Biggest 4-6-2 Pacific: Omaha Road’s E-3 class

Three-quarter rear view of biggest 4-6-2 Pacific steam locomotive

The biggest 4-6-2 Pacific came from a surprisingly small railroad.     Any history of the American steam locomotive must save some superlatives for the 4-6-2 Pacific. The wheel arrangement allowed a wide variety of design and performance, such that approximately 6,000 were manufactured in the first half of the 20th century, all in the […]

Read More…

Chicago North Shore & Milwaukee equipment remembered

Streamlined Chicago North Shore & Milwaukee equipment under catenary

Chicago North Shore & Milwaukee equipment set it apart from other electric interurban lines. Please enjoy this photo gallery selected from files in Kalmbach Media‘s David P. Morgan Library.     Each month since October 2019, Classic Trains editors have selected one Fallen Flag to honor. A Fallen Flag is a railroad whose name and heritage have succumbed […]

Read More…

Hot Spot: Neenah, Wis.

red and gray locomotive

Neenah Neenah, Wis., is one of those towns you have probably never heard of. There is, however, a good chance that something from Neenah impacts your life every day. Take a good look at the next manhole cover you cross. If it’s cast with the words “Neenah Foundry Co., Neenah, WI,” you now know the […]

Read More…

Short lines and regional railroads are consistently upgrading locomotives

green locomotive on tracks

Upgrading locomotives Upgrading locomotives: If you haven’t already noticed, a motive power renaissance is occurring at short lines and regionals across the country. Smaller railroads are always getting power that’s newer or better than what they currently have. However, recently this change is more pronounced. It’s driven by a top-down push, starting with the Class […]

Read More…

East Broad Top Railroad locomotives in the 21st century

A train pulling into a storage area

East Broad Top Railroad locomotives make up a big piece to a bigger puzzle that is the preserved narrow-gauge railroad in Rockhill, Pennsylvania. The 33-mile line served the iron furnaces and coal mines from 1874 until freight haulage came to an end on April 6, 1956. Tourist operations on a short section of the railroad […]

Read More…

Honoring the legacy of Ashtabula

Steam locomotive with two cars on high bridge

My first railroad book has stuck with me ever since my parents gave it to me when I was 9. Lucius Beebe’s “Hear the Train Blow” was a massive scrapbook of American railroad history, full of the author’s outrageous prose and uncanny skill at digging up illustration. I still love looking through it 62 years […]

Read More…

Five mind-blowing dining car facts

People seated at tables with cloth tablecloths on railroad dining car

Mind-blowing dining car facts Dining by rail was transformed from a disgusting experience to a culinary calling card pitting one railroad against another to garner passengers. At the table, passengers enjoyed fine food served with the grace and style of the best restaurants. What we didn’t see was the world and culture of the dining […]

Read More…