Distinctly Montana Magazine

2025 // Fall

Distinctly Montana Magazine

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47 w w w . d i s t i n c t l y m o n t a n a . c o m cars behind it) forward. The steam locomotive played a key role in powering the industrial revolution in the late 19th century but fell out of favor by the mid-20th century, replaced by internal combustion diesel engines that were (relatively) cleaner to op- erate and easier to maintain. While most of Montana's railroads stopped using steam locomotives in the 1950s, a few restored engines have appeared on the state's rail lines since then. In September 1971, perhaps the world's most famous steam loco- motive, the London & North Eastern Railway 4472 "The Flying Scotsman," traveled across the Hi Line as part of a nationwide tour. In the 2000s, two big steam locomotives owned by the City of Portland, Oregon, visited on special excursions—one built for the Spokane, Portland & Seattle Railway in 1938 and another for the Southern Pacific Railroad in 1941. Most recently, a 2-8- 2 type engine built in 1914 was brought to Butte in November 2024 as part of a shoot for the "Yellowstone" spin-off "1923." Aside from those visits, and a narrow gauge locomotive that operated near Virginia City until the 2010s, seeing a living and COURTESY OF LARRY INGOLD

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