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Akron, Canton & Youngstown Railway Akron, Canton & Youngstown incorporated in 1907, completed its line in 1913. Purchased by N&W…
Read moreAkron, Canton & Youngstown Railway Akron, Canton & Youngstown incorporated in 1907, completed its line in 1913. Purchased by N&W…
Read moreNew York Central 4-4-0 No. 999 earned a place in history when it reached a speed of 112.5 mph while…
Read moreThe Pennsylvania Railroad built 90 G5s class 4-6-0s between 1923 and 1925. Ten-Wheeler No. 1963 was photographed pulling away from…
Read moreSanta Fe owned the largest fleet of Atlantics, and kept a handful in service until 1953. No. 1468, a 1909…
Read moreC&NW subsidiary Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis & Omaha owned the world’s heaviest and most powerful Pacifics. No. 602 – one…
Read moreHenry Dreyfus created the timeless design worn by the streamlined 4-6-4s that pulled the Twentieth Century Limited. New York Central…
Read moreBY Neil Carlson The development of the 4-8-2 grew out of the need for a locomotive with greater power than…
Read moreBetter than most railroads, perhaps, the Union Pacific understood fast freight service. With an expansive network of lines spread across…
Read moreThe proving ground for Union Pacific’s locomotives was a 75-mile portion of its busy main line between Ogden, Utah, and…
Read moreInterurbans Interurbans were electric railroads running between cities, often of lighter construction than “steam” railroads. They had their own rights…
Read moreOne enduring symbol of railroading’s past is the red-and-white diamond herald of the Railway Express Agency. Today one finds reminders…
Read moreNorfolk & Western’s Jawn Henry (named for the legendary “steel-drivin’ man”) was the last of a handful of U.S. experimental…
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