Thursday, July 5, 2018

Portland & Western #1202 in the 1998 Rainier Days in the Park Parade

Portland & Western SW1200R #1202 "Rainier" in the Days in the Park Parade in Rainier, Oregon, on July 11, 1998

On July 12, 1997, the Portland & Western Railroad, a subsidiary of Genesee & Wyoming Inc., purchased Burlington Northern Santa Fe's 91.7-mile rail line from Willbridge Junction in Portland, Oregon, to Tongue Point, near Astoria, Oregon (the line from Tongue Point to Astoria had already been sold to the City of Astoria.) On July 11, 1998, a locomotive from the Portland & Western Railroad was part of the Rainier Days in the Park Parade in Rainier, Oregon, and spent the rest of the weekend parked near Rainier Riverfront Park.

Portland & Western SW1200R #1202 "Rainier" in the Days in the Park Parade in Rainier, Oregon, on July 11, 1998

The locomotive was Portland & Western #1202. It was originally built by the Electro-Motive Division of General Motors in October 1953 as a 1,200-horsepower SW9 for the Pittsburg & Shawmut Railroad. It was originally numbered #233, but was renumbered to #1774 and named "Ben Franklin" for America's bicentennial in 1976. Genesee & Wyoming Inc. purchased the Pittsburg & Shawmut on April 29, 1996, and this is one of four P&S locomotives subsequently transferred to the G&W's Oregon operations, and classified as a SW1200R. This locomotive was named "St. Helens" after St. Helens, Oregon, the city where most of the Astoria line's remaining business came from, but was temporarily renamed "Rainier" for the weekend.

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