Winona, Arizona

Populated place in Coconino County, Arizona, US From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Winona, Arizonamap

Winona is a small populated place in Coconino County in the northern part of the U.S. state of Arizona.[1] At one time it was also called Walnut, and Winona's railroad station was renamed Darling in honor of an engineer.

Quick Facts Country, State ...
Winona, Arizona
Thumb
A freight train passing through Darling
Thumb
Location in Coconino County and the state of Arizona
Coordinates: 35°12′18″N 111°24′30″W
CountryUnited States
StateArizona
CountiesCoconino
Elevation6,263 ft (1,909 m)
Time zoneUTC-7 (MST)
Area code928
FIPS code04-83860
GNIS feature ID36324[1]
Close

History

Winona was once an incorporated village called Walnut Creek, until the 1950s when it became part of Flagstaff. Walnut Creek runs through Winona. It has been a dry creek bed since a dam was built above Walnut Canyon in the 1950s to provide Flagstaff with a reservoir. Before this, the creek ran year round.[citation needed]

Railroad

Winona train station was renamed on 6 December 1959 as "Darling" after William B. Darling, a local railroad engineer.[2][3][4] Darling Cinder Pit to the north east of Winona is also named after him.[5]

The history of Darling is tied directly to the railroad that crosses through it. The Southwest Chief has been a regular visitor[6][7] and for many years it was served by the Santa Fe Railway.[8][9][10]

In October 2019 a Burlington Northern freight train derailed there, disrupting both freight traffic, intermodal freight[11] and passenger train traffic on Amtrak.[12][13]

Thumb
Winona Bridge, which is no longer accessible by car

Winona is located along Interstate 40 (old U.S. Route 66), and the otherwise-obscure town was made famous due to its inclusion in the lyrics to the song "(Get Your Kicks on) Route 66". It lies about thirteen miles (21 km) east of Flagstaff, meaning that it is out of sequence with the rest of the cities named in the song because of its near-miss: "Don't forget Winona."

The singer Wynonna Judd adopted her name upon hearing "Winona" in "Route 66."[14]

References

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.