An engineer’s life: Mad Dog’s dinner train fiasco
The Washington Central Railroad’s Spirit of Washington dinner train started running in 1989. Originally, it operated for a few years…
Read moreThe Washington Central Railroad’s Spirit of Washington dinner train started running in 1989. Originally, it operated for a few years…
Read moreALTOONA, Pa. — Work to construct a new $425,000 firebox for Pennsylvania Railroad Class K4s steam locomotive No. 1361 (PRR…
Read moreBombardier LRC diesel locomotives were built for the future using beloved Alco components of old. “From the tip…
Read moreDelaware & Hudson passenger trains All through July 2023, Classic Trains editors are celebrating the grit and grandeur…
Read moreTrains in movies Trains in movies: Looking for a brief retreat that is fun, fairly inexpensive, and easily accessible all…
Read morePhoebe Snow as a person was an invention by advertising men a half century before the streamliner. A new management…
Read moreDelaware & Hudson history dates from 1823, when the Delaware & Hudson Canal Co. was chartered to build a canal…
Read moreThe Southern Pacific locomotive roster was expansive. A headlight breaking the horizon in the 1960s meant one thing; you never…
Read moreUNION, Ill. — The Illinois Railway Museum, which is marking its 70th anniversary in 2023, celebrated the milestone on Saturday,…
Read moreBig Boy’s story We all know the old tried and sometimes true saying, “bigger is better.” Yes, a significantly enlarged…
Read moreThere were more than 200 red-white-and-blue Bicentennial diesel locomotives. Many “Bicens” were specially renumbered, but some (the 76s, 200s, 1776s,…
Read moreWhat was your first byline in Trains? Robert Scott: My first byline in Trains was in the May 2005 issue.…
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