Great Northern 1952 "Gopher" and "Badger"

The 1952 streamlined 'Gopher' and 'Badger' trains are a case study of a common post-war streamlined passenger train solution: Build it yourself. Any important passenger train was expected to have the latest improvements, but the car builders had huge order backlogs which could delay new equipment three or four years. The GN, like many other railroads, picked some solid but obsolete equipment and rebuilt it into a streamlined beauty.

The 'Badger' consisted of two complete trains. At 8:00 am each morning, one departed from the St. Paul Union Depot and the other from the Duluth Union Station. Making all stops en route, they reached the opposite terminals by noon. The trains were then turned and serviced, and became the 'Gopher'. They departed at 4:30 pm, stopped only at Minneapolis, Cambridge, Sandstone, and Superior, and arrived at 8:00 pm. Train numbers were:

Tickets cost $6.75 for Duluth passengers, and $6.55 for Superior passengers. The Great Northern, Northern Pacific, and Soo Line participated in a pool, so any railroad's tickets were honored on any railroad's trains between the Twin Cities and the Twin Ports. The Great Northern route still exists today as the BNSF line to Superior. The Northern Pacific ran a daily overnight train, and a daily except Sunday morning train on its direct 'Skally' line, which parallels highway 61. Only fragments of that route survive. The Soo Line ran one daily afternoon train. That route today hosts the MTM's Osceola & St Croix Valley trains, but exists only as far north as Dresser, WI.

The ten heavyweight cars were 'Streamlined' as follows:

Finished weight was between 145,100 lbs (coaches) and 163,500 lbs (observations.) This is roughly 10,000 lbs to 20,000 lbs heavier than a typical 'lightweight' streamlined car.

The morning 'Badger' had five cars. The evening 'Gopher' had six:

Total accomodations on the 1952 'Gopher' and 'Badger' were:

Motive power was a pair of 250-series passenger F units, or a single 500-series E7.

Named cars were: