wow!!!
Fantastic answer. There's a mention of the Bristol RR in Shaughnessy's "The Rutland Road". I haven't been able to find a photo of the railcar. The New Haven Jct. station still stands, in use by Roundtree Construction as an office, with a couple of sidings for Phoenix Feeds north of the station served by Vermont Ry.
Wans, you continue to amaze me.
Mark
The SECOND city in the US to have electric street railways. Davenport, IA.
If I'm correct, I pass the baton to Mark.
I'll accept Buck Dean's offer and post the next question.
Over the years there were several through sleeping car routes between Chicago and Cincinnati. What railroads participated in these and where more than one railroad was involved in a given route what was the junction point?
Chicago-Cincinnati service was offered by three railroads on their own and by one joint operation.
NYC(CCC&St.L)
PRR(PCC&StL.)
C&O of Indiana (before 1917)
Monon and B&O ran a joint car via Indianapolis.
From what I can find at this point C&O used either Central (IC) or Grand Central, depending on the year. After 1917 C&O of Indiana's passenger service gave out at Hammond, Indiana. Monon/B&O service lasted until the early 1930s. NYC and PRR sleeper service to Cincinnati were gone by the PC merger.
Big Four, PRR and Monon/B&O are correct.
The C&0 of IN did not run a through sleeper and there was still one more road that teamed up with one of the roads you have mentioned to run a through car.
C&O's through sleeper ran in the "Old Dominion Limited" from 1911 to 1917. I find from more research it ran across Indiana in the daytime (with sleepers) so I'll withdraw it, though unnamed 9 and 10 were reported to have carried sleepers in the 1920s and early 1930s (See "Limiteds, Locals and Expresses in Indiana 1838-1971" by Craig Sanders). I think the line you're looking for is the Cincinnati Hamilton and Dayton, which paired with the Monon for a while as the "Great Central" route, via Indianapolis or Roachdale on the Louisville line.
The Monon/CH&D pair is one I was looking for. The other was the Chicago Cincinnati & Louisville which was acquired by the C&O in 1917. According to my info (which admittedly could be wrong) after it became the the C&O the Cincy sleeping car route was truncated to just a Chicago - Muncie car.
In any event I declare you the winner so shoot us a new question, Rob.
The corporate history of the various Indiana lines between 1905 and 1917 is about as tangled as it gets. The Great Central scheme involved the CH&D, CC&L and the Pere Marquette, and lasted less thatn 5 years. The CH&D was the line B&O bought to get to Cincinnati, so in a sense it was the same as the B&O, though earlier. The name resurfaced briefly in the 1920s on an Ohio interurban that later became part of the Cincinnati and Lake Erie.
This small California interurban survived for a while after the end of passenger service as a switching line, its motors carrying a UP shield on the side.
possibly the one that became Modesto Terminal or Stockton Terminal?
Those were WP properties. This one had a steeplecab electric until UP got diesel switchers.
Probably the Visalia Elec. Ry.
If not, then the Petalum & Santa Rosa or the Nevada County
You need to go back to the UP's classic footprint to look in the right area. If it's any help, a big SP property nearby did heavy maintenance on the line's B-W motor, which is still in existence. For you folks who like old books, the line is listed in Bill Middleton's classic "The Interurban Era".
Ok, the Glendale & Montrose. The locomotive still exists...it's at the Orange Empire Trolley Museum.
That's it. G&M let UP (LA&SL) use some of its track to reach a customer before Glendale slapped on a franchise restriction requiring an electric locomotive inside Glendale city limits. G&M quickly bought motor 22 (So quickly that Westinghouse outfitted it at Baldwin, instead of East Pittsburgh). When G&M folded in 1931, UP bought the line and the motor, renumbered it E-100 and used it in Glendale until S-2's arrived in 1942. UP sent it over to PE's shops when work was necessary. UP sent the motor up to the Yakima Valley Transportation Co. in Washington in 1942, where it worked into the 1960s.
Ok...an easy one then.
What RR did Beebe describe as "A Shortline with Mainline Overtones"?
Columbus & Greenville
http://www.clarionledger.com/story/news/2014/08/02/railroad-still-playing-vital-transport-role/13529169/
http://hawkinsrails.net/shortlines/cagy/cagy.htm
Nope..but a good guess.
I'm going with Georgia Northern, the home of their first private car.
The Georgia RR. Just a guess.
Mark, the Georgia was considered a Class I. But you and RCD are getting close. I will tell you that it is NOT a Pidcock road.
Another guess. Gainsville Midland.
You would certainly think so, what with those hefty decapods. Now, another hint. The GM ended up in the same "boat" as the road I'm thinking of.
How about the Winston-Salem Southbound. If nothing else, probably one of the more unique names in US railroading. I know they had at least one ex N&W 2-6-6-2 and some big mikados. As for the same boat, it's now part of CSX.
FlyingCrow You would certainly think so, what with those hefty decapods. Now, another hint. The GM ended up in the same "boat" as the road I'm thinking of.
Thinking of the GM brought to mind this 16mm movie clip of Russian Decapod No. 208 in operation in 1956.
www.youtube.com/watch?v=bPFGBKS4yEB8
Sorry about the confusion but I had to correct the URL.
It still doesn't work so let's try something different. Open Google, enter Gainsville Midland Railroad and click on Gainsville Midland Steam Locomotive No. 208.
Buck, I'll try another SWAG. Macon Dublin & Savannah
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