Opened in 1901, the Grand Canyon Railway carried
passengers and supplies over the sixty-five mile journey from the
Arizona town of Williams to Grand Canyon Village at the canyon's
South Rim. A convenient means of visiting one of the USA's greatest
natural phenomena, the Grand Canyon Railway remained
popular with tourists until the irresistible rise of America's car
industry. As the popularity of road travel boomed, the railway's
passengers declined and the line became freight-only in 1968 before
closing altogether in 1974.
Realising that such an iconic line could not be lost,
entrepreneurs Max and Thelma Biegert bought the Grand
Canyon Railway in 1989, just as its rusting assets were
being salvaged for scrap. Its track and rolling stock lovingly
restored to its original glory, the railway re-opened in 1990.
Today, although the magnificent steam locomotives that once hauled
carriages to and from the Grand Canyon only appear very rarely, the
two-hours and fifteen-minute trip to and from Williams remains an
unforgettable and nostalgic journey through one of the USA's most
spectacular landscapes.