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Riding the Empire Builder train through America’s Midwest

Historical anecdotes and communal meals give Amtrak passengers a chance to make friends and influence people

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The Fort Union Trading Post, in North Dakota. Picture: Alamy

Butter sculpting and lumberjack/jill demonstrations under a bright blue Midwestern sky; “gizmos” (beef and pork in a hoagie bun), bacon-on-a-stick and spam burgers; displays by tractor manu­facturers and the National Guard: one could spend days at the Minnesota State Fair – but I have a train to catch.

Amtrak’s Empire Builder service, from Chicago to the Pacific northwest, passes through Minnesota but once a day, calling at Saint Paul (which, with Minneapolis, is one of the United States’ Twin Cities) at 10.20pm.

The restored Union Depot station in Saint Paul. Picture: Mark Footer
The restored Union Depot station in Saint Paul. Picture: Mark Footer
I arrive early to find the cavernous halls of Saint Paul’s beautifully restored Union Depot station well-lit but almost deserted. A hand­ful of fellow travellers are milling around, warily eyeing the local youths taking advan­tage of the comfy seating, the free Wi-fi and, that staple of railway waiting halls the world over, the complementary ping pong table.

As departure time approaches, a line forms at the Amtrak door and I get a look at the 40 or so other passengers board­ing the train. Behind me stands a pasty young man in a black T-shirt and a jester’s hat who is obviously excited. Kenobi’s going to PAX West, he says, a gaming-culture festival in Seattle, and he’s meeting a similarly inclined lady from Chicago for the first time – at least in the flesh – on the train. Fortunately for his nerves, the regular traveller who informs us this service tends to run on time (a rarity across the Amtrak net­work, appar­ently) is correct, and the silver carriages of the Empire Builder slip into the station on schedule.

The carriages are double-deckers, bathrooms and luggage racks downstairs, seating up­stairs. I have a ticket for coach rather than a sleeper cabin, and the set-up is much like that in an airliner, albeit far less squashed.

A locomotive converted into a guest room at the Izaak Walton Inn, in Essex, Montana. Picture: Mark Footer
A locomotive converted into a guest room at the Izaak Walton Inn, in Essex, Montana. Picture: Mark Footer
Mark Footer joined the Post in 1999, having been the magazine and book buyer for Tower Records in Hong Kong. He started on the business desk before moving, in 2006, to Post Magazine, of which he was editor until 2019. He took on a secondary role as travel editor in 2009.
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