced that it would discontinue the Calumet on December 31. Representative Peter J. Visclosky introduced H.R. 5660 to require Amtrak to continue operations until July 1, 1991 to allow time for the State of Indiana to consider subsidizing the route. The date was changed to May 6 and the mandate was included in S. 3012, an amendment to the Independent Safety Board Act of 1974, signed into law November 28, 1990, by U.S. President George H. W. Bush as Public Law No. 101-641. Indiana decided not to pay the required $1.5 million a year, and the weekday-only Calumet last ran Friday, May 3, 1991.

Commuter service from Chicago into northern Indiana is still provided by the South Shore Line, operated by the Northern Indiana Commuter Transportation District over its own alignment, whose closest stop, Dune Park station, is 15 miles from Valparaiso, closer to Lake Michigan. Valparaiso residents can reach it using the V-Line's Orange Line, but that bus route is only operated Friday afternoon through Sunday, starting from the Valparaiso University Student Union. They can also take ChicaGo Dash express bus to Chicago during weekday rush hours, for which the Valparaiso terminal is a parking lot adjacent to Franklin House and the location of the now-demolished terminal station of the "Valpo Local".

On August 1, 2004, the Chicago, Fort Wayne and Eastern Railroad started freight operations over the old route of the Calumet and beyond.

Station stops

The Calumet and Indiana Connection were assigned numbers between 321 and 324, with odd numbers running westbound and even numbers eastbound. Trains made the following station stops (some of which closed prior to Amtrak's takeover of the route):

Illinois
  • Chicago
  • Englewood
  • State Line
  • Indiana
  • Whiting
  • Standard
  • Mahoning
  • Indiana Harbor
  • Buffington
  • Gary
  • Broadway (Gary)
  • Hobart
  • Wheeler
  • Valparaiso
  • References

    Calumet (train) Wikipedia