Certain railroad names and locations are iconic. Horseshoe Curve on the Pennsy, Tehachapi Loop on the Southern Pacific, Breakneck Mountain on the New York Central, Royal Gorge on the Rio Grande, or the Feather River Canyon on the Western Pacific conjure up images of sleek streamliners snaking through canyons and laboring freights blasting out of tunnels against a dramatic backdrop of towering rocks. Cajon Pass northeast of Los Angeles is one of these iconic areas and the most famous scene in Cajon Pass is Sullivan's Curve. After serving as an aerial photographer during the first World War, Herb Sullivan returned home to Palcentia, California, southeast of Los Angeles to manage his family's orange groves. His interest in photography continued and during his explorations in nearby Cajon Pass he was attracted by the wild, fanciful terrain of radically up-tilted sandstone rock formations. As the Santa Fe main line climbs out of the Los Angeles basin through Cajon Pass it makes a 180-degree curve at the base of two massive sandstone rock formations. Sullivan saw that the dramatic scene and the curve, allowing views of both sides of a passing train, made for the perfect "photo op."
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