- Lynndyl Subdivision
The Lynndyl Subdivision is a
rail line owned and operated by theUnion Pacific Railroad in theU.S. state ofUtah , running from Salt Lake City southwest to Milford, where theCaliente Subdivision continues towards Los Angeles. [http://www.brs72.org/BRSUPSPAgree.html#R44 Agreement Between Union Pacific Railroad Company and Brotherhood of Railroad Signalmen] , effective February 1, 2000 (includes a list of subdivisions from the first post-merger timetable in 1998)] It was formerly part of theLos Angeles and Salt Lake Railroad .History
Mormons incorporated the
Utah Southern Railroad in 1871 to build astandard gauge line from Salt Lake City south to Payson. It was completed to that city and beyond to York (south of Santaquin) in 1875, and bought by theUnion Pacific Railroad later that year. The UP organized the Utah Southern Railroad Extension in 1879, and completed the line to Frisco in 1880. Both companies merged with theUtah Central Rail Road (Salt Lake City-Ogden) to form the UP-controlled Utah Central Railway in 1881, and in 1889 it was merged with theUtah and Northern Railway and other companies to form theOregon Short Line and Utah Northern Railway , which was reorganized as theOregon Short Line Railroad in 1897.Don Strack, [http://utahrails.net/up/up-in-ut-1.php UtahRails.net: Union Pacific in Utah, 1868-1899] , accessed August 2008]The Salt Lake, Sevier Valley and Pioche Railroad was incorporated in 1872 to build west from Salt Lake City, and the Utah Western Railway, organized in 1874, acquired its unfinished roadbed and completed the
narrow gauge line to a point near Stockton in 1877. The company was reorganized in 1881 as the Utah and Nevada Railway, and the UP gained control later that year, merging it into theOregon Short Line and Utah Northern Railway in 1889. The Oregon Short Line later widened the gauge and extended the line south to the old Utah Southern at Lynndyl, west of Leamington. This new Leamington Cut-off, completed in 1903, had better grades and alignment than the old route through Payson, which became a secondary route (and is now, where still in use, theSharp Subdivision ). TheSan Pedro, Los Angeles and Salt Lake Railroad , half-owned by the OSL, bought the OSL's lines south and west of Salt Lake City later that year, and completed the line to Los Angeles in 1905. The short piece of the old line from Milford, where the new Los Angeles line left, west to Frisco became theFrisco Branch , and was abandoned in 1943. After the UP bought theWestern Pacific Railroad in 1983, the two parallel lines between Salt Lake City and Garfield, where the ex-WPShafter Subdivision now begins, were converted to adirectional running setup.Don Strack, [http://utahrails.net/up/up-in-ut-2.php UtahRails.net: Union Pacific in Utah, 1900-1996] , accessed August 2008]References
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