I took these pictures while riding Amtrak’s westbound Empire
Builder through Montana on May 24, 2003. The pictures begin with the train’s
arrival in Havre, Montana.

As the train passed the Havre engine terminal, a variety of
motive power could be seen. Norfolk Southern #9086 is a 4,000-horsepower Dash
9-40CW that was built by General Electric in March 1997. Burlington Northern
Santa Fe #6730 is a 3,000-horsepower SD40-2 that was built by the
Electro-Motive Division of General Motors in September 1979 as Atchison, Topeka
& Santa Fe #5071. Following the merger of the Burlington Northern and the
Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe on September 22, 1995, this locomotive became
Burlington Northern Santa Fe #6730 on January 20, 1998. Burlington Northern
Santa Fe #7909 is a 3,000-horsepower SD40-2 that was built by the
Electro-Motive Division of General Motors in June 1979 as Colorado &
Southern #7909. Colorado & Southern was a subsidiary of Burlington
Northern, and its locomotives were painted in Burlington Northern colors. The
Colorado & Southern was formally merged into the Burlington Northern on
December 31, 1981, and this locomotive became Burlington Northern #7909.
Following the merger of the Burlington Northern and the Atchison, Topeka &
Santa Fe on September 22, 1995, this locomotive became Burlington Northern
Santa Fe #7909.

Near the Havre shops, BNSF #507 is a 4,000-horsepower Dash
8-40BW that was built by General Electric in October 1990 as Atchison, Topeka
& Santa Fe #507. Following the merger of the Burlington Northern and the
Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe on September 22, 1995, this locomotive became
Burlington Northern Santa Fe #507 on May 8, 2001 and was repainted into Burlington Northern Santa Fe's "Heritage II" paint scheme on June 6, 2001.
Havre is only 40 miles from the Canadian border, and the
Border Patrol meets Amtrak's Empire
Builder in Havre, to catch illegal aliens attempting to board the
train. As a result, there are often Border Patrol vehicles parked at the
station.
Leading the westbound Empire Builder, Amtrak #152 is a
4,250-horsepower P42DC that was built by General Electric in March 2001. It is
wearing the first version of Amtrak’s “Phase V” paint scheme.
Trailing is Amtrak #96 is a 4,250-horsepower P42DC that was
built by General Electric in June 1997. It has been repainted with the new
version of Amtrak’s “Phase V” paint scheme.
The small Hands Across the Border Park at the Havre depot
features a statue of an American Border
Patrol officer shaking hands with a Royal Canadian Mounted Police officer.
On display next to the depot in Havre is former Great
Northern Railroad 4-8-4 steam locomotive #2584, an S-2 Class 4-8-4 that was
built by the Baldwin Locomotive Works in 1930 and was put on static display
next to the Have depot on May 15, 1964.
A sign next to the locomotive
tells its history:
This Northern type locomotive, survivor of the last steam
engines acquired by the Great Northern Railway for main-line passenger service,
was placed on permanent exhibition here on May 15, 1964.
A powerful and speedy locomotive, this engine now looks
every bit the aristocrat that it was during the yrs. of its pre-eminent
association with the Empire Builder and the Oriental Limited. The Empire
Builder was inaugurated in June, 1929, and was pulled by a Mountain type locomotive,
but popularity of the train led to addition of cars to the consist, and this
necessitated more powerful engines.
In 1930 Great Northern acquired 14 Class S-2 steam
locomotives from Baldwin Locomotive Works for service on the Empire Builder and
the Fast Mail trains. This engine – No 2584 - is the last of the 14 engines.
Samuel Vauclain, President of Baldwin described the Class S-2 engines as
"the finest, most powerful steam passenger locomotives ever built up to
this time." These engines were operated in freight service after the
Empire Builder was streamlines and diesel powered in 1947, and were retired in
1955.
Locomotive and tender are 103 feet 3 inches long, weight
764,680 pounds, and height from rail to top of stack is 16 feet. No 2584 was an
oil burner and developed 58,305 pounds of tractive effort. Each of the 8 drive
wheels is 80 inches high.
The track on which No 2584 stands is laid to Great Northern
main line specifications. The creosoted ties are supported on a sub-ballast
consisting of 6 inches of crushed rock chips and a ballast consisting of 6
inches of crushed pink quartzite rock. Both of which are quarried by the Great
Northern in Montana. Welded rails fully tie plated and anchored, weight 115
pounds to the yard.

The depot in Havre, at 235 Main Street, is not only an Amtrak station; it also
a local base of operation for Burlington Northern-Santa Fe freight operations and
maintenance crews. As a result, it is a large depot for a city of Havre's
size. The Burlington Northern Santa Fe was formed in 1995 when the
Burlington Northern Railroad (successor to the Great Northern) and the
Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railroad merged together. The station in
Havre still showed signs of its Burlington Northern heritage with an apparent
identity crisis. In front of the depot on the street side is a statue of James
J. Hill. Hill formed the Great Northern Railroad in 1889 from the bankrupt St.
Paul and Pacific Railroad, and extended it to Seattle by 1893. The commercial
possibilities realized in the northern United States due to Hill's Great
Northern Railway earned him the nickname of "The Empire Builder."

A consist of freight locomotives approached the Havre depot,
led by Burlington Northern Santa Fe #4716, a 4,400-horsepower Dash 9-44CW that
was built by General Electric in November 1997.
The second unit is Norfolk Southern #7062, a
3,500-horsepower GP50 that was built by the Electro-Motive Division of General
Motors in November 1980 as Southern
Railway #7062. Following the merger of the Southern Railway and the Norfolk
& Western in 1982, this locomotive became Norfolk Southern #7062.
A sign near the Havre railroad depot tells the story of
Havre's early days.
WELCOME
TO HAVRE
(pronounced
Have'er)
The naming of Havre,
according to William T. Cowan's memoirs.
The coming of the railroad in 1887 and '88 brought many workers
and their families to Bull Hook Bottoms, later called Havre, according to
William T. Cowan's memoirs.
The name Havre came from the following story:
"Two French-Canadian squatters on Bull Hook Bottoms were French Gus
Descelles, a little sawed off man, and Joe De Mars, a very large, strong
man. They got in a fight over the affection of a charming girl and Joe De
Mars got the best of the struggle. Little French Gus reportedly said 'you
can have her' and this is how Havre supposedly got it's name." The Great
Northern Railway was the main supply line for Fort Assinniboine, located 5
miles southwest of Havre. The railroad is still one of the main economic
forces in the community.

On the Havre depot is this handmade Telecommunications sign
featuring a depiction of a General Electric Dash 9-44CW locomotive and the
slogan “We Move Information.”
As Amtrak’s Empire Builder continues west through Montana,
it enters Glacier National Park and begins crossing the Rocky Mountains.
The westbound Empire Builder eventually
crosses the Middle Fork of the Flathead River near Nimrod, Montana on Java
Trestle, at the point where Java Creek flows into Middle Fork of the Flathead
River. This view from Java Trestle shows the clear blue water of the Middle
Fork of the Flathead River.
The railroad passes through Snowshed #12, the last of a
series of structures that protect the railroad from winter slides and
avalanches. Just after leaving Snowshed #12 is this view of the Middle Fork of
the Flathead River. The bridge carrying U.S. Highway 2 Bridge over the river is
visible in the background.
As the train made its station stop in Essex, Montana, it
passed a number of rustic residences.
There is a small Burlington Northern Santa Fe rail yard at
Essex where helper locomotives and maintenance equipment can be found.
Adjacent to the yard is the Izaak Walton Inn. Named after
English writer Izaak Walton, for whom the Walton Ranger Station in Glacier
National Park is also named, the inn was built on railroad property in 1939 in
three months at a cost of $40,000 by the Addison Miller Company, which also
operated it under contract for the Great Northern Railway as lodging for
railway workers. Measuring 36 feet by 114 feet, the Tudor Revival inn featured
29 guest rooms, 10 bathrooms, a lobby, dining room, kitchen with a two-ton
stove, drying room, store room and general store.

Located at the south end of
Glacier National Park 27 miles from West Glacier and 30 miles from East
Glacier, it was anticipated that Essex would become a southern gateway to
Glacier National Park, however World War II prevented that development. With
the inn never living up to its tourism potential, the Addison Miller Company
sold it to Harry Stowell in 1965 for $5,000. George A. Walker purchased it in
1968. Sid and Millie Goodrich bought it in 1973. Larry and Linda Vielleux
acquired it in 1982. The inn was added to the National Register of Historic
Places on October 18, 1985, and was renovated in 1995 with bathrooms added to
every guestroom.
West of Essex, Montana, the route of Amtrak's Empire
Builder parallels U.S. Highway 2, which featured red-tinted pavement
near Nyack, Montana.
In addition to U.S. Highway 2, Amtrak's Empire
Builder also parallels the Middle Fork of the Flathead River as it
skirts the south edge of Glacier National Park, as seen here near Nyack,
Montana.
At Nyack, Montana, there is a wye for turning helper
locomotive consists. Here we see Burlington Northern Santa Fe #7868, a
3,000-horsepower SD40-2 that was built by the Electro-Motive Division of
General Motors in October 1978 as Colorado & Southern #7868. Colorado &
Southern was a subsidiary of Burlington Northern, and its locomotives were
painted in Burlington Northern colors. The Colorado & Southern was formally
merged into the Burlington Northern on December 31, 1981, and this locomotive
became Burlington Northern #7868. Following the merger of the Burlington
Northern and the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe on September 22, 1995, this
locomotive became Burlington Northern Santa Fe #7868.
Kayakers can sometimes be seen on the Middle Fork of the Flathead River.
As the Empire Builder makes its station stop at West
Glacier, Montana, the Travel Alberta Visitors Information Centre on
Going-to-the-Sun Road can be seen from the train. This centre features visitor
information and interpretive displays promoting the Canadian province of
Alberta, along with restrooms, telephones, and picnic areas.
The trailing unit of a freight train in the BNSF yard in
Whitefish, Montana, Norfolk Southern #6707 is a 3,800-horsepower SD60 that was
built by the Electro-Motive Division of General Motors in August 1989 as
Conrail #6852. Following the breakup of Conrail between Norfolk Southern and
CSX Transportation on June 1, 1999, this locomotive was acquired by Norfolk
Southern, becoming #6707, though it still wore its Conrail colors at this
point.
Part of a freight train in the BNSF yard in Whitefish,
Montana, Milwaukee Road #4512 is a boxcar that was built in 1972 and still
wears its original paint over 30 years later, despite the bankrupt Milwaukee
Road having been taken over by the Soo Line in February 1985.
Making its station stop in Whitefish, Montana, Amtrak’s westbound
Empire Builder stopped alongside Great Northern NW3 #181 in Whitefish, Montana.
Built by the Electro-Motive Division of General Motors in March 1942 as Great
Northern #5406, this 1,000-horsepower diesel locomotive was the last of the
only seven NW3s built, all for the Great Northern. It was renumbered to #181 in
1943.
On August 30, 1965, the Great Northern sold #181 to Anaconda Aluminum in
Columbia Falls, Montana, where it became their #900. When no longer needed,
Anaconda Aluminum donated the locomotive to the Stumptown Historical Society in
Whitefish, Montana. It was restored to Great Northern colors and placed on
permanent static display next to the Whitefish depot on November 19, 1990.

It was getting dark when Amtrak’s westbound Empire Builder
departed Whitefish, Montana, but I was able to get one last photograph of a
pair of Burlington Northern Santa Fe 4-axle EMD locomotives, only one of which
can be identified. Burlington Northern Santa Fe #2257 is a 2,000-horsepower
GP38-2 that was built by the Electro-Motive Division of General Motors in June
1973 as St. Louis-San Francisco (also known as the Frisco) #402. The Frisco was
merged into the Burlington Northern on November 21, 1980, and this locomotive
became Burlington Northern #2257. Following the merger of the Burlington
Northern and the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe on September 22, 1995, this
locomotive became Burlington Northern Santa Fe #2257 on April 25, 1998.