San Luis Central Railroad Explained

Railroad Name:San Luis Central Railroad
Marks:SLC
Locale:Colorado
Start Year:1913
End Year:2024
Length:13miles
Hq City:Monte Vista, Colorado

The San Luis Central Railroad was a railroad company based in the U.S. state of Colorado.[1] It was founded in 1913 to haul sugar beets from grower to processor. The railroad operated freight traffic through a connection with the Colorado Pacific Rio Grande Railroad hauling mainly grain, potatoes and fertilizer.[2] SLC was also a railcar owner, mostly refrigerator cars and boxcars. On August 23rd, 2024, a filing with the Surface Transportation Board revealed that the Soloviev Group was purchasing the San Luis Central, which would then be renamed to Colorado Pacific San Luis Railroad.[3]

The railroad is 13miles long, located between Sugar Junction (east of Monte Vista, Colorado) and Center, Colorado. At the time of sale in 2024, the railroad owned two locomotives: Electro Motive Division SW8 number 70 and General Electric 70 ton locomotive number 71. Prior to its purchase by Colorado Pacific San Luis, the company was owned by Rail World, Inc., which is controlled by Ed Burkhardt.[4]

Headquarters

The company's headquarters was located at 2899 Sherman Avenue, Monte Vista, Colorado 81144, at coordinates 37.5746°N -106.113°W

Notes and References

  1. News: Runaway Quebec Train's Owner Battled Safety Issues. Alistair MacDonald, Tom Fowler and Jesse Newman. July 9, 2013. Wall Street Journal. July 14, 2013.
  2. Web site: Short Line Railroad Profiles: San Luis Central Railroad Company SLC #696. Union Pacific Railroad. July 14, 2013.
  3. Web site: Filings . 2024-08-30 . Surface Transportation Board . en . FD 36795.
  4. Web site: Rail World Inc.. April 21, 2020.