Cascade Tunnel, the longest railroad tunnel in the United States, located in central Washington about 60 miles (100 km) east of Seattle. It carries a line of the BNSF (Burlington Northern and Sante Fe) railroad through the rugged Cascade Range between Berne (on the east) and Scenic and is part of the transcontinental main line connecting Seattle and Chicago. It is 7.8 miles (12.5 km) long. Constructed from 1925 to 1929, it replaced a shorter tunnel, the old Cascade Tunnel, a few miles to the north and at a higher elevation.
The construction of the new Cascade Tunnel was necessitated by the Wellington Disaster of 1910, the deadliest avalanche disaster in U.S. history. In late February 1910 two Great Northern trains bound for Seattle made it through the old Cascade Tunnel but were forced to stop near the railroad community of Wellington because of severe winter weather. After days of waiting, with supplies running low and telegraph lines having failed, some passengers chose to hike out and reached safety. On March 1 those who stayed in the trains were hit by a massive avalanche triggered by a thunderstorm, which pushed the trains off the tracks and into the river gorge below. Rescuers were able to immediately dig 23 survivors out of the snow and rubble, but 96 passengers and crew members died in the disaster. It was hoped that a longer tunnel at a lower elevation would reduce the dangers of winter travel.
In addition to its vulnerability to the harsh mountain weather, the old Cascade Tunnel had inadequate ventilation: thick smoke from the steam engine would fill the tunnel with fumes, making passengers and crew ill. Electric locomotives were proposed as a solution, and construction of a hydroelectric plant to power them began in 1907. Completed in 1909, the Tumwater Dam was the largest hydroelectric project west of Niagara Falls at the time and supplied the trolley lines within the tunnel for both freight and passenger trains. The system was used in the new Cascade Tunnel until diesel-powered locomotives and better ventilation rendered it obsolete in 1956, at which point the power plant was taken offline.