FACTOID # 45: American adults have spent more time than anyone in education .
 
 Home   Encyclopedia   Statistics   Countries A-Z   Flags   Maps   Education   Forum   FAQ   About 
 
WHAT'S NEW
RECENT ARTICLES
More Recent Articles »
 

FACTS & STATISTICS    Simple view

  1. Select countries to view: (hold down Control key and click to select several)

     

     

    Compare:

     

     

  1. Select fact or statistic: (* = graphable)

     

     

     

  2. (OPTIONAL) Compare to statistic: (both need to be graphable)

     

     

     

  3. View result as:

     

       
(OR) SEARCH ALL encyclopedia, stats & forums:   

Encyclopedia > List of defunct United States railroads

Contents: Top - 0–9 A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z Commuter railroadsSee also


See Category:Defunct railway companies of Canada for historic railway companies that have operated in Canada.


A

The Abbeville and Waycross Railroad was founded in 1889. ... The Akron, Canton and Youngstown Railroad (AAR reporting mark ACY) was a class I railroad that existed between 1907 and 1964. ... The Alabama and Chattanooga Railroad was formed out of a merger between the Wills Valley Railroad and the North East and South West Alabama Railroad in 1868. ... The Alabama Great Southern Railroad Company, Ltd. ... Florida state law chapter 3797, approved May 31, 1887, incorporated the Alabama Midland Railway Company, owned by J. W. Woolfolk, David Weil, Josiah Morris, A. St. ... The Alabama, Tennessee and Northern Railroad (AAR reporting mark ATN) was a short line railroad operating within the state of Alabama. ... The Albany and Northern Railway began life in about 1895 on a 35 mile strech of railway from Cordele, GA to Albany, GA. The line had originally been built around 1890 by the Albany, Florida and Northern Railway. ... The Albany, Florida and Northern Railway was chartered in 1889 and built a railway between Albany, GA and Cordele, GA, beginning operation in 1891. ... The Aliquippa and Southern Railroad was a short line railroad in Pennsylvania that was purchased by the Ohio Central Railroad and renamed the Aliquippa and Ohio River Railroad in late 2002. ... Originally named the Allegheny Railroad, the Genesee and Wyoming Railroad purchased the company in the early 1990s and renamed it the Allegheny and Eastern Railroad. ... 1885 map The Alton Railroad was the final name of a railroad linking Chicago, Illinois to Alton, St. ... 1885 map The Alton Railroad was the final name of a railroad linking Chicago, Illinois to Alton, St. ... The Americus and Atlantic Railroad was founded in 1917 and operated from Mata, GA to Methvins, GA. It provided only frieght service through a connection with the Atlanta, Birmingham and Atlantic Railroad and was eventually abandoned in 1926. ... Orignially a narrow gauge line, the Americus, Preston and Lumpkin Railroad was chartered in 1884 and started operations the next year between Americus, GA and Richland, GA. It eventually operated from Louvale, GA to Abbeville, GA. In 1888, it changed its name to the Savannah, Americus and Montgomery Railway. ... The New London Northern Railroad was a part of the Central Vermont Railway from New London, Connecticut north to Brattleboro, Vermont. ... The New London Northern Railroad was a part of the Central Vermont Railway from New London, Connecticut north to Brattleboro, Vermont. ... The Ann Arbor Railroad (AAR reporting mark AA) is an American railroad that operates between Ann Arbor, Michigan and Toledo, Ohio. ... The Annapolis and Elk Ridge Railroad, later the Annapolis, Washington & Baltimore Railroad, once provided rail service to Annapolis, Maryland and was one of the earliest railroads in the U.S. It later merged into the Washington, Baltimore and Annapolis Railroad and was finally abandoned. ... The Anniston and Atlantic Railroad was a 53-mile narrow gauge railroad built between Anniston, Alabama and Sylacauga, Alabama, via Talladega, Alabama and Murphy, Alabama. ... The Argentine Central Railway reached the summit of Mount McClellan. ... Arkansas, Louisiana, and Mississippi Railroad (AAR reporting mark ALM) is a Class III short-line railroad headquartered in Crossett, Arkansas. ... Arkansas, Louisiana, and Mississippi Railroad (AAR reporting mark ALM) is a Class III short-line railroad headquartered in Crossett, Arkansas. ... Arkansas, Louisiana, and Mississippi Railroad (AAR reporting mark ALM) is a Class III short-line railroad headquartered in Crossett, Arkansas. ... The Atchison and Nebraska City Railroad was chartered May 5, 1867. ... The Atchison and Nebraska Railroad was initially chartered as the Atchison and Nebraska City Railroad but City was dropped from the name when it was formally organized. ... The Atchison and Pikes Peak Railroad is the original name for the Central Branch Union Pacific Railroad and was incoporated on February 11, 1859. ... The Santa Fe trademark in the late 1800s incorporated the British lion out of respect for the countrys financial assistance in building the railroad to California. ... The Atchison, Lincoln, and Columbus Railroad was initially authorized to build from the terminus point of the Atchison and Nebraska Railroad, which was at the Nebraska and Kansas border North of White Cloud, KS, to Columbus, NE by way of Lincoln, NE. Work began in 1871 and the Atchison and... The Atchison, Republican Valley and Pacific Railway was incorporated on May 15, 1878 and was planned to operate from Atchison, Kansas, along the Republican River to near Willow Island, Nebraska. ... The Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway (AAR reporting marks ATSF), often abbreviated as Santa Fe, was one of the largest railroads in the United States. ... The Atkinson Northern Railroad was originally founded in the late 1800s or early 1900s to operate North out of Atkinson, Nebraska to a point in Boyd County, Nebraska. ... Originally called the East and West Railroad of Alabama, the Atlanta and Birmingham Air Line Railway was formed when the Seaboard Air Line Railroad purchased the E&W in 1902 and renamed it in 1903. ... The Atlanta and Charlotte Air-Line Railway emerged from the 1877 re-organization of the Atlanta and Richmond Air Line Railway. ... In July of 1886, the Atlanta and Florida Railroad was chartered as the Atlanta and Hawkinsville Railroad. ... The Atlanta and Hawkinsville Railroad was chartered in July of 1886 and was planned to operate between Atlanta, GA and Hawkinsville, GA. The name was changed in 1887 to the Atlanta and Florida Railroad, which was eventually taken over by the Southern Railroad in 1895. ... The Atlanta and LaGrange Rail Road was chartered in 1847 and was to run 80 miles between East Point, GA through LaGrange, GA to West Point, GA. Construction began in 1849-50 and was completed in May of 1854. ... The Atlanta and New Orleans Short Line was an early name for the Atlanta and West Point Rail Road which came into existance in 1857. ... Organized in 1870, the Atlanta & Richmond Air-Line combined the Georgia Air Line Railway and the Air Line Railroad Company of South Carolina under president Algernon S. Buford. ... An old logo for the line, which reached Atlanta, Georgia via trackage rights on the Central of Georgia Railway. ... The Atlanta and West Point Railroad (AWP) was originally chartered in 1847 and the section from Newnan to West Point was chartered in December 1849. ... The Atlanta, Birmingham and Atlantic Railway was formed in 1905 to purchase the Atlantic and Birmingham Railway and extend its track into Birmingham from an end point at Montezuma. ... The Atlanta, Birmingham and Coast Railroad was formed in 1926 from a reorganization of the Atlanta, Birmingham and Atlantic Railroad. ... Nicknamed The Hiawasse Route for a scenic portion of the railroad along the Hiawassee River, the Atlanta, Knoxville and Northern Railroad was chartered in 1896 as a successor to the Marietta and North Georgia Railroad. ... Atlantic, Mississippi and Ohio Railroad - Wikipedia /**/ @import /skins-1. ... The Atlantic and Birmingham Railway was originally chartered in 1887 as the Waycross Air Line Railroad. ... The Norfolk, Franklin & Danville (AAR reporting marks NFD) at one time operated 250 miles of track between Norfolk, Virginia and Danville, Virginia. ... 1882 map The Plant System was a system of railroads and steamboats in the U.S. South, taken over by the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad in 1902. ... The Atlantic and Gulf Short Line Railroad originated around 1905 from a possible reorganization of a railroad called either the Midville and Swainsboro Railroad or the Midville, Swainsboro and Red Bluff Railroad (maps from the period show the former while other accounts showed the latter). ... The Atlantic and Pacific Railroad Company was chartered in New York state in 1852. ... The Atlantic and St. ... The Atlantic and Western Railway (AAR reporting mark ATW) is a Class III short-line railroad operating about 10 miles of track in Lee County, North Carolina. ... The Atlantic & Yadkin Railway was a short line railroad within North Carolina from 1899-1950. ... The Atlantic Coast Line Railroad (AAR reporting mark ACL) was an American railroad that existed between 1880s and 1967, when it merged with the Seaboard Air Line Railroad, its longtime rival, to form the Seaboard Coast Line Railroad. ... The Atlantic Short Line was formed on December 9, 1892 from the failed Macon and Atlantic Railway. ... Chartered in 1897, the Atlantic, Valdosta and Western Railway operated from Valdosta, GA to Jacksonville, FL and was nicknamed the Jacksonville Short Line. ... The Atlantic, Waycross and Northern Railroad was formed in 1911 as a successor to the St. ... The Augusta and Florida Railroad began in 1905 and operated a line between Keysville, GA and Midville, GA. The A&F lasted only one year before being purchased by the Georgia and Florida Railroad. ... The Augusta and Knoxville Railroad was built in 1882 and built 67 miles of track between Augusta, GA and Greenwood, SC. In 1883, it was merged with the Port Royal and Augusta Railway to become Charleston and Western Carolina Railroad. ... The Augusta and Savannah Railroad was established in 1856 as a successor to the Augusta and Waynesboro Railroad. ... The Augusta and Waynesboro Railroad was chartered in 1838 but didnt begin operations until 1854. ... The Augusta Belt Railway was incorporated in 1896 and was a susidiary of the Georgia Railroad. ... The Augusta, Gibson and Sandersville Railroad was incorporated in 1884 and began operating from Augusta, GA to Stapleton, GA in 1885. ... The Augusta Southern Railroad was established in 1893 through a reorganization of the Augusta, Gibson and Sandersville Railroad. ... Auto-Train Corporation (AAR reporting mark: AUT) was a privately-owned railroad which used its own rolling stock, and traveled on rails leased from major railroads along the route of its trains. ...

B

Originally a logging railroad called the Georgia Eastern Railway, the Bainbridge Northeastern Railroad ran 18 miles between Swindell Landing, GA to Mount Royal, GA starting in 1908. ... Known as The Lumber Line, the Bainbridge Northern Railway was operated by the Flint River Lumber Company and originally began operations from Bainbridge, GA to Eldorendo, GA between 1896 and 1899. ... The Baltimore & Annapolis Railroad, now defunct, was an American railroad of central Maryland built in the 19th century. ... The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad (B&O) was one of the oldest railroads in the United States, with an original line from the port of Baltimore, Maryland, west to the Ohio River at Wheeling and Parkersburg, West Virginia. ... The Baltimore & Ohio Chicago Terminal Railroad was a Class II railroad in the United States. ... The Bangor and Aroostook Railroad or BAR is a defunct United States railroad company, that formerly operated lines in northern Maine. ... The Bath and Hammondsport Railroad was chartered in 1872 as a narrow gauge railroad running from the Erie and Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad interchange in Bath, New York, to Hammondsport, New York. ... The Bay Ridge and Annapolis Railroad, originally called the Annapolis and Bay Ridge Railroad, was a 4. ... Organized from the Union Railway Company and the Chattanooga Union Railway in about 1895, the Belt Railway Company of Chattanooga operated about 45 miles of track in and around Chattanooga, TN. It was controlled by the Alabama Great Southern Railroad and may have been in operation, at least on paper... The Billerica and Bedford Railroad was an early narrow gauge railroad in Massachusetts, built to demonstrate the advantages of a two-foot gauge. ... The Black Diamond Railroad was an attempt in the late 1890s by Albert E. Boone to build a railroad from the Ohio River Valley through the Rabun Gap to the Atlantic Coast. ... The Blakely and Southern Railroad has one of the briefest existances of any railroad line that actually operated track. ... Chartered in 1887, the Blue Ridge and Atlantic Railroad purchased the Cornelia and Tallulah Falls Railroad in an attempt to connect Savannah, GA to Knoxville, TN. It went bankrupt in about 1892 and in 1898 its properties became part of the newly formed Tallulah Falls Railway. ... The Blue Ridge Railroad was owned by the Commonwealth of Virginia. ... The Blue Ridge Railway was originally chartered in 1852 as the Blue Ridge Railroad (not to be confused with Virginias Blue Ridge Railroad). ... It has been suggested that this article be split into articles entitled Boston and Albany Railroad and Framingham/Worcester Line. ... The Boston and Albany Railroad (not to be confused with the Boston and Albany Railroad that operated in New England) was chartered in 1891 to build a rail line from Boston, GA to Albany, GA. After two years, very little progress had been made and the railroad was reorganized as... The Boston & Maine (B&M) was the dominant railroad of the northern United States for a century. ... 2-4-4 Mason Bogie locomotive #6 as built in 1886. ... The Bostwick Railroad was constructed in 1907 between Bostwick, GA and Apalachee, GA. It failed in 1912 and was purchased by the Greene County Railroad. ... Originally opened in 1885 as a private railroad operating only for guests of the Sweet Water Park Hotel near Lithia Springs, GA, the Bowden Lithia Springs Short Line Railroad operated 2. ... The Bowdon Railway was founded in 1910 and began operations in 1911. ... 1879 map The Central Vermont Railway (AAR reporting marks CV) was a railroad that operated in the New England states of Connecticut, Massachusetts, Vermont, New York, as well as the Canadian province of Quebec. ... The Bridgton and Saco River Railroad was a two foot gauge railroad that operated in the vicinty of Bridgton and Harrison, Maine. ... The Brinson Railroad was chartered in 1906 and was named after and owned by George M. Brinson, a businessman who had earlier built the Stillmore Air Line Railway. ... The Broxton, Hazlehurst and Savannah Railroad was chartered in 1900 and operated a 26 mile line between Broxton, GA and Hazlehurst, GA. It lasted until 1905 when it merged with the Ocilla and Valdosta Railroad. ... Organized in 1869, the Brunswick and Albany Railroad was created to take over operation of the Brunswick and Florida Railroad which was a casualty of the civil war. ... The Brunswick and Birmingham Railway was chartered in 1900. ... The Brunswick and Florida Railroad was chartered in 1835 and was originally planned to run from several areas in Southern Georgia and Northern Florida to Brunswick, GA. By 1859, the railroad stretched from Brunswick to Glenmore, GA where it connected with the Atlantic and Gulf Railroad. ... The Brunswick and Pensacola Railroad was a logging line established in 1894. ... The Brunswick and Western Railroad was formed in 1882 through a reorganization of the Brunswick and Albany Railroad. ... Incorporated on June 27, 1897, the Bruton and Pineora Railway was controlled by the Central of Georgia Railway and took over the former Atlantic Short Line Railway which had gone bankrupt. ... Originally incorporated as the Buena Vista Railroad in 1880, the name was changed to Buena Vista and Ellaville Railroad in 1885. ... Originally incorporated as the Buena Vista Railroad in 1880, the name was changed to Buena Vista and Ellaville Railroad in 1885. ... 1879 map The Central Vermont Railway (AAR reporting marks CV) was a railroad that operated in the New England states of Connecticut, Massachusetts, Vermont, New York, as well as the Canadian province of Quebec. ... The Burlington and Missouri River Railroad was incorporated in Iowa in 1852. ... Categories: Rail stubs | Defunct railroad companies of the United States | California railroads | Colorado railroads | Idaho railroads | Illinois railroads | Iowa railroads | Kansas railroads | Kentucky railroads | Minnesota railroads | Missouri railroads | Montana railroads | Nebraska railroads | North Dakota railroads | Oregon railroads | South Dakota railroads | Washington railroads | Wisconsin railroads | Wyoming railroads ... The Burlington-Rock Island Railroad (AAR reporting marks BRI) officially came into existence on July 7, 1930, through the reorganization of its parent road, the Trinity and Brazos Valley Railway Company (T&BV), AKA the “Boll Weevil[1]. Like its predecessor, the BRI was jointly owned by the Chicago, Burlington... The Butte, Anaconda and Pacific Railway (AAR reporting mark BAP) was a short line railroad in the U.S. state of Montana which was founded in 1892 and ceased operation in 1985. ...

C

Camas Prairie Railroad was a short line railroad in northern Idaho owned and operated by Northern Pacific Railway and Union Pacific Railroad. ... A map of the C&A and other related railroads. ... Chartered in 1866, the Cartersville and Van Wert Railroad was originally planned to connect the Western and Atlantic Railroad at Cartersville, GA to the Selma, Rome and Dalton Railroad somewhere in Alabama. ... The Cedar Rapids and Missouri Railroad was a railroad chartered to run from Cedar Rapids, Iowa to Council Bluffs, Iowa on the Missouri River. ... The Central Branch Union Pacific Railroad was the follow-on to the Atchison and Pikes Peak Railroad. ... The Central New England Railway (CNE) was a railroad across northern Connecticut and west across the Hudson River in New York. ... The Central Ohio Railroad was the third railroad to enter Columbus, Ohio, and the first to connect Columbus with the east coast. ... The Central of Georgia Railroad was contructed to join the Macon and Western Railroad at Macon, Georgia to the Atlantic coastal railroads at Savannah, Georgia. ... The Gov. ... alternate logo The Central Railroad of New Jersey, more commonly known as the Jersey Central Lines or CNJ, was a regional railroad with origins in the 1830s, lasting until 1976 when it was absorbed into Conrail with the other bankrupt railroads of the U.S. Northeast. ... The Central Vermont Railway (AAR reporting mark CV) was a railroad that operated in the New England states of Connecticut, Massachusetts, Vermont, New York, as well as the Canadian province of Quebec. ... Chartered in 1827, the South Carolina Canal and Railroad Company ran a 136 mile line from Charleston, SC to Hamburg, SC beginning in 1833. ... The Charleston and Savannah Railway was originally chartered in 1854 as the Charleston and Savannah Railroad. ... The Charleston and Savannah Railway was originally chartered in 1854 as the Charleston and Savannah Railroad. ... The Charleston and Western Carolina Railroad was formed in 1896 to operate the lines of the former Port Royal and Augusta Railway and the Port Royal and Western Carolina Railway. ... In 1843, the South Carolina Canal and Railroad Company and the Louisville, Cincinnati and Charleston Railroad merged to form the South Carolina Railroad. ... In 1869 the Charlotte and South Carolina Railroad and the Columbia and Augusta Railroad merged to form the Charlotte, Columbia and Augusta Railroad. ... The West Point Manufacturing Company began operating the Chattahoochee Valley Railway to serve cotton mills along the Chattahoochee River. ... The Chattanooga and Durham Railroad was formed in 1894 from the failed Chickamauga and Durham Railroad. ... The Chatanooga and Lookout Mountain Railway was chartered in 1887. ... Originally chartered in 1881 as the Rome and Carrollton Railroad, the railroads name became the Chattanooga, Rome and Columbus Railroad in 1887 before any tracks were constructed. ... The Chattanooga, Rome and Southern Railway was formed out of a reorganization of the Chattanooga, Rome and Columbus Railroad in 1897 and three years later, it purchased the Chattanooga and Durham Railroad. ... The Chattanooga Southern Railway was founded in 1890 and began operations in 1891. ... The Chattanooga Southern Railway was founded in 1890 and began operations in 1891. ... In 1871, the Cherokee Railroad was organized to take over operations from the failing Cartersville and Van Wert Railroad. ... The Chesapeake and Ohio Railway (C&O) was a Class I railroad formed in 1869 in Virginia from many smaller railroads begun in the 19th century. ... The Chesapeake Beach Railroad opened on June 9, 1900, as a means of transporting people from Washington, DC to Chesapeake Beach, MD. It left DC at Chesapeake Junction - where Minnesota Avenue NE and Nannie Helen Burroughs Avenue NE meet in the Deanwood neighborhood - on the abandoned right-of-way of... The Chessie System was a holding company that owned three American railroads, the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway (C&O), the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad (B&O), and the Western Maryland Railway (WM), from 1972 until 1987, when the B&O and C&O were merged into CSX Transportation. ... 1856 map The Chesterfield Railroad was located in Chesterfield County, Virginia. ... 1885 map The Alton Railroad was the final name of a railroad linking Chicago, Illinois to Alton, St. ... The Chicago and Eastern Illinois (AAR reporting mark CEI) was a Class I railroad that linked Chicago to southern Illinois, St. ... The Chicago and Illinois Midland Railway (AAR reporting mark CIM) was a Class I railroad in the United States, serving Peoria, Springfield and Taylorville, Illinois. ... The Chicago and North Western Railway (AAR reporting marks: CNW, CNWS, CNWZ; unofficial abbreviation: C&NW) was a Class I railroad in the United States. ... Chicago and Western Indiana Railroad ... The Chicago, Attica and Southern Railroad (AAR reporting mark CAS) was a railroad linking small towns in west central and northwestern Indiana to a connection with the Chicago and Eastern Illinois Railway (C&EI) near Momence, Illinois (where traffic continued on to Chicago). ... The Chicago, Aurora and Elgin Railroad (CA&E, (AAR reporting mark CAE)) known colloquially as the Roarin Elgin, was an interurban railroad that operated commuter trains between Wells Street in downtown Chicago and Aurora, Batavia, Elgin, and Geneva, with several branch lines. ... The Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad (AAR reporting mark CBQ) was a railroad that operated in the Midwestern United States. ... A Chicago Central train passes westbound through northern Illinois in 1993. ... The Chicago Great Western Railway (AAR reporting mark CGW) was a Class I railroad that linked Chicago, Minneapolis, Omaha, and Kansas City. ... The Monon Railroad, also known as the Chicago, Indianapolis & Louisville Railroad from 1897-1956, operated almost entirely within the state of Indiana. ... The Chicago, Kansas and Nebraska Railroad was formed in 1885 with Marcus Low, a former attorney for the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad, as its president. ... The Milwaukee Road, officially the Chicago, Milwaukee, St. ... The Chicago, Missouri and Western Railroad (CM&W), (AAR reporting mark CMNW) was a Class II railroad that operated in the midwest of the United States between 1987 and 1990. ... The Chicago North Shore and Milwaukee Railroad, often called the North Shore Line, was an interurban railroad that operated commuter and passenger trains between Chicago, Illinois, and Milwaukee, Wisconsin. ... The Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad (AAR reporting mark RI) was a Class I railroad in the United States. ... The Chicago Great Western Railway (AAR reporting mark CGW) was a Class I railroad that linked Chicago, Minneapolis, Omaha, and Kansas City. ... The Chicago and North Western Railway (AAR reporting marks: CNW, CNWS, CNWZ; unofficial abbreviation: C&NW) was a Class I railroad in the United States. ... The South Shore Line is an electrically powered interurban streetcar line operated by the Northern Indiana Commuter Transportation District (NICTD) between Randolph Street Terminal in downtown Chicago, Illinois and the South Bend Regional Airport in South Bend, Indiana. ... Chartered in 1889, the Chickamauga and Durham Railroad was constructed to operate a 17 mile long railroad between Chickamauga, GA and Durham, GA. The line was completed in 1892 but went bankrupt by 1894. ... The Cincinnati and Lake Erie Railroad (C&LE) was a short-lived electric interurban railroad that operated between Cincinnati, Ohio, Columbus, Ohio, and Toledo, Ohio. ... CL&N #17, a 4-4-0, photographed in the 1920s The Cincinnati, Lebanon and Northern Railway,[1] now defunct, was an American railroad of southwestern Ohio built in the late 19th century that became part of the Pennsylvania Railroad system in the early 20th. ... ... The Cincinnati, New Orleans and Texas Pacific Railway (AAR reporting mark CNTP) is a railroad that runs from Cincinnati, Ohio to Chattanooga, Tennessee. ... City Point Railroad was a nine-mile railroad in eastern Virginia established in 1838 which ran from City Point (now part of the independent City of Hopewell) on the navigable portion of the James River to Petersburg, Virginia. ... The Cleveland Columbus and Cincinnati Railroad was the second railroad to enter Columbus, Ohio. ... The Cleveland, Columbus, Cincinnati and Indianapolis Railway was formed from the merger of the Cleveland Columbus and Cincinnati Railroad with the Bellefontaine Railroad in 1868. ... Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago and St. ... To meet Wikipedias quality standards, this article or section may require cleanup. ... Created from the former Collins and Ludowici Railroad, the Collins and Glennville Railroad was founded in 1921 and operated 23 miles of track between Collins, GA and Glennville, GA. The railroad lasted until 1941 when it was abandoned. ... In 1915, the Georgia Coast and Piedmont Railroad entered receivership and was subsequently broken up. ... Constructed in 1896, the Collins and Reidsville Railroad ran about seven miles between Collins, GA and Reidsville, GA. In 1906 the C&R was part of a merger that formed the Georgia Coast and Piedmont Railroad. ... In the late 1960s, the State of Georgia started an improvement project for the port at Brunswick, GA. In this project, the Colonels Island Railroad (AAR reporting mark: CISD) was created as a part of the Georgia Ports Authority. ... The Colorado Central Railroad was a U.S. railroad company that operated in Colorado and southeastern Wyoming in the late 19th century. ... The Colorado & Southern Railroad began as the consolidation of bankrupt railroads on 1898. ... The Colorado Midland Railway, incorporated in 1883, was the first standard gauge railroad built over the Continental Divide in Colorado. ... On April 13, 1897 Lucian D. Ross, Thomas Burk, James L. Lindsay, W.T. Doubt and Kurnel R. Babbitt organized the Cripple Creek District Railway Company to operate a 6. ... The Columbus and Greenville Railway (AAR reporting mark CAGY) was founded in 1975 to operate divested Illinois Central trackage across the state of Mississippi. ... Originally chartered in 1885 as the Columbus and Florida Railway, the Columbus Southern Railway name came into use in 1886 when the C&Fs charter was amended. ... Chartered in 1871 as the North and South Railroad, the Columbus and Rome Railway opened in 1873 with a 20 mile line going North out of Columbus, GA. The years later, the railroad extended to Hamilton, GA and by 1888 was operating as far as Greenville, GA. At some during... The Columbus, San Antonio and Rio Grande Railroad (CSA&RG) was an early Texas railroad. ... Organized in 1880, the Columbus and Western Railway was founded to connect Columbus, GA to Birmingham, AL. The same year, the C&W started out by purchasing the Savannah and Memphis Railroad, which ran 66 miles between Opelika, AL and Goodwater, AL. Two years later, it purchased a 55 mile... The Columbus and Xenia Railroad was the first railroad to operate in Columbus, Ohio. ... Originally chartered in 1885 as the Columbus and Florida Railway, the Columbus Southern Railway name came into use in 1886 when the C&Fs charter was amended. ... Conrail, officially known as the Consolidated Rail Corporation, is an American railroad company. ... The Copper Range Railroad (AAR reporting marks CR, COPR) was formed in 1899 in Houghton, Michigan. ... The Copper River and Northwestern Railway was a railroad built by the Kennecott Corporation between 1907 and 1911 to take copper ore from Kennicott, Alaska to Cordova, Alaska, a distance of 315 km (196 miles). ... Founded in 1885, the Covington and Macon Railroad began operations in 1887 between Macon, GA and Hillsboro, GA. It eventually stretched 105 miles, operating from Macon to Athens, GA however it went bankrupt and was sold at public auction in 1891. ... The Covington, Columbus, and Black Hills Railway operated on 26 miles of track in Northeast Nebraska from 1876 to 1890. ... The Crawford County Railroad ran from Girard to Walnut in Crawford County, Kansas, USA. It was established on February 6, 1884 from the failed Nebraska, Iola, Topeka and Memphis Railroad. ... The Cumberland and Pennsylvania Railroad was an American Class III railroad which operated in Western Maryland. ... Offices and station in Chambersburg, 1916 postcard The Cumberland Valley Railroad (AAR reporting marks CVRR) was an early railroad in Pennsylvania, originally charted in 1831 to connect with Pennsylvania’s Main Line of Public Works. ... In 1894 the Cuyler and Woodburn Railroad built a 13 mile line between Cuyler, GA and Woodburn, GA. The railroad had also planned to build an additional line to Statesboro, GA. The railroad was sold under foreclosure in 1897 and was reorganized as the Savannah and Statesboro Railway. ...

D

In 1894 the Darien and Western Railroad was established to take over operations of the Darien Short Line which had gone bankrupt. ... The Darien Short Line was founded in the early 1890s to build track North out of Darien, GA. The railroad built some track but never connected anywhere before going bankrupt. ... The Deep Creek Railroad, now defunct, was a railroad company that constructed and operated a line between Wendover and Gold Hill, Utah, a distance of about 45 miles. ... The Deepwater Railway was formed in 1898 as an intrastate short-line railroad located in West Virginia in the United States by William N. Page, a civil engineer and entrepreneur. ... The Delaware and Northern Railroad Company was a small railroad in Delaware County that was founded in 1905, and was planned to go from East Branch, where it would make a connection with the New York, Ontario and Western Railway, to Arkville, where it would connect with the Ulster and... 1886 map The Delaware and Hudson Railway (D&H) (AAR reporting mark DH) is a subsidiary of the Canadian Pacific Railway, giving it access to New York City and other parts of the northeastern United States. ... The Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad Company (DL&W or Lackawanna) (AAR reporting marks DLW) was a railroad connecting Pennsylvanias Lackawanna Valley, rich in anthracite coal, to New York City, Buffalo and Oswego, New York. ... The Delaware and Northern Railroad Company was a small railroad in Delaware County that was founded in 1906, and was planned to go from East Branch, where it would make a connection with the New York, Ontario and Western Railway, to Arkville, where it would connect with the Ulster and... Categories: Rail stubs | Defunct railroad companies of the United States | Colorado railroads | New Mexico railroads | Utah railroads ... The Denver and Rio Grande Railroad (AAR reporting mark DRG and DRGW) generally referred to as the Rio Grande, became the Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad in 1920, and is today a fallen flag (a railroad that has been absorbed into a larger system -- Union Pacific -- as the result... The Denver, Northwestern and Pacific Railway was a U.S. railroad company incorporated on July 18, 1902 by David H. Moffat, Walter S. Cheesman, William G. Evans, Charles J. Hughes, Jr. ... Denver, Northwestern and Pacific Railway References Griswold, P. R. (1995). ... The Denver Pacific Railway was historic railroad that operated in the western United States in the late 19th century. ... The Denver, South Park, and Pacific Railroad was a historic narrow gauge railway that operated in Colorado in the western United States in the late 19th century. ... the Detroit and Toledo Shore Line Railroad, (AAR reporting mark DTSL) was a small rail carrier that had a multi-track mainline bridging Detroit and Toledo and served major industries. ... The Butler Branch (or Vandalia Railroad or Eel River Railroad known as the “Eel River” Route or Line) was a rail line owned and operated by the Pennsylvania Railroad in the U.S. state of Indiana. ... The Detroit, Toledo and Ironton Railroad (DT&I) (AAR reporting marks DTI) was a railroad that operated between its namesake cities in Michigan and Ohio between 1905 and 1982. ... The Dooly Southern Railway was chartered in 1897 and operated 9 miles of track between Richwood, GA and Pinia, GA starting in 1898. ... Built in 1895-96, the Douglas and McDonald Railroad operated a 15 mile line from Douglas, GA to McDonald, GA where it connected with the Brunswick and Western Railroad. ... The Douglas, Augusta and Gulf Railway was created as a subsidiary of the Georgia and Florida Railway to consolidate lines of several smaller railroads. ... The Dover and Statesboro Railroad was founded in 1889 and began operations between Statesboro, GA and Dover, GA. It was acuired by the Central of Georgia Railroad in 1901. ... The Dublin and Southwestern Railroad was founded in 1904 and began operating in 1905. ... The Dublin and Wrightsville Railroad was built in 1886 and ran 19 miles from Dublin, GA to Wrightsville, GA. It was almost immediately aquired by the Wrightsville and Tennille Railroad upon its completion. ... The Duluth, Missabe and Iron Range Railway (DM&IR) (AAR reporting mark DMIR) was a railroad operating in northern Minnesota and Wisconsin to haul iron ore and later taconite to the Great Lakes port of Duluth, Minnesota and Two Harbors, Minnesota. ... The Duluth, South Shore and Atlantic Railway (DSS & A) was an American railroad serving the Upper Peninsula of Michigan and the Lake Superior shoreline of Wisconsin. ... Categories: Rail stubs | Minnesota railroads ... The Durham & Southern Railroad ran from Apex, NC to Durham, NC. It ran from 1906 to 1979 when it became part of the CSX system History of the Durham & Southern Railroad Category: ...

E

  • East and West Railroad of Alabama
  • East Carolina Railroad
  • East Cooper and Berkeley Railroad
  • East St. Louis & Suburban Railway
  • East Tennessee and Western North Carolina Railroad (ET&WNC, nicknamed "Tweetsie")
  • Eastern Kansas and Gulf Railroad
  • Eastern Oklahoma Railway
  • Eckhart Railroad
  • Edaville Railroad
  • Eel River Railroad
  • El Dorado and Santa Fe Railway
  • El Dorado and Walnut Valley Railroad
  • El Dorado, Halstead and Denver Railway
  • El Dorado, Oklahoma and Chihuahua Railway
  • El Dorado, Salt Plains and Pan Handle Railroad
  • Elk and Chautauqua Railroad
  • Elk Valley and Western Railroad
  • Ellijay Railroad
  • Ellsworth and Irving Railway
  • Ellsworth and Limestone Valley Railroad
  • Ellsworth and Pacific Railroad
  • Ellsworth, Great Bend and Southern Railroad
  • Ellsworth, Great Bend and Western Railway
  • Ellsworth, La Crosse and Western Railway
  • Elmira, Corning and Waverly Railway
  • Elwood, Palermo and Fort Riley Railroad
  • Empire and Dublin Railroad
  • Emporia and Council Grove Railway
  • Emporia and El Dorado Short Line Railroad
  • Emporia and Southern Kansas Railroad
  • Emporia and Southwestern Railroad
  • Emporia and South Western Railway
  • Emporia, Winfield and Fort Smith Railroad
  • Englewood, Garden City, Leoti and Northwestern Railroad
  • Erie Railroad
  • Erie Lackawanna Railroad (EL)
  • Erie, Thayer and Arkansas River Railroad
  • Eufaula and Clayton Railroad
  • Eufaula and East Alabama Railway
  • Eureka and Fall River Railroad
  • Eureka, Augusta and Southwestern Railway
  • Eureka, Augusta and Wichita Railway
  • Eureka, Douglass and Santa Fe Railroad

The East & West Railroad of Alabama was a narrow gauge railroad in the US States of Alabama and Georgia. ... The East St. ... The East Tennessee and Western North Carolina Railroad (ET&WNC), affectionately called the Tweetsie in reference to the sound of its steam whistles, was a primarily narrow gauge railroad established in 1866 for the purpose of the serving the mines at Cranberry, North Carolina. ... The Echart Railroad was a railroad operated by the Maryland Mining Company of Eckhart Mines, Maryland. ... The Edaville Railroad is a heritage railway in the U.S. state of Massachussetts. ... The Butler Branch (or Vandalia Railroad or Eel River Railroad known as the “Eel River” Route or Line) was a rail line owned and operated by the Pennsylvania Railroad in the U.S. state of Indiana. ... The Empire and Dublin Railroad was founded in 1888. ... The Erie Railroad (AAR reporting mark ERIE) was a railroad that operated in New York State, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana and Illinois, connecting New York City with Lake Erie, and extending west to Cleveland, Ohio, Cincinnati, Ohio and Chicago, Illinois. ... The Erie Lackawanna Railroad (AAR reporting mark EL) was formed from the 1960 merger of the Erie Railroad and the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad. ...

F

  • Fall River, Howard and Western Railroad
  • Falls City, Sycamore Springs, Sabetha and Southwestern Railway
  • Farmers and Stockgrowers Railroad
  • Farmers and Traders Railway
  • Federal Creek Valley Railroad
  • Federal Valley Railroad
  • Fitzgerald, Ocilla and Broxton Railroad
  • Flint River and North Eastern Railroad (FR&NE or the Ticknor switch road)
  • Flint River and Gulf Railway
  • Florence and Cripple Creek Railroad (F&CC)
  • Florence, El Dorado and Walnut Valley Railroad
  • Florida, Memphis and Columbia River Railroad
  • Flushing and North Side Railroad
  • Flushing and Woodside Railroad
  • Fonda, Johnstown and Gloversville Railroad
  • Ford County, Meade Center and Southwestern Railroad
  • Fore River Railroad
  • Forest City and Gettysburg Railroad
  • Fort Dodge, Des Moines and Southern Railway
  • Fort Gibson, Arkansas City, Belle Plaine and Pueblo Railroad
  • Fort Leavenworth and Southern Railway
  • Fort Leavenworth, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad
  • Fort Riley, Denver and Salt Lake Railroad
  • Fort Riley, Smoky Hill Valley and Denver City Railroad
  • Fort Scott and Allen County Railroad
  • Fort Scott and Carthage Railroad
  • Fort Scott and Eastern Railway
  • Fort Scott and Lincoln Railroad
  • Fort Scott and Memphis Railroad
  • Fort Scott and Pittsburg Railway
  • Fort Scott and Southern Railway
  • Fort Scott and Topeka Railroad
  • Fort Scott, Arkansas and Texas Railway
  • Fort Scott Belt Line Railway
  • Fort Scott Belt Terminal Railway
  • Fort Scott, Bluff City and Salt Plains Railroad
  • Fort Scott Central Railway
  • Fort Scott, Chanute and Western Railway
  • Fort Scott Division of the Lexington, Lake and Gulf Railroad
  • Fort Scott, Erie and Verdigris River Railroad
  • Fort Scott, Iola and Neosho Falls Railway
  • Fort Scott, Iola and Western Railway
  • Fort Scott, Kansas City and Northern Railway
  • Fort Scott, Neosho and Santa Fe Railroad
  • Fort Scott, New Chicago and Fredonia Railroad
  • Fort Scott, Park City and Santa Fe Railroad
  • Fort Scott, Pittsburg and Southern Railroad
  • Fort Scott, St. Louis and Chicago Railroad
  • Fort Scott, South Eastern and Memphis Railroad
  • Fort Scott, South Eastern and Memphis Railway
  • Fort Scott Southern Railway
  • Fort Scott, Topeka and Lincoln Railroad
  • Fort Scott, Wichita and Western Railroad
  • Fort Scott, Winfield and Western Railway
  • Fort Smith and Arkansas Valley Railway
  • Fort Smith and Western Railroad (FS&W)
  • Fort Smith, El Dorado and Northwestern Railroad
  • Fort Smith, Howard and Northwestern Railroad
  • Fort Smith, Kansas and Nebraska Railway
  • Fort Smith, Kansas and Western Railway
  • Fort Smith, Wellington and Northwestern Railway
  • Fort Worth and Denver Railroad
  • Fox River Valley Railroad
  • Fox Valley and Western
  • Frankfort and Cincinnati Railroad
  • Fredonia, Howard and Southwestern Railroad
  • Fredonia, Winfield and Mexico Railroad
  • Fremont, Elkhorn and Missouri Valley Railroad

The Flint River and North Eastern Railroad was built in 1904 and operated 23 miles between Pelham, GA and Ticknor, GA. It was purchased by the Georgia Northern Railway in about 1910 and was operated as a subsidiary until 1946 when it was abandoned. ... Incorporated in 1903, the Flint River and Gulf Railroad was planned to operate between Ashburn, GA and Bainbridge, GA. It began operations in 1904 but was acquired by the Gulf Line Railway in 1907. ... The Forest City and Gettysburg Railroad was a small, short-lived railroad that ran between the South Dakota towns of Forest City and Gettysburg, a distance of 19 miles. ... The Fort Smith and Western (AAR reporting mark FS&W) was a railroad that operated in the states of Arkansas and Oklahoma. ... Fort Worth and Denver Railway is a defunct railroad in the United States. ... The Fox River Valley Railroad (AAR reporting marks FRV) was a short-lived railroad in eastern Wisconsin from 1988 to 1993. ... The Fremont, Elkhorn and Missouri Valley Railroad (FE&MV), sometimes called the Elkhorn, was an American railroad established in 1869 in Nebraska. ...

G

The Gainesville, Jefferson and Southern Railroad was chartered in 1872, and on its opening day, March 8, 1884, consisted of a 55-mile track from Gainesville, Georgia to Monroe, Georgia. ... The Galena and Chicago Union Railroad (G&CU) was a railroad running west from Chicago to Clinton, Iowa and Freeport, Illinois, never reaching Galena, Illinois. ... The Garden City Western Railway, Inc. ... The Genesee and Wyoming Railroad (AAR reporting mark GNWR) is a Class III short-line railroad which is operated by Genesee & Wyoming Inc. ... In the late nineteeth century, the Georges Creek & Cumberland Railroad (GC&C) was created by rival coal mining companies in the Georges Creek Valley to compete against the Consolidated Coal Company who dictated rail traffic over the Cumberland and Pennsylvania Railroad. ... The Georges Creek Railroad was a railroad operated by the Georges Creek Coal and Iron Company. ... The Georgia and Alabama Railroad was formed in 1895 from the failed Savannah, Americus and Montgomery Railway. ... The Georgia, Ashburn, Sylvester and Camilla Railway was founded in 1922 and operated a former line of the failed Gulf Line Railway from Ashburn, GA to Camilla, GA. The GAS&C was a subsidiary of the Georgia Northern Railway which was purchased by the Southern Railway in 1966 and operated... On April 14, 1995, the Georgia and Florida Railroad began operations on the following lines that it had acquired from Norfolk Southern:[1] Moultrie lines - Ganor, Georgia to Schley Junction, Georgia and Norman Junction, Georgia to Moultrie, Georgia Valdosta-Nashville line - Valdosta, Georgia to Nashville, Georgia Camilla line - 2. ... In 1906 the Collins and Reidsville Railroad, the Reidsville and Southeastern Railroad and the Darien and Western Railroad merged to form the Georgia Coast and Piedmont Railroad. ... In 1886 the Georgia, Carolina and Northern Railway was founded and planned on building a railroad from Monroe, NC to Atlanta, GA. By 1892 the railroad had almost completed its original plan when a court injunction halted its progress into Atlanta. ... The Georgia Midland and Gulf Railroad was chartered in 1885 and began operations in 1887, running from Columbus, GA to McDonough, GA. In 1890, the line leased the Columbus Southern Railway but was forced to cancel the lease a year later due to financial problems. ... Founded in 1896 to take over the failed Georgia Midland and Gulf Railroad, the Georgia Midland Railway operated about 100 miles of rail from McDonough, GA to Columbus, GA. The railroad didnt even last a full year when it became a part of the Southern Railway. ... In the early 1890s, the Pidcock Family founded a private logging railroad that ran North out of Pidcock, GA. The Pidcocks purchased the failed Boston and Albany Railroad (Georgia) and combined the assets into the Georgia Northern Railway. ... The Georgia Railroad was originally chartered in 1833 starting in Augusta, Georgia it was completed into Atlanta by Chief Engineer J. Edgar Thomson in 1845 and Richard Peters was its first superintendent. ... Also known as the Suwanee River Route from it crossing of the Suwanee River, the Georgia Southern and Florida Railroad was founded in 1885 and began operations between Macon, GA and Valdosta, GA in 1889, extending to Palatka, FL in 1890. ... The Georgia, Southwestern and Gulf Railroad began operations in 1910 on about 35 miles of track leased from the Albany and Northern Railway running between Cordele, GA and Albany, GA. The GS&G was purchased by the Georgia Northern Railway in 1939, but the line was dissolved by 1942. ... The Gila Valley, Globe & Northern Railway was a common carrier incorporated on January 24, 1894. ... The Gilmore and Pittsburgh Railroad (G&P), now defunct, was an American railroad located in southwestern Montana and east-central Idaho. ... The Grand Rapids and Indiana Railroad Company at its height provided passenger and freight railroad services between Cincinnati, Ohio and the Straits of Mackinac. ... 1885 map The Grand Trunk Railway (GTR) was a historic railway system which operated in the Canadian provinces of Quebec and Ontario, as well as the American states of Maine, New Hampshire, and Vermont. ... A Great Northern train pauses for the photographer four miles west of Minot, North Dakota in 1914. ... The Greeley, Salt Lake and Pacific Railroad was a railroad that operated in northern Colorado in the United States during the 1880s. ... Categories: Rail stubs | Defunct railroad companies of the United States | Defunct companies | Wisconsin railroads ... The Gulf, Colorado and Santa Fe Railway is a now-defunct rail company with lines running from Galveston, Texas northwest to the Denver and Rio Grande Railway. ... Created as a subsidiary of the Southern Railway, the Gulf Line Railway was created in 1907 through a merger and lease of several smaller railroads in Georgia. ... The Gulf, Mobile and Northern Railroad is a defunct U.S. railroad. ... The Gulf, Mobile and Ohio ( AAR reporting mark GMO) was a railroad carrier in the central United States, with its primary routes from Chicago to Mobile, Alabama and Kansas City, Missouri. ...

H

  • Halstead, Kanopolis and Pacific Railroad
  • Hampton and Branchville Railroad
  • Hanover Branch Railroad
  • Hanover, Washington and Western Railway
  • Harbor Belt Line (HBL) LA Harbor switching road (owned by UP, SP, ATSF & LA Harbor Dept.)
  • Harbor Springs Railway, a narrow gauge logging line in Michigan
  • Hardy, White Rock, Omic and Beloit Railway
  • Harold, Garden City and Southwestern Railway
  • Hartford and Slocomb Railroad
  • Hartwell Railway
  • Harvey County Railroad
  • Hawkinsville and Florida Southern Railway
  • Hays City and Great Northern Railway
  • Hays City and Southwestern Railway
  • Higgins Park Railway
  • Highland and St. Joseph Railroad
  • Highland and St. Joseph Railway
  • Hillsboro and Northeastern Railway
  • Hocking Valley Railway
  • Holton, Council Grove and Southwestern Railway
  • Hoosac Tunnel and Wilmington Railroad
  • Houston and Texas Central Railroad
  • Hoxie and Trinidad Railroad
  • Hudson River Railroad
  • Humboldt and Arkansas River Railroad
  • Humboldt and Baxter Springs Railroad
  • Humboldt and Fredonia Railway
  • Humboldt and Southwestern Railroad
  • Humboldt and Western Railway
  • Humboldt, Fredonia, Winfield and Arkansas City Railway
  • Humboldt, Neosho County and Columbus Railway
  • Humboldt Railway and Terminal Company
  • Huntingdon and Broad Top Mountain Railroad
  • Hutchinson and North Eastern Railroad
  • Hutchinson and Northern Railway
  • Hutchinson and South Eastern Railroad
  • Hutchinson and Western Interurban Railway
  • Hutchinson, Arlington, Saratoga and Southwestern Railroad
  • Hutchinson, Ashland and Neutral Strip Railroad
  • Hutchinson, Larned, Garden City and Denver Railroad
  • Hutchinson, Greensburg and New Mexico Railroad
  • Hutchinson, Greensburg and Western Railway
  • Hutchinson, Huntsville and Western Railroad
  • Hutchinson, Waterloo and Southwestern Railroad

Harbor Springs #1, a frameless geared locomotive built by Ephraim Shay. ... The introduction of this article does not provide enough context for readers unfamiliar with the subject. ... The Hawkinsville and Florida Southern Railway was founded in 1889 and by 1901 was operating 43 miles of track from Hawkinsville, GA to Worth, GA where it connected with the Georgia Southern and Florida Railroad. ... The Hoosac Tunnel and Wilmington Railroad was an interstate railroad in southwestern Vermont and northwestern Massachusetts. ... The Upper Hudson River Railroad runs along the Hudson River in New York State in the Adirondack Mountains. ... Huntingdon and Broad Top Mountain Railroad (AAR reporting mark HBTM) is a former short line railroad company operating passenger and freight service on standard gauge track in south central Pennsylvania. ... The Hutchinson and Northern Railway (AAR reporting marks HN) is a railroad operating in the U.S. state of Kansas which started operations in 1923 as an electric line serving the Carey Salt mine at Hutchinson, KS. Currently, HN operates 5. ...

I

  • Illinois Central Railroad (IC)
  • Illinois Central Gulf Railroad (ICG)
  • Illinois Terminal Railroad (ITC)
  • Independence and Parsons Railway
  • Independence and South-Western Railroad
  • Independence and Verdigris Valley Railway
  • Independence, Colorado, Arizona and Pacific Railroad
  • Independence, Neodesha and Topeka Traction Company
  • Independence, North and South Railway
  • Indian Territory and Kansas Central Railroad
  • Indiana Railroad
  • Indiana Interstate Railroad
  • Inner Belt Railway
  • Inter City Terminal Railway
  • Inter-State Rail Road Company
  • International-Great Northern Railroad (IGN)
  • International Pacific Railway
  • Interstate and Denver Railroad
  • Interstate Belt Railway
  • Interstate Railroad
  • Interstate Railway
  • Iola and Arkansas Valley Railroad
  • Iowa Point, Hiawatha and Denver City Railroad

The Illinois Central (AAR reporting mark IC), sometimes called the Main Line of Mid-America, was a railroad carrier in the central United States, with its primary routes connecting Chicago, Illinois with New Orleans, Louisiana and Birmingham, Alabama. ... The Illinois Central Gulf Railroad (AAR designation ICG) was the result of the merger between the Illinois Central (IC) and the Gulf, Mobile and Ohio (GM&O) railroads. ... The Illinois Terminal Railroad (AAR reporting mark ITC) was a railroad carrier in Illinois. ... The Indiana Railroad (IR) was the last of the typical Midwestern United States interurban lines. ... The International-Great Northern Railroad Company was a major component of the Missouri Pacific lines in Texas. ... The Interstate Railroad (AAR reporting marks INT) was a railroad in the southwest part of the U.S. state of Virginia. ...

J

  • Jefferson City and Neosho Valley Railroad
  • Jefferson City, Fort Scott and Southwestern Railroad
  • Jefferson City, Kansas and Oklahoma Railroad
  • Jefferson City, Osage and Neosho Valley Railway
  • Johnson County Railroad
  • Joplin and Galena Railway
  • Joplin and Short Creek Railroad
  • Joplin-Pittsburg Railroad
  • Joplin Railroad
  • Joplin Railway
  • Junction City and Fort Kearney Railway
  • Junction City and Omaha Railroad
  • Junction City and Omaha Railway
  • Junction City, Hope and McPherson Air Line Railroad
  • Junction City, Solomon Valley and Denver Railway

K

  • Kalamazoo, Lake Shore and Chicago Railroad (KLS&C)
  • Kalamazoo and South Haven Railroad (K&SH) [4]
  • Kanopolis and Kansas Central Railway
  • Kankakee, Beaverville and Southern Railroad (KB&S)
  • Kansas Air Line Railway
  • Kansas and Arizona Railway
  • Kansas and Arkansas Valley Railway
  • Kansas and Chapman Valley Railway
  • Kansas and Colorado Air Line Railroad
  • Kansas and Colorado Railroad
  • Kansas and Colorado Midland Railway
  • Kansas and Colorado Pacific Railway
  • Kansas and Gulf Railway
  • Kansas and Memphis Railway
  • Kansas and Missouri Central Railroad
  • Kansas and Missouri Mineral Railway
  • Kansas and Missouri Railway
  • Kansas and Missouri Railway and Terminal Company
  • Kansas and Missouri Terminal Railway
  • Kansas and Nebraska Central Railroad
  • Kansas and Nebraska Central Railway
  • Kansas and Nebraska Railway
  • Kansas and Nebraska Railway Company of Kansas
  • Kansas and Neosho Valley Railroad
  • Kansas and New Mexico Railroad
  • Kansas and Northern Railway and Telegraph Company
  • Kansas and Northwestern Railway
  • Kansas and Oklahoma Railroad
  • Kansas and Panhandle Railroad
  • Kansas and Rio Grande Railroad
  • Kansas and Southeastern Railroad
  • Kansas and Southeastern Railway and Telegraph Company
  • Kansas and Southern Railroad
  • Kansas and Southern Railway
  • Kansas and Southwestern Railway
  • Kansas and Texas Pan Handle Railroad
  • Kansas, Arizona and Pacific Railroad
  • Kansas Belt Railway
  • Kansas, Bloomington and Northwestern Railroad
  • Kansas Central and Southwestern Railroad
  • Kansas Central Railroad
  • Kansas Central Railway (Narrow Gauge)
  • Kansas City and Arkansas Valley Short Line Railroad
  • Kansas City and Emporia Railroad
  • Kansas City and Kansas Southwestern Railway
  • Kansas City and Leavenworth Railway
  • Kansas City and Memphis Railroad
  • Kansas City and North Belt Railway
  • Kansas City and Olathe Railroad
  • Kansas City and Panhandle Railroad
  • Kansas City and Pacific Railroad
  • Kansas City and Santa Fe Railroad and Telegraph Company
  • Kansas City and Southern Railroad
  • Kansas City and Southern Short Line Railroad
  • Kansas City and Southwestern Railroad
  • Kansas City and Southwestern Railway
  • Kansas City and Topeka Railroad
  • Kansas City and Topeka Railway
  • Kansas City and Wellington Air Line Railway
  • Kansas City and Western Railroad
  • Kansas City, Augusta and Southern Railroad
  • Kansas City, Augusta, Wellington and Pan Handle Railway
  • Kansas City, Baldwin City and Emporia Railroad
  • Kansas City Belt Railway
  • Kansas City, Bonner Springs and Topeka Railway
  • Kansas City, Burlingame and Western Railway
  • Kansas City, Burlington and Southwestern Railway and Telegraph Co.
  • Kansas City, Clinton and Springfield Railway
  • Kansas City, Colorado and Texas Railroad
  • Kansas City Connecting Railway
  • Kansas City, Elk Falls and El Paso Railroad
  • Kansas City, Emporia and Southern Railway
  • Kansas City, Emporia and Walnut Valley Railroad
  • Kansas City, Emporia, El Dorado and Midland Railway
  • Kansas City, Eureka and Santa Fe Railroad
  • Kansas City, Forest Lake and Bonner Springs Railway
  • Kansas City, Fort Scott and Gulf Railroad
  • Kansas City, Fort Scott and Memphis Railroad
  • Kansas City, Fort Scott and Springfield Railroad
  • Kansas City, Fort Smith and Southern Railroad
  • Kansas City, Indian Territory and Louisiana Railroad
  • Kansas City, Iowa and Minnesota Railway
  • Kansas City Junction Railroad
  • Kansas City, Lamar and Denver Railroad
  • Kansas City, Lawrence and Nebraska Railway
  • Kansas City, Lawrence and Southwestern Railroad
  • Kansas City, Lawrence and Wichita Railroad
  • Kansas City, Leavenworth and Atchison Railway
  • Kansas City Link Railway
  • Kansas City, Linn and Southern Railroad
  • Kansas City, Memphis and Birmingham Railroad (KCM&B)
  • Kansas City, Mexico and Orient Railway (KCM&O)
  • Kansas City, Monett and Southern Railway
  • Kansas City, Nebraska and Western Railroad
  • Kansas City, Northeastern and Gulf Railway
  • Kansas City Northwestern Railroad
  • Kansas City Northwestern Railway
  • Kansas City, Oklahoma and Arkansas Pass Railroad
  • Kansas City, Oklahoma and Pacific Railway
  • Kansas City, Olathe Railway
  • Kansas City, Olathe and Southern Railway
  • Kansas City, Osceola and Southern Railway
  • Kansas City, Oskaloosa and Western Railway
  • Kansas City, Pittsburg and Fort Smith Railway
  • Kansas City, Pittsburg and Gulf Railroad
  • Kansas City, Pittsburg and Western Railroad
  • Kansas City, Richfield and Trinidad Railroad
  • Kansas City, Springfield and Memphis Railroad
  • Kansas City Terminal Railway (KCT) [5]
  • Kansas City, Topeka and Northwestern Railroad
  • Kansas City, Topeka and Western Railroad
  • Kansas City, Walnut and Southwestern Railway
  • Kansas City, Watkins and Gulf Railway
  • Kansas City, Wichita and Indian Territory Air Line Railway
  • Kansas City, Wyandotte and Northwestern Railroad
  • Kansas City, Wyandotte and Northwestern Railway
  • Kansas Coal Belt Railroad
  • Kansas, Colorado and California Railway
  • Kansas, Colorado and Pacific Railroad
  • Kansas, Colorado and Pacific Railway
  • Kansas, Colorado and Texas Railroad
  • Kansas Diagonal Railway
  • Kansas, Galatia and Smoky Valley Railway
  • Kansas, Lawrence and Topeka Railway
  • Kansas, Medicine Valley and Western Railway
  • Kansas, Miami and Southern Railway
  • Kansas Midland Rail Road
  • Kansas Midland Railway
  • Kansas, Missouri and Southeastern Railway
  • Kansas, Missouri, Arkansas and Natchez Railroad
  • Kansas, Nebraska and Dakota Railway
  • Kansas, Nebraska and Minnesota Railroad
  • Kansas, Nebraska and Omaha Railway
  • Kansas Northern Railway
  • Kansas Northwestern Railroad
  • Kansas Northwestern Railway
  • Kansas, Odessa, Fort Stockton and San Antonio Railway
  • Kansas, Oklahoma and Gulf Railroad (KO&G)
  • Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas Railway
  • Kansas Pacific Railway
  • Kansas, Scott City and Colorado Railroad
  • Kansas, Solomon Valley and Colorado Railway
  • Kansas Southern and Gulf Railroad
  • Kansas Southern and Texas Railroad
  • Kansas Southern Rail Road
  • Kansas Southern Railroad
  • Kansas Southwestern and Scandia Southern Railway
  • Kansas Southwestern Railroad
  • Kansas Southwestern Railway
  • Kansas State Line Railway
  • Kansas, Texas and Mexican Railway
  • Kansas, Texas and Mexico Railway
  • Kansas, Texas and Southern Railway
  • Kansas Valley Railroad
  • Kansas Western Railway
  • Kaw River Valley Railway
  • Kaw Valley and Southwestern Railroad
  • Kaw Valley Railroad
  • Kaw Valley Railway and Improvement Company
  • Kearney and Black Hills Railway
  • Kearney, Hutchinson and Gulf Railway
  • Kenosha and Rockford Railroad
  • Kentucky and Tennessee Railway
  • Kettle Valley Railway
  • Kingman and Northeastern Railroad
  • Kingman and Southwestern Railway
  • Kingman, Larned and Northwestern Railroad
  • Kingman, Pratt and Western Railroad
  • Kiowa, Hardtner and Pacific Railroad
  • Kodak Park Railroad (KPRR) [6]

The Kalamazoo and South Haven Railroad operated on 40 miles of track laid between Kalamazoo and South Haven, Michigan. ... The Kankakee, Beaverville and Southern Railroad Company (AAR reporting mark KBSR), is a Class III railroad serving agricultural communities in east-central Illinois and west-central Indiana. ... The Kansas and Oklahoma Railroad (AAR reporting mark KO) is one of the Watco Companies and began operations in July, 2001. ... The Kansas City, Clinton and Springfield Railway, also known as the Leaky Roof Railway, is now an abandon rail line that ran from Kansas City, Missouri, and also Olathe, Kansas through Clinton, MO and on to Ash Grove, Missouri, where it tied in with the KCFS&G. It was founded... The Kansas City, Memphis & Birmingham Railroad is a defunct U.S. railroad; it was operationally absorbed into the St. ... Predecessor to the Chihuahua al Pacifico railroad in Mexico. ... The Kansas City Southern Railway (AAR reporting mark KCS) is a United States-based Class I railroad operating over 3,130 track miles in 10 central and southeastern states. ... Union Station The Kansas City Terminal Railway is Class III railroad that serves as joint operation of the trunk railroads that serve the Kansas City metropolitan area, the countrys second largest rail hub. ... The Kansas, Nebraska and Omaha Railway ran from Omaha, Nebraska to southwestern Kansas, specifically to provide access from the cattle regions of present-day Oklahoma and Texas. ... The Kansas Pacific main line shown on an 1869 map. ... The Kansas Southwestern Railway (KSW) (AAR reporting marks KSW) Category: ... The Kearney and Black Hills Railway was a shortline railroad built in the late-1800s between Kearney, NE and Callaway, NE. It was purchased by the Union Pacific in about 1898. ... Construction of the Kenosha and Rockford Railway was encouraged by the city of Kenosha, Wisconsin and, the 75-mile line was opened on July 21, 1861. ... The Kettle Valley Railway (KVR) was a railway running through southern British Columbia up until 1961. ... Owned by Eastman Kodak Company, Kodak Park Railroad services Kodak Park in Rochester, New York. ...

L

The Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway, sometimes referred to as the Lake Shore, was a major part of the New York Central Railroads Water Level Route from Buffalo, New York to Chicago, Illinois, primarily along the south shore of Lake Erie and across northern Indiana. ... The Lake Superior and Ishpeming Railroad (LS & I), an American railroad offering service from Marquette, Michigan to nearby locations in Michigans Upper Peninsula, began operations in 1896. ... The Lake View & Collamer Railroad opened on 1 May 1875 on the east side of Cleveland. ... The Lancaster and Chester Railway The Lancaster and Chester Railway, or L&C as it is commonly refered is headquartered in Lancaster, South Carolina. ... The Laurel Fork Railway was a small, standard-gauge logging railroad that operated entirely in Carter County, Tennessee from 1912 to 1927. ... The Lehigh and Hudson River Railway (L&HR) was the smallest of the six component railroads that were merged into Conrail. ... The Lehigh and New England Railroad (AAR reporting mark LNE) was a connection from northeastern Pennsylvania towards the Poughkeepsie Bridge across the Hudson River. ... 1884 map of the Pennsylvania, Reading and Lehigh Valley Railroads The Delaware, Lehigh, Schuylkill and Susquehanna Railroad Company (AAR reporting mark LV) was incorporated April 21, 1846 in Pennsylvania. ... The Lexington & Arlington Railroad was built in 1843. ... The Livonia, Avon & Lakeville Railroad is a Class III short line railroad that operates in Livingston County and Monroe County in New York. ... The Loganville and Lawrenceville Railroad was founded in 1898 and operated a ten mile line between Loganville, GA and Lawrenceville, GA. It was owned by the Georgia, Carolina and Northern Railway which was incorporated into the Seaboard Air Line Railway in 1901. ... Corporate logo of the Los Angeles & Salt Lake Railroad. ... The Louisiana and Arkansas Railway (AAR reporting mark LA) was a railroad that operated in the states of Arkansas, Louisiana, and Texas. ... Chartered by the state of Kentucky in 1850, the L&N, as it was generally known, grew into one of the great success stories of American business. ...

M

In October 26, 1901 the Macomb and Western Illinois Railroad was chartered. ... The Macon and Birmingham Railway (M&B) was a railroad in the southeastern United States that operated from 1891 through 1922. ... In 1891, the Macon and Northern Railroad was established and took over the failed Covington and Macon Railroad. ... In 1891, the Macon and Northern Railroad was established and took over the failed Covington and Macon Railroad. ... The Mad River and Lake Erie Railroad was the first railroad to be built and operated in the U.S. state of Ohio. ... 1923 map The Maine Central Railroad was a railroad in central Maine. ... The Magma Arizona Railroad (AAR reporting mark MAA) was built by the Magma Copper Company and operated from 1920 - 1997. ... The Marietta and Cincinnati Railroad (M&C), now defunct, was a railroad of southern Ohio later absorbed by the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad (B&O). ... The Maryland and Pennsylvania Railroad, sometimes shortened to the Ma and Pa, operated between Baltimore, Maryland and York, Pennsylvania from 1901 until the middle of the twentieth century. ... The Memphis and Charleston Railroad completed in 1857 was the first railroad in the United States to link the Atlantic Ocean with the Mississippi River. ... Michigan Central Railroad operated in the states of Michigan, Indiana, Ontario, and Illinois in the United Statesand Canada. ... The Middletown and Cincinnati Railroad, now defunct, was a shortline railroad of Southwest Ohio running from Middletown, Butler County 14. ... The Midland Railroad was founded in 1915 by George M. Brinson. ... The Midland Terminal Railway construction started in 1893 to connect the Colorado Midland to Cripple Creek, Colorado. ... The Midland Valley extended from Fort Smith, Arkansas to Wichita, Kansas prior to its purchase by Missouri Pacifics Texas & Pacific. ... The Midville, Swainsboro and Red Bluff Railroad was chartered around 1888. ... The Midville, Swainsboro and Red Bluff Railroad was chartered around 1888. ... The Milwaukee Road, officially the Chicago, Milwaukee, St. ... Soo Line 6022, an EMD SD60, pulls a train through Wisconsin Dells, WI, June 20, 2004. ... The Minneapolis, Northfield and Southern Railway (the MN&S) was an 87 mile (140 km) long American short line railroad connecting Minneapolis and Northfield, Minnesota. ... The Minneapolis and St. ... 1879 map The Central Vermont Railway (AAR reporting marks CV) was a railroad that operated in the New England states of Connecticut, Massachusetts, Vermont, New York, as well as the Canadian province of Quebec. ... The Mississippi Central Railroad Company was a railroad in the southeast United States. ... The Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad (known as the MKT, or Katy) began as the Union Pacific Railway, Southern Branch (unrelated to the Union Pacific Railroad) in 1865. ... Missouri Pacific (MoPac; AAR reporting mark MP) was one of the first railroads in the United States west of the Mississippi River. ... The Gulf, Mobile and Ohio (AAR reporting mark GMO) was a railroad carrier in the central United States, with its primary routes from Chicago to Mobile, Alabama and Kansas City, Missouri. ... The Mobile and Ohio Railroad is a defunct U.S. railroad. ... The Modesto & Empire Traction (AAR reporting mark MET) is a Class III shortline operating in Californias San Joaquin Valley. ... The Monon Railroad (AAR reporting marks CIL, MON), also known as the Chicago, Indianapolis & Louisville Railway from 1897-1956, operated almost entirely within the state of Indiana. ... The Monongahela Connecting Railroad (MCRR) or Mon Conn is a small industrial railroad in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. ... The Monongahela Railway (AAR reporting mark MGA) was a coal-hauling short line railroad in Pennsylvania and West Virginia in the United States. ... The Montana Southern Railway, now defunct, was an American narrow-gauge railroad constructed between Divide, Montana and the mining district of Coolidge, Montana. ... The Montana Western Railway (MW) was an American railroad constructed between the towns of Conrad, Montana and Valier, Montana, a distance of 20 miles. ... The Montgomery Railroad was chartered January 20th, 1832, to build track between Montgomery, AL to the Chattahoochee River at Columbus, GA. In 1834, it was rechartered with the route going to West Point, AL instead of Columbus. ... The Montgomery Railroad was chartered January 20th, 1832, to build track between Montgomery, AL to the Chattahoochee River at Columbus, GA. In 1834, it was rechartered with the route going to West Point, AL instead of Columbus. ... Montour Railroad is a former short line railroad company operating passenger and freight service on standard gauge track in southwestern Pennsylvania. ... The Morristown and Erie Railway (M&E) is a freight short line based in Morristown, New Jersey. ... The Mound City and Eastern Railway was a small, short-lived railroad that operated in McPherson County, South Dakota. ... One of the 24 inch gauge 4-4-0 locomotives of the Mt Gretna Narrow Gauge Railway. ... The Mount Savage Railroad was a railroad operated by the Mount Savage Coal and Iron Company of Mount Savage, Maryland. ...

N

NC&StL Steam Engine 576, now displayed in Centennial Park in Nashville This famous Southern United States railroad began as the Nashville and Chattanooga Railroad, chartered in Nashville in December 1845 and was the first railway to operate in the state of Tennessee. ... The Tennessee Central Railway Company was founded in 1884 as The Nashville and Knoxville Railroad Company. ... This company began as Nashville and Chattanooga Railroad Company, chartered in Nashville in 1845 and one of the first railways to operate in the state. ... The Nebraska, Iola, Topeka and Memphis Railroad was founded June 17, 1881 and operated sixteen miles between Walnut, KS and Girard, KS. It may have originally been planned as an Frisco Railroad branch extension from Joplin, MO. On January 1, 1884 it was leased by the Southern Kansas Railroad but... The Nebraska Midland Railroad was a narrow gauge steam line that was established in 1973 in North Platte, Nebraska. ... The New London Northern Railroad was a part of the Central Vermont Railway from New London, Connecticut north to Brattleboro, Vermont. ... The Central Vermont Railway (AAR reporting mark CV) was a railroad that operated in the New England states of Connecticut, Massachusetts, Vermont, New York, as well as the Canadian province of Quebec. ... The Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway (AAR reporting marks ATSF), often abbreviated as Santa Fe, was one of the largest railroads in the United States. ... The Illinois Central (AAR reporting mark IC), sometimes called the Main Line of Mid-America, was a railroad carrier in the central United States, with its primary routes connecting Chicago, Illinois with New Orleans, Louisiana and Birmingham, Alabama. ... The New Orleans, Opelousas and Great Western Railroad was established in 1852 by the Louisiana legislature. ... For the current company, see New York Central Lines LLC. The New York Central Railroad (AAR reporting marks NYC), known simply as the New York Central in its publicity, was a railroad operating in the Northeastern United States. ... The New York Central Railroad, known simply as the New York Central in its publicity and with the AAR reporting mark of NYC, was a railroad operating in the North-Eastern United States. ... The New York, Chicago and St. ... The New York and Harlem Railroad (now the Metro-North Railroad Harlem Line) was one of the first railroads in the United States, and possibly the first street railway, running north from Lower Manhattan to and beyond Harlem. ... The Long Beach Branch is an electrified rail line and service owned and operated by the Long Island Rail Road in the U.S. state of New York. ... LIRR redirects here. ... The Long Beach Branch is an electrified rail line and service owned and operated by the Long Island Rail Road in the U.S. state of New York. ... The Ulster and Delaware Railroad Company (U&D) was a small Class III railroad located in New York State, headquartered in Rondout and founded in 1866. ... The New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad (AAR reporting mark NH) was a railroad that operated in the northeast United States. ... The New York, Ontario and Western Railway, more commonly known as the O&W or NYO&W, was a regional railroad with origins in 1868, lasting until 1957 when it was ordered liquidated by a US bankruptcy judge. ... Norfolk and Petersburg Railroad map, circa 1858-1870, issued by William Mahone, President The Norfolk and Petersburg Railroad was built between Norfolk and Petersburg, Virginia and was completed by 1858. ... Norfolk and Western Railway (AAR reporting mark: NW), a US class 1 railroad, was formed by more than 200 railroad mergers between 1838 and 1982. ... The Norfolk, Franklin & Danville (AAR reporting mark NFD) at one time operated 250 miles of track between Norfolk, Virginia and Danville, Virginia. ... The North and South Railroad was chartered in 1871 to build a railroad from Columbus, GA to Rome, GA. In 1874, after building about 20 miles, the railroad went bankrupt and was reorganized as the Columbus and Rome Railway. ... The North and South Railway (N&S), now defunct, was an American railroad planned for construction between Casper, Wyoming and Miles City, Montana, via Sheridan, Wyoming. ... In 1854, the Georgia General Assembly passed an act for the establishment of a rail line from Athens to Clayton, Georgia. ... The Northern Central Railway was a rail line connecting Baltimore, Maryland with Sunbury, Pennsylvania. ... The Northern Pacific Railway (AAR reporting marks NP) was a railway that operated in the north-central region of the United States. ... Northern Vermont Railroad. ... The Northwestern Pacific Railroad (AAR reporting mark NWP) was a regional railroad serving the Redwood Empire of Northern California. ...

O

  • Oahu Railway
  • Oakley and Colby Railway
  • Oberlin, Colby, Winona and Granada Railroad
  • Ocilla and Irwinville Railroad
  • Ocilla and Valdosta Railroad
  • Ocilla, Pinebloom, and Valdosta Railway
  • Oconee and Western Railroad
  • Offerman and Western Railroad
  • Ohio River and Western Railroad
  • Oklahoma Central Railroad
  • Oklahoma City-Ada-Atoka Railway (OCAA)
  • Oklahoma, Kansas and Northern Railway
  • Olathe and Southern Kansas Railroad
  • Olathe, Winfield and Arkansas City Railway
  • Old Augusta Railroad
  • Omaha and Gulf Railway
  • Omaha and Republican Valley Railway
  • Omaha and Southwestern Rail Road
  • Omaha and Southwestern Railway
  • Omaha, Abilene and Wichita Railway
  • Omaha and Gulf Railway
  • Omaha and Mexican Air Line Railway
  • Omaha, Garden City and Pacific Railway
  • Omaha, Garden City and Southwestern Railway
  • Omaha, Hays City and Southwestern Railway
  • Omaha, Horace and Southwestern Railway
  • Omaha, Kansas and El Paso Railroad
  • Omaha, Kansas and Gulf Railway
  • Omaha, Kansas and Southern Railway
  • Omaha, Kansas Central and Galveston Railroad
  • Omaha, Kingman and El Paso Railroad
  • Omaha, Lincoln, Hartland and El Paso Railroad
  • Omaha, Ness City and Mexican Railway
  • Omaha Southern Railroad
  • Omaha, Superior and Southwestern Railway
  • Opelika and Talladega Railroad
  • Opelika and Tuscumbia Railroad
  • Oregon and California Railroad
  • Oregon Electric Railroad (OER)
  • Oregon, Pacific and Eastern Railway (OP&E)
  • Oregon Short Line (OSL)
  • Osage, Neosho and Walnut Valley Railroad
  • Oswego and Trinidad Railway
  • Oswego, Carthage, Mount Vernon and Springfield Railway
  • Oswego, Fort Scott and Sedalia Railroad
  • Oswego, Parker and El Paso Railroad
  • Ottawa and Topeka Railway
  • Ottawa, Burlingame and Council Grove Railroad
  • Ottawa, Burlingame and Junction City Railroad
  • Ottawa, Emporia and Western Railroad
  • Ottawa, Lyndon and Manhattan Railroad
  • Ottawa North and South Railway
  • Ottawa, Osage City and Council Grove Railroad
  • Ottawa, Topeka and Northern Railway
  • Ottawa, Quenemo and Emporia Railroad

The Oahu Railway and Land Company, or OR&L, was a narrow gauge common carrier railroad that served much of the Hawaiian island of O‘ahu until its dissolution in 1947. ... The Ocilla and Irwinville Railroad began operations in 1900, operating a 10 mile line between Ocilla, GA and Irwinville, GA. It had only one locomotive and the railroad was purchased in 1903 by the Brunswick and Birmingham Railway. ... Chartered in 1903, the Ocilla and Valdosta Railroad had originally planned on building a railroad from Macon, GA to Valdosta, GA. In 1905 it acquired track between Broxton, GA and Hazlehurst, GA from the Broxton, Hazlehurst and Savannah Railroad. ... Organized in 1892, the Oconee and Western Railroad was founded to take over operations of the failed Empire and Dublin Railroad. ... The Oklahoma City-Ada-Atoka Railway(OCAA) was formed from trackage from Oklahoma City, Oklahoma to Atoka, Oklahoma via Shawnee, Oklahoma and Ada, Oklahoma that was not included in the 1923 reorganization of the Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad. ... The Omaha and Republican Valley Railway was a branch line of the Union Pacific that crossed Nebraska. ... The Omaha and Southwestern Rail Road carried the Burlington Railroad from the west to Omaha, Nebraska starting in the 1860s. ... The Omaha, Abilene and Wichita Railway was built as an extension of the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railway. ... The Omaha Southern Railroad was a subsidiary corporation owned by the Missouri Pacific Railroad Company. ... The Savannah and Memphis Railroad was originally founded as the Opelika and Talladega Railroad in 1854. ... The Savannah and Memphis Railroad was originally founded as the Opelika and Talladega Railroad in 1854. ... The Oregon and California Railroad was formed from the Oregon Central Rail Road when it was the first to operate a 20 mile stretch south of Portland in 1869. ... Oregon Electric Railroad (OERR) was a railroad line that was once part of the Spokane, Portland and Seattle Railway. ... The Oregon, Pacific and Eastern Railway (AAR reporting marks OPE) is a short line railroad that began in 1904 as the Oregon and Southeastern Railroad (O&SE). ... The Oregon Short Line Railroad, was established to construct a standard gauge line from Granger, Wyoming, through Idaho to a junction in Huntington, Oregon, with the Oregon Railroad and Navigation Company, on April 14, 1881. ...

P

  • Palatine, Lake Zurich and Wauconda Railroad (PLZ&W)
  • Pacific and Pueblo City Railroad
  • Pacific Electric Railway
  • Pacific Railway Company in Nebraska
  • Paola and Fall River Railroad
  • Paola and Fall River Railway
  • Paola, Garnett, Burlington and Santa Fe Railway
  • Palermo and Lecompton Railroad
  • Palermo and St. Joseph Railroad
  • Parsons and Memphis Railroad
  • Parsons and Pacific Railroad
  • Parsons and Santa Fe Railway
  • Parsons and Solomon City Railroad
  • Parsons and Southwestern Railroad
  • Parsons and Western Railway
  • Parsons Belt Line Railroad
  • Parsons, Cimarron, Guthrie and Gulf Railway
  • Parsons, Girard and Arcadia Railway
  • Parsons, Independence and Southwestern Railway
  • Parsons, Independence and Western Railroad
  • Parsons, La Junta and Las Vegas Railroad
  • Parsons, Newton and Ellsworth Railway
  • Parsons, Neodesha and Western Railroad
  • Parsons, North Platte and Denver Railroad
  • Parsons Terminal Railroad
  • Parsons, Walnut Valley and Southwestern Railway
  • Parsons, Wichita and Western Railroad
  • Pawnee Valley and Denver Railroad
  • Peabody Short Line (PSL)
  • Peach Bottom Railroad
  • Peach Bottom Railway
  • Peninsula Railroad
  • Penn Central (PC)
  • Pennsylvania-Reading Seashore Lines (PRSL) (joint venture of Pennsylvania Railroad and Reading Railroad)
  • Pennsylvania Railroad (PRR, "Pennsy")
  • Pensacola, Ness City and Puget Sound Railway
  • People's Railroad and Telegraph Company
  • Peoples Railway of Kansas
  • Peoria and Pekin Union Railway (P&PU)
  • Peoria Railway
  • Pere Marquette Railroad (PM)
  • Perkiomen Railroad
  • Perryville and Grasshopper Valley Railway
  • Petersburg Railroad
  • Philadelphia and Reading Railroad
  • Pickens Railroad
  • Pigeon Mountain Route
  • Piedmont and Northern Railway (PN)
  • Pioneer Industrial Railway (PRY)
  • Pittsburg and Columbus Railway
  • Pittsburg and Weir City Railway
  • Pittsburg, Baxter Springs and Galveston Railway
  • Pittsburg, Calamine and Newport Railway
  • Pittsburg, Fort Scott and Chicago Railway
  • Pittsburg, Fort Smith and Southern Railroad
  • Pittsburg, Independence and Oklahoma Railroad
  • Pittsburg Railroad
  • Pittsburg, Weir and Columbus Railway
  • Pittsburgh and Lake Erie Railroad (PLE)
  • Pittsburgh and Shawmut Railroad (PS)
  • Pittsburgh and West Virginia Railway (P&WV)
  • Pittsburgh, Columbus and Fort Smith Railway
  • Pittsburgh, Shawmut and Northern Railroad (PS&N)
  • Piqua Branch of M-K-T Railway
  • Pleasant Hill and DeSoto Railroad
  • Pleasanton, LeRoy and Newton Railroad
  • Port Royal and Augusta Railway
  • Port Royal and Western Carolina Railway
  • Prairie City and Missouri State Line Railroad
  • Pratt, Salt Plains and Rio Grande Railroad
  • Preston, Salina and Denver Railroad

The Palatine, Lake Zurich and Wauconda Railroad (PLZ&W) was an 11 mile shortline railroad built to connect Palatine, IL to Lake Zurich and Wauconda. ... The Pacific Electric Railway main company depot at Sixth Street and Main Street in downtown Los Angeles, circa 1910. ... The Peach Bottom Railway was a 19th-century narrow gauge railroad in Pennsylvania, intended to haul coal from the Broad Top fields to Philadelphia, but succeeded only in establishing two local short lines. ... The Penn Central Transportation Company, normally called Penn Central, was an American railroad company, headquartered in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and formed by the merger on February 1, 1968 of the Pennsylvania Railroad and the New York Central Railroad; the New Haven was added to the merger at the insistence of the... Pennsylvania-Reading Seashore Lines (PRSL) was a joint venture of the Pennsylvania Railroad and Reading Railroad in southern New Jersey. ... 1893 map The Pennsylvania Railroad (AAR reporting mark PRR) was an American railroad that was founded in 1846 and merged in 1968 into Penn Central Transportation. ... The Peoria and Pekin Union Railway (AAR reporting mark PPU) began operating in 1881 and still runs today. ... The Pere Marquette Railroad (AAR reporting mark: PM) was a railroad that operated in the Great Lakes region of the United States. ... Petersburg Railroad was chartered in 1830 and opened in 1833. ... 1923 map The Reading Company (AAR reporting marks RDG), usually called the Reading Railroad, and officially known as the Philadelphia and Reading Rail Road and then the Philadelphia and Reading Railway until 1924, operated in southeast Pennsylvania and neighboring states. ... The Chattanooga Southern Railway was founded in 1890 and began operations in 1891. ... // The Piedmont & Northern Railway was a heavy electric interurban company operating over two disconnected divisions in North and South Carolina, respectively. ... The Pittsburgh and Lake Erie Railroad (P&LE) (AAR reporting mark PLE), also known as the Little Giant, was formed on May 11, 1875. ... The Pittsburg and Shawmut Railroad Company (AAR reporting mark PSR) also known as the Shawmut Line, was a former short line railroad company operating passenger and freight service on standard gauge track in central and southwestern Pennsylvania. ... The Pittsburgh and West Virginia Railway was a railroad in the Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and Wheeling, West Virginia areas. ... The Pittsburg, Shawmut and Northern Railroad (AAR reporting mark PSN) also known as the Shawmut Line, was a former short line railroad company operating passenger and freight service on standard gauge track in central Pennsylvania and western New York. ...

Q

  • Quanah, Acme and Pacific Railway (QA&P)

R

Philadelphia and Reading Railroad Categories: Rail stubs | Philadelphia and Reading Railroad ... The Rhinebeck & Connecticut Railroad was chartered on June 29, 1870 for the purpose of building a railroad from Rhinecliff on the Hudson River east to the Connecticut state line. ... The Richmond, Fredericksburg, and Potomac Railroad (AAR reporting mark RFP) was a railroad connecting Richmond, Virginia to Washington, DC. It is now a portion of the CSX Transportation system. ... The Richmond & Danville Railroad was chartered in Virginia in the United States in 1847. ... Richmond and Petersburg Railroad was chartered in 1836 and opened in 1838. ... The Reidsville and Southeastern Railroad was founded in 1905 and ran a 36 mile line between Reidsville, GA and Ludowici, GA. In 1906 it became part of a merger of several railroads to form the Georgia Coast and Piedmont Railroad. ... Rio Grande Industries was the diversified parent company, headquartered in Denver, of the Rio Grande. ... The Rio Grande Southern Railroad (RGS) was a narrow gauge railroad which ran from Durango to Ridgway in the western part of the US state of Colorado. ... The Rome, Watertown and Ogdensburg Railroad, commonly known as The Hojack Line, operated along the south shore of Lake Ontario, from Niagara Falls, New York to Oswego, New York. ... The Ulster and Delaware Railroad Company (U&D) was a small Class III railroad located in New York State, headquartered in Rondout and founded in 1866. ... The Roswell Railroad was a narrow-gauge railroad that ran from south of Roswell, Georgia to Chamblee from 1881 until 1921. ... The Rutland Railroad was a small railroad in the north-eastern United States, primarily in the state of Vermont but extending into the state of New York. ...

S

  • St. Johnsburg and Lake Champlain Railroad
  • St. Joseph and Denver City Railroad of 1862
  • St. Joseph and Denver City Railroad of 1866
  • St. Joseph and Grand Island Railroad
  • St. Joseph and St. George Railroad
  • St. Joseph and Topeka Railway
  • St. Joseph and Western Railroad
  • St. Joseph Bridge Building Company
  • St. Joseph, Hanover and Solomon Valley Railroad
  • St. Joseph, Hanover and Southwestern Railroad
  • St. Joseph, Highland and Northwestern Railway
  • St. Joseph, Joplin and Gulf Railroad
  • St. Joseph, Kansas and Colorado Railroad
  • St. Joseph, Kansas and Denver Railway
  • St. Joseph, Kansas and Texas Pacific Railway
  • St. Joseph, Kansas and Texas Railway
  • St. Joseph, Sumner and Lawrence Railroad
  • St. Joseph, Wamego and Council Grove Railway
  • St. Joseph, Washington and Western Railroad
  • St. Louis and Colorado Railway
  • St. Louis and Emporia Railroad
  • St. Louis and Kansas Central Railway
  • St. Louis and Santa Fe Railroad
  • St. Louis and Southern Kansas Railroad
  • St. Louis and Southern Kansas Railway
  • St. Louis and New Mexico Railway
  • St. Louis, Anthony and Salt Plains Railroad
  • St. Louis, Baxter Springs and Mexican Railroad
  • St. Louis, Baxter Springs and Oklahoma Railway
  • St. Louis, Baxter Springs and Santa Fe Railroad
  • St. Louis, Brownsville and Mexico Railway
  • St. Louis, Emporia and Denver Railway
  • St. Louis, Emporia and Western Railway
  • St. Louis, Fort Scott and Colorado Narrow Gauge Railway
  • St. Louis, Fort Scott and Neosho Railroad
  • St. Louis, Fort Scott and Northwestern Railroad
  • St. Louis, Fort Scott and Wichita Railroad
  • St. Louis, Fort Scott, Iola and Western Railway
  • St. Louis, Fredonia and Denver Railway
  • St. Louis, Humboldt and Southwestern Railway
  • St. Louis, Hutchinson and Denver Railway
  • St. Louis, Hutchinson and Western Railroad
  • St. Louis, Iron Mountain and Southern Railway
  • St. Louis, Jefferson County and Kansas Railway
  • St. Louis, Kansas and Arizona Railway
  • St. Louis, Kansas and Colorado Narrow Gauge Railway
  • St. Louis, Kansas and Northwestern Railroad
  • St. Louis, Kansas and Southwestern Railway
  • St. Louis, Kansas City and Northern Railroad
  • St. Louis, Kansas City and Western Railroad
  • St. Louis, Lawrence and Denver Railroad
  • St. Louis, Lawrence and Denver Railroad (Lawrence Branch) Co.
  • St. Louis, Lawrence and Western Railroad
  • St. Louis, Newton and Denver Railway
  • St. Louis, Oklahoma and Southwestern Railway
  • St. Louis, Osage City and Walnut Valley Railroad
  • St. Louis, Osage Valley and Northwestern Railway
  • St. Louis, Oswego and Colorado Railroad
  • St. Louis, Oswego and Southern Kansas Railroad
  • St. Louis, Ottawa and Western Railway
  • St. Louis, Pittsburg and Southern Railway
  • St. Louis, St. Joseph and Nebraska Railroad
  • St. Louis - San Francisco Railway (SLSF or Frisco)
  • St. Louis Southwestern Railway (SSW or Cotton Belt)
  • St. Louis, Topeka and Northerwestern Railway
  • St. Louis, Wichita and Western Railroad
  • St. Louis, Wichita and Northwestern Railway
  • St. Louis, Wichita, Hays City and Northwestern Railway
  • St. Marys and Kingsland Railroad
  • St. Paul and El Dorado Railroad
  • Sacramento Northern Railway (SN)
  • Salina and Northwestern Railroad
  • Salina and Northwestern Railway
  • Salina and Santa Fe Railway
  • Salina and South Western Railway
  • Salina, Atlanta and Raymond Railroad
  • Salina, Atlanta and Southwestern Railroad
  • Salina, Columbus and Southeastern Railroad
  • Salina, Hutchinson and Southwestern Railroad
  • Salina, Hutchinson and Texas Railroad
  • Salina, Lincoln and Fremont Railroad
  • Salina, Lincoln and Pacific Railway
  • Salina, Lincoln and Western Railway
  • Salina, Minneapolis and Northern Railroad
  • Salina Northern Railroad
  • Salina, Sedgwick and Southern Railway
  • Salina, Sterling and El Paso Railroad
  • Salina, Tipton and Northern Railroad
  • Saline and Solomon Valley Railway and Telegraph Company
  • Sandersville Railroad
  • Sandy River and Rangeley Lakes Railroad
  • San Diego and Arizona Railway (SD&A)
  • San Diego and Arizona Eastern Railway (SDAE)
  • San Diego Northern Railway (SDNR)
  • San Francisco and San Jose Railroad (SF&SJ)
  • San Francisco, St. Joseph and St. Louis Railway
  • San Luis Valley Southern Railway
  • Savannah, Americus and Montgomery Railway
  • Savannah and Atlanta Railway (SA)
  • Savannah and Charleston Railroad
  • Savannah and Columbus Railroad
  • Savannah and Memphis Railroad
  • Savannah and Northwestern Railway
  • Savannah and Statesboro Railway
  • Savannah and Western Railroad
  • Savannah, Augusta and Northern Railway
  • Savannah, Griffin and North Alabama Railroad (SG&NA)
  • Savannah, Florida and Western Railroad
  • Savannah Short Line
  • Savannah Valley Railroad
  • Sawyer River Railroad
  • Scott City Northern Railway
  • Seaboard Air Line Belt Railroad
  • Seaboard Air Line Railroad (SAL)
  • Seaboard and Roanoke Railroad
  • Seaboard Coast Line Railroad (SCL)
  • Seaboard System Railroad (SBD)
  • Seattle, Lake Shore and Eastern Railway (SLS&E)
  • Sedan and Moline Railway
  • Sedgwick and Cimarron Valley Railroad
  • Sedgwick and Western Railroad
  • Sedgwick, Kingman and Medicine Lodge Railroad
  • Selma, Rome and Dalton Railroad
  • Seneca and Nemaha Valley Railway
  • Seneca, Onaga and Manhattan Railway
  • Shepaug, Litchfield and Northern Railroad
  • Sheboygan and Fond du Lac Railroad
  • Sheboygan and Mississippi Railroad
  • Shelburne Falls and Colrain Railway (SF&C) [8]
  • Short Creek and Joplin Railroad
  • Smithtown and Port Jefferson Railroad
  • Smoky Hill Railway
  • Solomon, Arkansas Valley and Eastern Railway
  • Solomon Railroad
  • Solomon Valley and Republican River Railroad
  • Solomon Valley and Republican River Railway
  • Solomon Valley, Gypsum and Gulf Railway
  • Solomon Valley, Phillipsburg and Northern Railroad
  • Soo Line Railroad (Also known as the Minneapolis, St. Paul and Sault Ste. Marie Railway) (SOO)
  • South Buffalo Railway
  • South Central Tennessee Railroad
  • South Carolina and Georgia Railroad
  • South Carolina Canal and Rail Road Company
  • South Carolina Rail Road
  • South Carolina Railway
  • South Kansas and Western Railroad
  • South Kansas Railroad
  • South Omaha Railroad
  • South Side Railroad
  • Southeast Kansas Railway
  • Southern Kansas and Pacific Railroad
  • Southern Kansas and Panhandle Railroad
  • Southern Kansas Industrial Belt Railway
  • Southern Kansas Rail Road Company
  • Southern Kansas Railroad
  • Southern Kansas Railway
  • Southern Pacific Railroad (SP)
  • Southern Railway (Southern, later NS with N&W)
  • Southwestern Kansas and Colorado Railroad
  • Southwestern Mineral Railway
  • Southwestern Railroad of Kansas
  • Spokane, Portland and Seattle Railway (SP&S)
  • Spokane International (SI)
  • Spring Grove, Avondale and Cincinnati Railway
  • Springfield and Memphis Railroad
  • Springfield and Western Missouri Railroad
  • Springfield Western and Southern Railroad Company of Missouri
  • Springfield, Girard and Arkansas Valley Railroad
  • State Line, Emporia and Southwestern Railway
  • State Line, Osawatomie and Fort Union Railroad
  • State Line, Oswego and Independence Railway
  • State Line, Oswego and Southern Kansas Railway
  • Statesboro Northern Railway
  • Steelton and Highspire Railroad (SH) [9]
  • Stillmore Air Line Railway
  • Stockton, Hill City and Western Railway
  • Stockyards and Northwestern Railway
  • Sumner, Anthony and Western Railroad
  • Sumner, Manhattan and Fort Riley Railroad
  • Superior, Hutchinson and Little Rock Railroad
  • Susquehanna and New York Railroad
  • Suwanee River Route
  • Swatara Railroad

In 1879 construction of tracks connecting the Union Pacifics main line at Grand Island with the St. ... The St. ... The St. ... The St. ... The Sacramento Northern Railway began as an electric interurban railway system in the U.S. state of California, operating under that name between 1918 and 1983. ... Originally chartered in 1893 as a subsidiary of the Central of Georgia Railroad, the Sandersville Railroad (AAR reporting mark: SAN) originally operated from Tennille, GA to Sandersville, GA. It was extended North five miles from Sandersville to a kaolin mine and processing plants. ... The Sandy River and Rangeley Lakes Railroad operated approximately 132 miles (212 km) of 2 foot (610 mm) gauge railroad in Franklin County, Maine, USA. Categories: Rail stubs | Narrow gauge railways ... The San Diego & Arizona Railway Company was a short-line American railroad (AAR reporting mark SDA) founded by sugar heir, developer, and entrepreneur John D. Spreckels, and dubbed The Impossible Railroad by many engineers of its day due to the immense logistical challenges involved. ... The San Diego & Arizona Eastern Railway Company is a short-line American railroad (AAR reporting mark SDAE) originally founded in 1906 as the San Diego & Arizona Railway Company (SD&A) by sugar heir, developer, and entrepreneur John D. Spreckels. ... The San Diego Coaster, or Coaster, is a commuter rail service administered by North County Transit District of San Diego County, California and operated by Amtrak. ... The San Francisco and San Jose Railroad was a railroad incorporated on August 18, 1860 and consists of 49. ... The Savannah, Americus and Montgomery Railway was founded in 1888 to take over operations from the Americus, Preston and Lumpkin Railroad which ran from Louvale, GA to Abbeville, GA. In 1890, the line extended itself from Abbeville to Lyons, GA and from Louvale to the Chattahoochee River and connected with... The Charleston and Savannah Railway was originally chartered in 1854 as the Charleston and Savannah Railroad. ... The Savannah and Memphis Railroad was originally founded as the Opelika and Talladega Railroad in 1854. ... The Savannah and Statesboro Railway began in 1897 through a reorganization of the Cuyler and Woodburn Railroad. ... The Savannah and Western Railroad began in 1888 from a consolidation of seven different railroads owned by the Central of Georgia Railroad. ... The Savannah, Augusta and Northern Railway began operations around 1908, running from Statesboro, GA to Garfield, GA. It was in the process of building from Garfield to Stevens Crossing, GA when in went into receivership and was sold to new owners around 1910. ... The Georgia and Alabama Railroad was formed in 1895 from the failed Savannah, Americus and Montgomery Railway. ... Sawyer River Railroad - a lumber railroad that operated along the Sawyer River in Livermore, New Hampshire from 1877-1928. ... The Seaboard Air Line Railroad (AAR reporting mark SAL) was an American railroad that existed between 1880s and 1967, when it merged with the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad, its longtime rival, to form the Seaboard Coast Line Railroad. ... Portsmouth and Weldon Railroad was organized in 1833 to extend from the area of the rapids of the Roanoke River at its fall line near Weldon, North Carolina to Portsmouth, Virginia. ... Categories: Stub | Defunct companies | Defunct railroad companies of the United States | District of Columbia railroads | Florida railroads | Georgia railroads | North Carolina railroads | South Carolina railroads | Virginia railroads ... Categories: Stub | Defunct railroad companies of the United States | Defunct companies | District of Columbia railroads | Florida railroads | Georgia railroads | North Carolina railroads | South Carolina railroads | Virginia railroads ... The Seattle, Lake Shore and Eastern Railway (SLS&E) was a railroad founded in Seattle, Washington (April 28, 1885), with three tiers of purposes: Build and run the initial line to the town of Ballard, toward immediate results and returns to investors; exploit resources east in the valleys, foothills, Cascade... The Port Jefferson Branch is a rail line and service owned and operated by the Long Island Rail Road in the U.S. state of New York. ... Categories: Rail stubs | Defunct railroad companies of the United States | Illinois railroads | Michigan railroads | Minnesota railroads | North Dakota railroads | South Dakota railroads | Wisconsin railroads ... Soo Line 6022, an EMD SD60, pulls a train through Wisconsin Dells, WI, June 20, 2004. ... The South Buffalo Railway operates more than fifty miles of railway lines along the southeast shore of Lake Erie. ... In 1843, the South Carolina Canal and Railroad Company and the Louisville, Cincinnati and Charleston Railroad merged to form the South Carolina Railroad. ... Chartered in 1827, the South Carolina Canal and Rail Road Company ran scheduled steam service over its 136 mile line from Charleston, SC to Hamburg, SC beginning in 1833. ... The South Carolina Rail Road was the direct successor of the South Carolina Canal and Rail Road Company, which had operated its 136 mile line from Charleston, SC to Hamburg, SC since 1833. ... In 1843, the South Carolina Canal and Railroad Company and the Louisville, Cincinnati and Charleston Railroad merged to form the South Carolina Railroad. ... Originally the Union Stock Yards Company of Omaha, the South Omaha Railroad started service in July, 1927, operating about 17 miles of track in the Omaha, NE area. ... South Side Railroad - Wikipedia /**/ @import /skins-1. ... The Southern Pacific Railroad (AAR reporting marks SP) was an American railroad. ... The Southern Railway (AAR reporting mark SOU) was the product of nearly 150 predecessor lines that were combined, reorganized and recombined beginning in the 1830s, formally becoming the Southern Railway in 1894. ... Spokane, Portland & Seattle Railway coach at Snoqualmie, Washington (Northwest Railway Museum collection) The Spokane, Portland and Seattle Railway was a United States-based railroad incorporated in 1905. ... The Spring Grove, Avondale and Cincinnati Railway, now defunct, was a one and one-quarter mile long railroad of Hamilton County, Ohio that provided access to the Cincinnati Zoo. ... Around 1924, the Statesboro Northern Railway began operating on about 44 miles of the former Midland Railway (Georgia) between Statesboro, GA and Stevens Crossing, GA. Three years later the SN was merged into the Georgia and Florida Railway. ... The Susquehanna & New York Railroad (S&NY) was a short line railroad that connected the Lehigh Valley Railroad at Towanda, Pennsylvania with the Pennsylvania Railroad at Marsh Hill allowing freight and passengers to travel between West Williamsport and Towanda by rail rather than using the Susquehanna River. ... Also known as the Suwanee River Route from it crossing of the Suwanee River, the Georgia Southern and Florida Railroad was founded in 1885 and began operations between Macon, GA and Valdosta, GA in 1889, extending to Palatka, FL in 1890. ... The Swatara and Good Spring Railroad was incorporated in 1831 with Judge William Donaldson as president. ...

T

  • Tallulah Falls Railway
  • Tennessee, Alabama and Georgia Railroad
  • Tennessee, Alabama and Georgia Railway (TAG)
  • Tennessee Central Railway
  • Terminal Railroad Association (TRRA)
  • Texas and Pacific Railway (TP)
  • Texas Mexican Railway (TM)
  • Texas Transportation Company (TXTC)
  • Texas, Wellington and Northeastern Railway
  • Tidewater Railway
  • Tifton and Northeastern Railroad
  • Tifton, Thomasville and Gulf Railway
  • Toledo and Ohio Central Extension Railroad
  • Toledo, Peoria and Western Railway (TP&W)
  • Tonawanda Island Railroad (TIRL)
  • Tonawanda Valley and Cuba
  • Tonopah and Goldfield Railroad (T&G)
  • Tonopah and Tidewater Railroad (T&T)
  • Topeka, Amoret and Southern Railway
  • Topeka and Colorado Railway
  • Topeka and Denver Air Line Railway
  • Topeka and Emporia Railroad
  • Topeka and Fort Scott Railroad
  • Topeka and Lincoln Railroad
  • Topeka and Lincoln Railway
  • Topeka and New Orleans Air Line Railroad
  • Topeka and Northern Railway
  • Topeka and Northwestern Narrow Gauge Railway
  • Topeka and Northwestern Railroad
  • Topeka and Southern Kansas Railroad
  • Topeka and Southwestern Narrow Gauge Railway
  • Topeka and Southwestern Railroad
  • Topeka and Ottawa Railway
  • Topeka and Western Railway
  • Topeka, Blue Valley and Northwestern Railway
  • Topeka, Burlington and Verdigris Railroad
  • Topeka, Cottonwood and Walnut Valley Railway
  • Topeka, Council Grove and Southwestern Railway
  • Topeka, Fort Scott and Memphis Railway
  • Topeka, Frankfort and Marysville Railway
  • Topeka, Frankfort and Northwestern Railroad
  • Topeka, Hiawatha and Chicago Railroad
  • Topeka, Hiawatha and Northeastern Railway
  • Topeka, Humboldt and Southeastern Railway
  • Topeka, Leroy and Southern Railway
  • Topeka, Lyndon and Burlington Railroad
  • Topeka, Manhattan and Washington Railroad
  • Topeka, Mound City and Memphis Railway
  • Topeka, Northwestern and Pacific Railway
  • Topeka, Omaha and Northern Railway
  • Topeka, Ottawa and Fort Scott Railroad
  • Topeka, Ottawa and Fort Scott Railway
  • Topeka, Seneca and Northern Railway
  • Topeka, Soldier Creek and Nebraska Railroad
  • Topeka South-Western Railway
  • Topeka, Stockton and Northwestern Railroad
  • Topeka, Western and Pacific Railroad
  • Topeka Western Railway
  • Topeka, Westmoreland and Waterville Railroad
  • Toronto, Hamilton and Buffalo Railway (TH&B)
  • Trinidad, Caldwell and Arkansas Railroad
  • Troy and Iowa Point Railroad
  • Twin Branch Railroad (Spur of Elkhart & Western RR (E&W))

Around the 1910s, the Tallulah Falls Railway was a railroad based in Tallulah Falls, Georgia. ... TA&G Railway 80, the , is currently working the Trewsville Yard on the Trewsville Soutehrn Railroad. ... The Tennessee, Alabama and Georgia Railroad was created through a reorganization of the Chattanooga Southern Railway in 1911. ... The Tennessee Central Railway Company was founded in 1884 as The Nashville and Knoxville Railroad Company. ... The Texas and Pacific Railway Company (known as the T&P) was created by federal charter in 1871 with the purpose of building a southern transcontinental railroad between Marshall, Texas and San Diego, California. ... On 1 January 2005, Kansas City Southern (KCS) took control of The Texas Mexican Railway Company (Tex Mex) and the U.S. portion of the International Bridge in Laredo, Texas. ... The Texas Transportation Company (AAR reporting mark TXTC)) was a Class III short-line railroad in San Antonio, Texas that serviced the Pearl Brewery. ... The Tidewater Railway was formed in 1904 as an intrastate railroad located in Virginia in the United States by William N. Page, a civil engineer and entrepreneur and his silent partner, millionaire industrialist Henry Huttleston Rogers of Standard Oil fame. ... The Tifton and Northeastern Railroad was chartered in 1891 and built a 25 mile line from Tifton, GA to Fitzgerald, GA in 1896. ... The Tifton, Thomasville and Gulf Railway was chartered in 1897 and operated from Tifton, GA to Thomasville, GA in 1900. ... Toledo Peoria & Western Railway is currently a short-line railroad that operates from Mapleton, IL to Peoria across Illinois to Logansport, IN and includes a branch line between Logansport to Winamac, IN. TPW has trackage rights between Galesburg, IL and Peoria and between Logansport to Kokomo, IN. Traffic includes agricultural... The Tonawanda Island Railroad (AAR reporting mark TIRL) operated on a 1. ... The Tonopah and Tidewater Railroad was a a class II railroad extending through remote reaches of the Mojave Desert at Ludlow, California, through Death Valley and terminating at the mining camps of southwestern Nevada. ... The Toronto, Hamilton and Buffalo Railway (TH&B; AAR reporting mark THB) was a railway that ran in Southern Ontario. ...

U

The Uinta (you-IN-ta) Railway was founded in 1902 as a wholy owned subsidary of the Gilson Asphaltum Co. ... The Ulster and Delaware Railroad Company (U&D) was a small Class I railroad located in New York State and founded in 1866. ... The following railroads have been named Union Railroad or Union Railway, usually because they connected or merged several other railroads. ... The Union Stockyards Railroad Company in Omaha, Nebraska was established as an independent line built to accommodate the Union Stockyards. ... A map of the UNJ and P&T. The United New Jersey Railroad and Canal Company was part of the Pennsylvania Railroad system in New Jersey, including their main line to New York City (now Amtraks Northeast Corridor). ... The Utah and Northern Railway is a defunct railroad that was operated in the Utah Territory in the western United States during the late 1860s and early 1870s. ...

V

1879 map The Central Vermont Railway (AAR reporting mark CV) was a railroad that operated in the New England states of Connecticut, Massachusetts, Vermont, New York, as well as the Canadian province of Quebec. ... 1898 map The Boston and Maine Railroad (AAR reporting marks BM), also known by the abbreviation B&M, was the dominant railroad of the northern New England region of the United States for a century. ... 1879 map The Central Vermont Railway (AAR reporting marks CV) was a railroad that operated in the New England states of Connecticut, Massachusetts, Vermont, New York, as well as the Canadian province of Quebec. ... Virginia and Tennessee Railroad - Wikipedia /**/ @import /skins-1. ... Virginia Central Railroad was chartered as the Louisa Railroad in 1836 by the Virginia Board of Public Works and had its name changed to Virginia Central Railroad in 1850. ... The Virginian Railway (AAR reporting marks VGN) was a Class I railroad located in Virginia and West Virginia in the United States. ...

W

  • Wabash Railroad (WAB, now part of Norfolk Southern)
  • Wadley and Mt. Vernon Railroad
  • Walnut, Minnescah and Fort Dodge Railway
  • Walnut Valley and Colorado Railroad
  • Walnut Valley and Salt City Railroad
  • Walnut Valley Railroad
  • Walnut Valley Railway
  • Wamego and Northwestern Railroad
  • Wamego and Rock Creek Valley Railroad
  • Ware Shoals Railroad
  • Warren and Quachita Railroad
  • Washington and Old Dominion Railway (W&OD)
  • Washington, Baltimore and Annapolis Railroad (WB&A)
  • Washington, Brandywine & Point Lookout Railroad
  • Washington Central Railroad
  • Washington, Idaho and Montana Railway
  • Washington, Seapo and Concordia Railroad
  • Waterloo, Cedar Falls and Northern Railway (WCF&N)
  • Waterville and Junction City Railroad
  • Waterville and Little Blue Valley Railroad
  • Waterville and Washington Railroad
  • Waycross Air Line Railroad
  • Wellington, Anthony and Colorado Railroad
  • Wellsville, Addison and Galeton Railroad (WAG)
  • West Point Route
  • Western and Atlantic Railroad (W&A)
  • Western Banking and Railroad
  • Western Branch of the Memphis and Ellsworth Narrow Gauge Railway
  • Western Kansas Air Line Railroad
  • Western Maryland Railway (WM)
  • Western Pacific Railroad (WP)
  • Western Railroad
  • Western Railway of Alabama
  • Wheeling and Lake Erie Railway (W&LE)
  • White Pass and Yukon Railway (WP&Y)
  • White Sulphur Springs and Yellowstone Park Railway (WSYP)
  • White Top Railway
  • White Water and Walnut Valley Railway
  • Wichita and Arkansas Valley Railroad
  • Wichita and Colorado Railway
  • Wichita and Denver Railroad
  • Wichita and Dodge City Railway
  • Wichita and El Paso Railway
  • Wichita and Florence Short Line Railroad
  • Wichita and Harper Short Line Railroad
  • Wichita and Midland Valley Railroad
  • Wichita and Northwestern Railway
  • Wichita and South Western Rail Road
  • Wichita and Trinidad Railway
  • Wichita and West Line Railroad
  • Wichita and Western Railway
  • Wichita and Winfield Railway
  • Wichita, Arkansas Valley and Denver Railroad
  • Wichita, Cedarvale and Southeastern Railway
  • Wichita, Dodge City and Trinidad Railway
  • Wichita, Douglass and Sedan Railway
  • Wichita, Fort Smith and Denver Railroad
  • Wichita, Great Bend and Colorado Railway and Telegraph Company
  • Wichita, Geuda Springs and Fort Smith Railroad
  • Wichita, Harper and Kiowa Railroad
  • Wichita, Hutchinson and Northwestern Railroad
  • Wichita, Junction City and Springfield Railway
  • Wichita, Kinsley, Scott City and Denver Air Line Railroad
  • Wichita, McPherson and Denver Railroad
  • Wichita, McPherson and Denver Railway
  • Wichita, McPherson and Southern Railway
  • Wichita, Meade Center and Western Railway
  • Wichita Northwestern Railway
  • Wichita, Richfield and Trinidad Railroad
  • Wichita, Rio Grande and Pacific Railway
  • Wichita, San Antonio and Gulf Railway
  • Wichita, San Antonio and Red River Railroad
  • Wichita, Oxford and Arkansas Valley Railroad
  • Wichita, Richfield and Trinidad Railroad
  • Wichita Terminal Railway
  • Wichita Union Terminal Railway
  • Winfield and Fort Smith Railway
  • Winfield, Geuda Springs and Southern Railroad
  • Winona Interurban Railroad (WRR)
  • Willamette Valley Railway (WVR)
  • Wills Valley Railroad
  • Wilmington and Raleigh Railroad
  • Wilmington and Weldon Railroad
  • Winnipeg, Salina and Gulf Railway
  • Winnipeg, Yankton and Gulf Railway
  • Wiscasset, Waterville and Farmington Railway
  • Wisconsin and Calumet Railroad (WICT)
  • Wisconsin Central (WC)
  • Wrightsville and Tennille Railroad
  • Wyandotte and Lawrence Railroad
  • Wyandotte and Northwestern Railway
  • Wyandotte and Osage Valley Railroad
  • Wyandotte and Osawatomie Railroad
  • Wyandotte County Bridge and Terminal Railway
  • Wyandotte County Railway
  • Wyandotte, Kansas City and Northwestern Railway
  • Wyandotte, Minneola and Council Grove Railroad
  • Wyandotte, Nebraska and Northwestern Railway
  • Wyandotte, Northeastern and Chicago Railway
  • Wyoming Railway
  • Wyoming and Texas Railroad

Categories: Rail stubs | Defunct railroad companies of the United States | Illinois railroads | Indiana railroads | Ohio railroads ... The Ware Shoals Railroad was a single train connecting the town of Ware Shoals, South Carolina, to the main lines of the Piedmont and Northwest railroad system at Shoals Junction, South Carolina. ... Washington & Old Dominion Railway or the Washington & Old Dominion Railroad (sometimes abbreviated W&OD) was a railroad that ceased operation on August 28, 1968. ... The WB&A Railroad once linked Washington D.C. with the Maryland cities of Baltimore and Annapolis. ... The Washington, Brandywine & Point Lookout Railroad (WB&PL), now defunct, was an American railroad of southern Maryland and Washington, DC built in the 19th century. ... Originally chartered on October 24, 1887, the Waycross Air Line Railroad began operations between Waycross, GA to Sessoms, GA in 1890. ... This article or section does not adequately cite its references or sources. ... The West Point Route was actually a nickname used in the early twentieth century for the joint operations of the Atlanta and West Point Rail Road and the Western Railway of Alabama. ... The Western & Atlantic Railroad of the State of Georgia (W&A) is a railroad that runs from Atlanta, Georgia, to Chattanooga, Tennessee. ... The Western Maryland Railway ( AAR reporting mark WM) was an American Class I railroad which operated in Maryland, West Virginia and Pennsylvania. ... Drumhead logos such as these often adorned the ends of observation cars on the Western Pacific Railroad. ... The following railroads have been known as Western Railroad or Western Railway: Western Railroad Company (AAR reporting mark WRRC) Western Railroad of Alabama Western Railway of Alabama Western Railway of Arizona Western Railway of Florida Western Railroad of Massachusetts (part of the Boston and Albany Railroad) Western Railroad of Minnesota... The Western Railway of Alabama (WRA), also known as the Montgomery and West Point Railroad, ran from a junction near Selma, Alabama through Montgomery, Alabama to West Point, Georgia. ... The Wheeling and Lake Erie Railway (reporting mark WLE)s oldest predecessor rail line began in Ohio, with the organization of the Carroll County Rail Road on March 9, 1850. ... The White Pass steam locomotive is shown here between Bennett, British Columbia and Skagway The White Pass and Yukon Route (WP&Y) is a narrow gauge railroad linking the port of Skagway, Alaska with Whitehorse, the capital of Canadas Yukon Territory. ... The White Sulphur Springs and Yellowstone Park Railway (AAR reporting marks WSYP), now defunct, was an American railroad built and operated between the towns of Ringling and White Sulphur Springs, Montana, a distance of 22. ... WT Shay #4 as seen from the company store. ... The Williamette Valley Railway (WVR) was created in December, 1984 when the Willamina and Grand Ronde Railway Company purchased three miles of the former Valley and Siletz Railroad in Independence, OR from Boise Cascade and renamed itself. ... The Wills Valley Railroad was built in 1860 to run from Trenton, GA to Wauhatchie, TN, where it was to meet the Nashville and Chattanooga Railroad Company. ... Chartered in 1835, the Wilmington and Raleigh Railroad began operations in 1840 between Wilmington, NC and Weldon, NC. The name was changed in 1855 to the Wilmington and Weldon Railroad. ... Originally charter in 1835 as the Wilmington and Raleigh Railroad, the Wilmington and Weldon Railroad name began use in 1855. ... The Wiscasset, Waterville and Farmington Railway was a two-foot gauge railway which operated from Wiscasset, Maine to Albion and Winslow, Maine. ... WICT EMD F7 #96A approaches the West Washington Avenue grade crossing in Madison with an excursion train in September 1991. ... There were two Wisconsin Central railroads that ran through Wisconsin and neighboring states. ... Chartered in 1883, the Wrightsville and Tennille Railroad was founded to build a line from a connection with the Central of Georgia Railroad at Tennille, GA to Wrightsville, GA. In 1886, the W&T merged with the Dublin and Wrightsville Railroad and gained a through line to Dublin, GA. Ten... The Wyoming Railway, now defunct, was an American railroad built and operated between the towns of Clearmont and Buffalo, Wyoming, a distance of 28. ...

Y

  • Yazoo and Mississippi Valley Railroad
  • Yosemite Valley Railroad

The Yazoo and Mississippi Valley Railroad Company (Y&MV) was incorporated in 1882 and was part of the Illinois Central Railroad system (IC). ...

Commuter railroads

A 1914 map showing what was at the time the proposed expansion for the BRT. The only major differences from what was built is that a new 60th Street Tunnel was used rather than the Queensboro Bridge, the Manhattan-side Brooklyn Bridge connection was never built, and several lines ended... The Chicago North Shore and Milwaukee Railroad, often called the North Shore Line, was an interurban railroad that operated commuter and passenger trains between Chicago, Illinois, and Milwaukee, Wisconsin. ... The Chicago Surface Lines (CSL) was operator of the street railway system of Chicago, Illinois from the years 1913 to 1947. ... The Cincinnati and Lake Erie Railroad (C&LE) was a short-lived electric interurban railroad that operated between Cincinnati, Ohio, Columbus, Ohio, and Toledo, Ohio. ... The Independent Subway System (IND, formerly ISS), and even earlier the Independent City-Owned Subway System (ICOS) or Independent City-Owned Rapid Transit Railroad was one of the three systems that is now part of the New York City Subway. ... The Interborough Rapid Transit Company (IRT) was the operator of the original New York Subway line that opened in 1904 and additional rapid transit lines in the City of New York. ... The Key System (or Key Route) was a company that provided mass transit in the cities of Oakland, Berkeley, Emeryville, Piedmont, San Leandro, Richmond, Albany and El Cerrito in the eastern San Francisco Bay Area from the 1900s until 1960 when the system was sold to a newly formed public... During World War II, the LARy replaced the mission bell tower in its logo with the slogan Dedicated to Victory. ... The Pacific Electric Railway main company depot at Sixth Street and Main Street in downtown Los Angeles, circa 1910. ... The Philadelphia and Western Railroad was an interurban railroad company operating in the western suburbs of the U.S. city of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. ... The city of Rochester New York once had an underground rapid transit system, called the Rochester Subway. ... The San Diego Electric Railway Company (SDERy) was a mass transit system in Southern California using streetcars and (in later years) buses. ... The Twin City Rapid Transit Company (TCRT), also known as Twin City Lines (TCL), was a business that primarily operated streetcars, and buses in the area of Minneapolis-St. ...

List of railroads with a nickname ending in "Road"

It is rare for a railroad to have a nickname that ends in "road". This is a list of such railroads. This is the top-level page of WikiProject trains Rail tracks Rail transport refers to the land transport of passengers and goods along railways or railroads. ...

Consolidation, under date of August 1, 1850, of the Auburn and Rochester Railroad Company, which was incorporated May 13, 1836, and road opened in August 1841; and the Auburn and Syracuse Railroad Company, which was incorporated May 1, 1834, and road opened in June 1838. ... Consolidation, under date of August 1, 1850, of The Auburn and Rochester Railroad Company, which was incorporated May 13, 1836, and road opened in August, 1841; and The Auburn and Syracuse Railroad Company, which was incorporated May 1, 1834, and road opened in June, 1838. ... Incorporated December 14, 1850. ... Incorporated December 14, 1850. ... The Milwaukee Road, officially the Chicago, Milwaukee, St. ... The Milwaukee Road, officially the Chicago, Milwaukee, St. ... Categories: Defunct railroad companies of the United States | Illinois railroads | Indiana railroads | Missouri railroads | New York railroads | Ohio railroads | Pennsylvania railroads ... The New York, Chicago and St. ... The Chicago and North Western Railway (AAR reporting marks: CNW, CNWS, CNWZ; unofficial abbreviation: C&NW) was a Class I railroad in the United States. ... The Chicago and North Western Railway (AAR reporting marks: CNW, CNWS, CNWZ; unofficial abbreviation: C&NW) was a Class I railroad in the United States. ... Port Road may refer to: Port Wakefield Road, SA Port Robinson Road - thriller film Port Road, Adelaide Port road pub crawl Container Port Road Icknield Port Road railway station Port Road, Barry - a road in Barry, Vale of Glamorgan, Wales, UK Category: ... The Harrisburg, Portsmouth, Mount Joy and Lancaster Rail-Road was an early American railroad built to connect three main population centers in east-central Pennsylvania. ...

See also


  Results from FactBites:
 
FindLaw for Legal Professionals - Case Law, Federal and State Resources, Forms, and Code (12457 words)
The argument is that, since the railroads and the public have a common interest in the efficient performance of the whole transportation chain, it is proper and necessary to require all carriers to contribute to the cost of a plan designed to serve this end.
United States, 263 U.S., 44 S.Ct. 169, 33 A.L.R. A distinction is sought to be made because the carriers, which were required to contribute, were permitted to retain a reasonable return upon their property.
It is manifest that the list was prepared under a misapprehension of the extent of the authority of Congress with respect to employees of interstate carriers and of the application of the decision in the first Employers' Liability Cases (Howard v.
Transportation Series No. 11--State Rail Transportation Issues and Policies (13640 words)
Railroads carry 4 percent by value and 13 percent by weight of the nation's freight.11 (This compares with 71.9 percent by value and 53 percent by weight carried by truck.) Generally, rail carries small amounts along the eastern seaboard, but large shares of total shipments in some Great Plains and Rocky Mountain states.
States entered the railroad business in the 1970s when bankruptcies such as Penn Central, industry restructuring and deregulation caused the largest railroads to abandon service on all but their busiest lines.
State lawmakers are working to improve railroad safety, plan and fund passenger rail service, and resolve a variety of issues related to the rail transportation of freight.
  More results at FactBites »


 

COMMENTARY     


Share your thoughts, questions and commentary here
Your name
Your comments
Please enter the 5-letter protection code

Want to know more?
Search encyclopedia, statistics and forums:

 


Lesson Plans | Student Area | Student FAQ | Reviews | Press Releases |  Feeds | Contact
The Wikipedia article included on this page is licensed under the GFDL.
Images may be subject to relevant owners' copyright.
All other elements are (c) copyright NationMaster.com 2003-5. All Rights Reserved.
Usage implies agreement with terms.