Worthington Subdivision

The Worthington Subdivision or Worthington Sub is a railway line operated by Union Pacific Railroad. It runs generally southwest-northeast and begins at a siding in St. James Township, Minnesota, where the Mankato Subdivision ends, and it continues to Sioux City, Iowa. The line has yard facilities in Worthington and Sioux City, as well as a small yard north of Worthington in Hersey and Lorain townships called Elk Creek. The line passes through many small towns and villages with grain elevators along its route, and it is the origin of numerous grain unit trains.[1]

Union Pacific Railroad
Worthington Subdivision
Mankato Subdivision
123.6
West St. James
128.7
Butterfield
to Mason City, IA via Fairmont Sub.
129.1
South Butterfield
158.6
Heron Lake
171.2
Elk Creek
Yarding Facility
176.7
Worthington
Yarding Facility
181.1
Agate
Minnesota
Iowa
195.3
Sibley
211.1
Sheldon
230.8
Carnes
243.8
LeMars
to Fort Dodge via CN
491.7
Merrill
497.1
Wren
Interlocking with BNSF
498.3
Hinton
504.9
Leeds
506.3
Sioux City
Yarding Facility
Sioux City Subdivision

The line began as the St. Paul and Sioux City railroad and was constructed between 1871 and 1872.[2] It then became a division of the Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis and Omaha Railway (Omaha Road), which in turn became part of the Chicago and North Western Railway in 1882.[3] The Chicago and North Western Railway was acquired by Union Pacific in 1995.[4]

Authority to occupy the main track is dispatched via CTC from West St. James to South Butterfield. From there, track warrant control (TWC) is used, and it is dark territory until Le Mars, Iowa, where automatic block signaling is used in conjunction with TWC. Union Pacific has trackage rights over CN's track from Le Mars to Sioux City, although UP dispatchers grant the authority to occupy the main track.

Accidents

On November 18, 1999, an empty northbound Union Pacific grain unit train was stopped on the main track at Carnes to meet a southbound UP manifest train which was to take the siding. For reasons unknown, the southbound train did not enter the siding and struck the stopped northbound train head-on, derailing 30 cars, five locomotives, and claiming the life of 23-year-old conductor Paul Schmidt of Boone, Iowa on the southbound train. Dale Evans, the driver of a crew transport van parked nearby was also killed.[5] This accident was a prompt for legislation for the implementation of Positive Train Control, which could have prevented the accident.[6]

References

  1. Union Pacific Railroad (August 2017). "UPRR Grain Elevator Directory". Union Pacific Railroad. Retrieved August 6, 2017.
  2. Minnesota Historical Society. "History of the St. Paul & Sioux City Railroad 1864-1881". Minnesota Historical Society. Retrieved August 6, 2017.
  3. Chicago & North Western Historical Society. "Chicago St. Paul Minneapolis & Omaha - A Capsule History". Retrieved August 6, 2017.
  4. Feder, Barnaby J. (March 11, 1995). "COMPANY NEWS; Union Pacific to Buy Chicago and North Western". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved August 6, 2017.
  5. Strack, Don (March 5, 2013). "UP Locomotives Wrecked, and Retired Due To Wreck Damage". Utahrails.net. Retrieved August 6, 2017.
  6. "BLE member injured in head-on collision". Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen. December 1999. Retrieved August 6, 2017.
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