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Scioto Valley Railway: Ohio River and Columbus Railway: Ohio River and Lake Erie Railroad: NYC: 1897 1901 Lake Erie, Alliance and Wheeling Railroad: Ohio River and Western Railway: PRR: 1902 1931 Pittsburgh, Ohio Valley and Cincinnati Railroad: Ohio Southern Railroad: DT&I: 1881 1898 Detroit Southern Railroad: Ohio Valley Railway: PRR: 1871 1890
Cuyahoga Valley Scenic Railroad: CVSR Napoleon, Defiance & Western Railroad: ND&W Ohio Central Railroad: OHCR Ohio Terminal Railway: OHIO Ohio Valley Railroad: OVR, OVRX Toledo Lake Erie & Western: TLEW Cincinnati East Terminal Railway: CET
Camp Chase Railway; Canadian National Railway; Cedar Point & Lake Erie Railroad; Central Railroad of Indiana; Chicago, Fort Wayne and Eastern Railroad; Cincinnati, New Orleans and Texas Pacific Railway; Cincinnati Southern Railway; Columbus and Ohio River Railroad; CSX Transportation
Celina, Van Wert and State Line Extension of the Columbus and North-Western Railway; Cincinnati, Batavia and Williamsburg Railroad; Cincinnati District; Cincinnati, Lebanon and Northern Railway; Cincinnati Northern Railway (1880–83)
Byesville Scenic Railway – Byesville, Ohio [9] Byesville Station; N Cabin (C&M Crossing) Cedar Point & Lake Erie Railroad – Sandusky, Ohio [10] Main Station (Funway Station) Frontier Town Station; Boneville Station; Connotton Valley Railway – Bedford, Ohio [11] Bedford Depot; Cuyahoga Valley Scenic Railroad – Peninsula, Ohio [12 ...
The remaining railroad ceased operations in 1931; the line from Key to Bellaire was sold to the Pittsburgh, Ohio Valley and Cincinnati Railroad in April 1931. The last train to run on the remaining railroad was on Memorial Day, May 30, 1931, [4] [page needed] and the line was abandoned the next day. The company was formally dissolved in 1935.
On August 21, 1871, the Valley Railroad Company was incorporated, with the intention of running trains from Cleveland to Akron, Middlebury, and Canton, rivaling the nearby Ohio and Erie Canal. [5] [6] Construction of the railroad's right-of-way began, but following the Panic of 1873, a lack of funding halted the project again. [5]
ABC Railway's beginnings trace back to the organization of the Akron and Barberton Belt Railroad (ABB) which was formed in 1902. [1] ABB owned 62 miles (100 km) of track in and around Akron, Ohio. By the 1980s, ABB's traffic had fallen due to a lack of business in the tire industry in Akron.