The Varnish Vanishes
In "The Milwaukee Road Olympian - a Ride to Remember," author Stan Johnson recalled the transition from steam to electric power of the Milwaukee's varnish in the Harlowton Yards: the train glided silently away from the station and yards, under the quiet pull of the electric locomotive. Feeding the electric lines that ran above the train were the brick substations located at intervals along the line west of Harlowton. Here at Two Dot, MT was Substation One, 1347.5 miles from Chicago. Two Dot (or Twodot as it is known by some sources) was named for a local cattle ranch and first established as a station by Milwaukee Road predecessor, the Montana Railroad. Following the acquisition by the larger transcon, the location was selected for the first of the railroad's substations that would accompany the line from here to Avery, ID and the termination point of the Rocky Mountain Division electrification. The Two Dot substation suffered a fire prior to the abandonm