....and then there's the difference between a "paper railroad" under a corporate umbrella and an independent that never got off the ground. Colorado is full of both types of non-extant railroads. Out west, BLM has filing maps for railroads and routes that never happened. Several were attempts to break up perceived monopolies, political ploys and related nonsense. Many were doomed efforts.
ThamasTehTrain Just ones that no longer exist in any form and paper railroads.
Just ones that no longer exist in any form and paper railroads.
One of the only railfans who gives a crap about the MMA, despite not living IN the northeast.
diningcar You may wish to modify your task. There were so very many that my guess would be several thousand. I have a copy of the Santa Fe compliance (ICC Reports; Valuation Docket 625; Volume 127) which lists all of Santa Fe's predecessors, most of which were created by Santa Fe itself for a variety of reasons. It is comprised of 847 pages.
You may wish to modify your task. There were so very many that my guess would be several thousand.
I have a copy of the Santa Fe compliance (ICC Reports; Valuation Docket 625; Volume 127) which lists all of Santa Fe's predecessors, most of which were created by Santa Fe itself for a variety of reasons. It is comprised of 847 pages.
OP might want to consider finding a law library that has all the valuation dockets and bound volumes of the ICC. You can already see some of it on wikicrapedia and the labelled models websites. Neither did a good job of translating. (The wikipedia copying of several valuation dockets was really shoddy and in one case tried to schlep-in some political horsecrap about federal grant R/W....Most of the Wikipedia dockets are truncated)
There have been several organizational charts published that showed that type of information. Trains has done them in the magazine, although those were limited to a two page spread, so some information may have been "lost."
The New York Central, f'rinstance was famously assembled by Erastus Corning from no fewer than ten separate railroads. And that was just at the beginning.
Then you have things like the Utica and Black River, which was taken over by the Rome, Watertown and Ogdensburg, which was then taken over by the Central.
It's a tangled web that will, as mentioned, include thousands of corporate names.
Larry Resident Microferroequinologist (at least at my house) Everyone goes home; Safety begins with you My Opinion. Standard Disclaimers Apply. No Expiration Date Come ride the rails with me! There's one thing about humility - the moment you think you've got it, you've lost it...
ICC General Orders 20 and 26
ICC Valuation Dockets (Canada and Mexico are a different story)
As I recall, the Centennial History of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company has good coverage of many of the 'leased' lines that came to form the system.
A number of years ago I stumbled across some documents that detailed the corporate histories of all the railroad companies that went into forming both the Chessie and Seaboard sides of CSX. There were several hundred corporate railroad names that were involved in creating each of the properties and who got swallowed up by who.
Some of the 'big' carriers would form other companies to carry out specific improvements - the B&O created the Baltimore Belt Railroad to build the Howard Street Tunnel and the tracks between Camden Station and Bayview where it connected with the Royal Blue Line between the Canton Ferry Terminal and Philadelphia - before the completion of the Belt Line, trains - both passenger and freight, were ferried across Baltimore Harbor between Locust Point and Canton.
I can recall reading about the 'Boat Train' that operated between Boston and New York with several ferry crossings during the trip. Subsequently a all rail route was completed.
Never too old to have a happy childhood!
There have been books written on this subject, and the Official Guide used to publish a special section from time to time showing some of the old former names.
Carl
Railroader Emeritus (practiced railroading for 46 years--and in 2010 I finally got it right!)
CAACSCOCOM--I don't want to behave improperly, so I just won't behave at all. (SM)
By "defunct" do you mean jsut the roads that no longer exist in any form, or are you including, as Balt mentioned, all railroads that were built and later operated under new names as well as those which are entirely extinct?
Johnny
http://www.rr-fallenflags.org/
When you start checking the 'heritage' of today's Class 1's and the fallen flags they absorbed, don't forget the each of those fallen flag absorbed hundreds of other fallen flags to get to the Class 1's that existed in the 1950's.
https://fallen-flags-wiki.fandom.com/wiki/Fallen_Flags_Wiki
Im trying to document all of the defunct north american railroads. Please help out.
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