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Land O'Corn
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Land O'Corn : ウィキペディア英語版
Land O'Corn

The ''Land O'Corn'' was a streamlined passenger train operated by the Illinois Central Railroad between Chicago, Illinois, and Waterloo, Iowa. It operated from 1941 until 1967. It featured wide range of equipment over its existence, including self-propelled Motorailers and steam locomotives, before finally adopting conventional diesel locomotives and lightweight cars. The Illinois Central discontinued the ''Land O'Corn'' in 1967; Amtrak later operated the ''Black Hawk'' over part of its route.
== History ==
Initially the Illinois Central used self-propelled "Motorailers" manufactured by the American Car and Foundry Company. The Motorailer was a two-unit diesel multiple unit with a top speed of . Both units were powered; the driving car had two engines and the trailer one. Each engine was rated at .〔〔 The lead car seated 70 while the rear car seated 39 for a total capacity of 109. The rear car included a coffee shop/cafe with limited seating. Unusually, the engineer sat in the open at the front of the driving car.〔 Each car was long.〔
The Motorailer-equipped ''Land O'Corn'' made its first run between Chicago and Waterloo on October 26, 1941.〔 In February 1942 a collision with a beer truck wrecked the Motorailer and killed the engineer. Material shortages caused by World War II prevented ACF from building a replacement so the Illinois Central began operating regular steam-pulled coaches over the schedule.〔〔 The Illinois Central re-equipped the ''Land O'Corn'' with diesel-pulled lightweight equipment on February 12, 1947, although steam engines continued to substitute well into the 1950s.〔 The train's new consist was four 56-seat lightweight coaches built by Pullman-Standard (part of a larger order which requipped the ''City of New Orleans'' and ''Green Diamond'') and a heavyweight cafe/lounge.〔 An EMD E7 headed up the train.〔
The ''Land O'Corn'' made the Waterloo–Chicago run in 5.5 hours (lengthening to 6-6.5 hours by the mid-1960s), departing Waterloo in the morning and returning in the evening. A standard consist in the diesel era was three coaches and a cafe.〔 The ''Land O'Corn'' continued operating into the 1960s as the counterpart to the overnight ''Hawkeye'', which continued west to Sioux City, Iowa.〔 The Illinois Central discontinued the ''Land O'Corn'' on August 5, 1967.〔
Amtrak revived service over part of the ''Land O'Corns route 1974–1981 when it operated a train between Chicago and Dubuque, Iowa. Amtrak proposed naming this train the ''Land O'Corn'', but Illinois (which funded the service) preferred a more Illinois-centric name, so Amtrak named it the ''Black Hawk''.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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