Famous railroads with unique official nicknames
Railroads with cumbersome names that can be a mouthful to say and a headache to remember often opted for nicknames.…
Read moreRailroads with cumbersome names that can be a mouthful to say and a headache to remember often opted for nicknames.…
Read moreThe Pennsylvania’s one-of-a-kind class S1 6-4-4-6 duplex drive No. 6100 shrugs off an early Chicago winter snow storm as it…
Read moreWalk around the halls of Baltimore’s B&O Railroad Museum and you will encounter many first, last, and only railroad objects.…
Read moreAn A-B-B-A set of Santa Fe FT diesels leads a westbound freight just below famous Tehachapi Loop in 1949. This…
Read moreThis month’s episode of Cody’s Office is packed with three new products, a helpful modeling tip, and answers to your…
Read moreHandsome Western Maryland 4-6-2 No. 204 is ready to depart the road’s Hillen Street station in Baltimore with the daily…
Read moreTime to distress some steel! Follow along as David demonstrate two essential bridge weathering techniques on the HO scale (1:87.1)…
Read more[Ed. — This adventure is excerpted from a story originally appearing in Trains, September 1984. It, along with 45 other…
Read moreSanta Fe trains 93, the West Texas Express, and 94, the Eastern Express, were the Amarillo–Lubbock connection for the San…
Read moreIn fall 1953, Canadian National 4-6-2 5545 simmers inside the roundhouse at Moncton, New Brunswick. Philip R. Hastings photo [...]Read…
Read moreClass A 4-4-2 No. 2 hauls the Milwaukee Road’s newly launched Hiawatha up the hill and around the curve out…
Read moreLooking west at Frankfort, Ind., in 1944, we see the westbound yard with its east-end ladder angling off to the…
Read more