The Santa Fe Park branch circa 1975 in Tales of the Jointed Track

  • April 5, 2017, 10:57 p.m.
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  • Public

Time has marched on.. Some of this crew have passed, the branchline is now a walking path in some places. There are homes and buildings , business parks now in there area.

The “industry” we switched was a former BF Goodrich tire plant. Then Michelin Tyre Company bought it. It is now an AT&T facility. I looked at the old Joint Line No.6 Timetable. In effect Sunday May 16th 1971. I couldn’t find any reference, but I think, since it was within the Yard Limit rule, that what covered it. Yes Santa Fe Park still exists to this day. The branch up to the Michelin plant does not.

The Sedalia turn:
I got called on this. We went up to Sedalia and ran around some plastic cars that came into Denver, only to take them back. Had some Western Aspen, set out at Santa Fe Park along with three empty box cars and a load of Carbon Black for Michelin.

The grade is steep. I am thinking 2.5% in places then levels off. Also it is weed overgrown. So that also comes into the equation. A worn out GP-20, 1 load and 3 epmtys, weeds. Hi-Ball lets see what happens. We switch out and shove clear the cars we don’t need. Line back the main-line to let incoming freights to pass, while we are in the spur.

We have our Michelin cars, and were assaulting the weed covered grade. Yeah, no one has been up here for a while. Sand, lol if it is working or not clogged, will not overcome the grade and weeds. Weeds, grass, vegetation, will act like a lubricant, when crushed. We stall about a quarter mile up. We double into Michelin, and spot as needed. We grab the other two and switch out, and spot. The carbon Black is spotted, and the three loaded pulls are set over. The other three empty boxes are at the doors. Three loaded box cars, and we’re ready to head back to the main-line.

I ask the crew to set the retainers to Low Pressure, to allow me to short cycle down. The track is still slippery, and the dynamic brake,LOL, if it works will not help. We get down, with popping and pinging , of mashing weeds, during the descent.

The retainers are taken off, after we grab the rest of the train. An air test and back to finish off the rest of the work orders. All gone, but memories.


MageB April 12, 2017

But what memories.

Eric Miller May 20, 2017

That's a really cool story! It is very hard to find any information on how the Gates/Goodrich/Michelin plant was switched during the short time it was operating as a tire plant. Do you recall when rail service ended here and about when the track was torn out - about 1986? And do you know if they got any other cars, like tank cars? Thanks!

Brakeshoe Bob Eric Miller ⋅ May 28, 2017

Eric: Thanks for reading. I just got back from a vacation with the wife. I wrote a reply, but see it didn't post. So I'll try again.

I caught this to switch out maybe three or four times. It was the Michelin Plant when I went up there. We generally went up and back with boxcars and hoppers of carbon black. This branch shut down before 1986. When it was torn up and sold to the city of Littleton I do not recall. It is a hiking trail now. At Jack ass hill road you can walk it through the overgrowth to the Santa Fe Park siding. Eastward from Jackass Hill you can walk the path where it ends at Mineral. Again houses and businesses are now, where the branch crossed before Mineral Road was built or extended. The facility is now an AT&T center. I am thinking of walking the route, and making an entry. I do not know how close I can get to the old plant. Although not fenced in, I am sure they have security patrolling the parking lots etc.

Jim August 14, 2021

More on the history of the tire plant:
Gates Rubber optioned the land for the tire plant in 1966-67 but it wasn't constructed until 1970. Production began in early 1971, but the recession in the wake of the 1973 oil embargo forced Gates to cease production, shutter the plant, and eventually remove their manufacturing equipment. They put the empty building up for sale but there were no takers. In 1975 the US Mint contemplated purchasing the building as a new home for the Denver Mint, but the building was instead sold to Michelin in 1976. Production by Michelin only lasted a few years before they, too, closed the plant during the 1980 recession and subsequently sold the building to Martin Marietta in 1981. The building was sold to US West in 1994.

Here are some news photos of the plant:
https://www.gettyimages.ca/detail/news-photo/gates-littleton-plant-opens-next-month-the-tire-news-photo/162071183

https://www.gettyimages.ca/detail/news-photo/members-of-the-news-media-are-given-tour-of-idle-gates-news-photo/837789420

https://www.gettyimages.ca/detail/news-photo/artists-diagram-on-aerial-photo-shows-where-gates-rubber-co-news-photo/162071177

https://www.littletongov.org/Home/ShowDocument?id=23093

Brakeshoe Bob Jim ⋅ December 29, 2021

Thanks for updating this It is something else now..

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