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This connection had never been realized by its predecessor line, the Cleveland Columbus and Cincinnati Railroad, which ran trains only between Cleveland and Columbus, Ohio. In 1871, the CCC&I made agreements to operate the Cincinnati and Springfield Railroad and its 16 engines between Cincinnati and Dayton, Ohio.
The original line was variously the Cleveland, Canton and Southern, among other names, and joined the actual W. & L.E. in Brewster, Ohio, south of Canton, where the W. & L.E. mainline crosses from Toledo in the northwest going to Martins Ferry, Ohio, across the Ohio River from Wheeling. Passenger trains operated until the 1930s from Cleveland ...
Union Depot was the name given to two intercity railroad stations in Cleveland, Ohio.Union Depot was built as the first union station in Cleveland in 1853. After a large fire in 1864, a new structure was built, and was the largest train station in the United States until construction of Grand Central Depot in New York City in 1871.
Cleveland, Columbus, Cincinnati and Indianapolis Railway: NYC: 1868 1889 Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago and St. Louis Railway: Cleveland, Delphos and St. Louis Railroad: ACY: 1881 1885 Cleveland and Western Railroad: Cleveland, Fort Wayne and Chicago Railroad: NKP: 1865 1879 Ohio Railway: Cleveland, Lorain and Wheeling Railroad: B&O: 1883 1893
The Cleveland Commercial Railroad (CCR) is a shortline railroad which operates in Cuyahoga County in Ohio in the United States. Founded as a freight-only railroad in 2004, it leases and has trackage rights on lines owned by the Norfolk Southern and the Wheeling and Lake Erie Railway .
Historic American Engineering Record (HAER) No. OH-4, "Shaker Heights Rapid Transit Line, Cleveland, Cuyahoga County, OH", 18 photos, 15 data pages, 2 photo caption pages; Jon Bell – Cleveland, Ohio: Transit Links; Cleveland, Ohio – Rapid Transit (RTA) nycsubway.org – Cleveland, Ohio; RTA Rapid Transit Locations; Northern Ohio Railway Museum
From the Cleveland and Mahoning, constructed by that company— Cleveland to Youngstown, Ohio, 1849 to 1856. 65.341 Youngstown to connection with Westerman Coal and Iron Railroad at the Ohio-Pennsylvania State line, 1865. 14.977 Youngstown to Hazelton, Ohio, 1861. 1.633 81.951
S-4 14 engines built 1953; RS-2 2 engines built 1949, and later sold to Lehigh Valley Railroad; RSD-5 26 engines built 1952; RS-1 2 engines built 1953; RS-3 2 engines built 1955; RSD-12 10 engines built 1956; RSD-7 12 engines built 1956, retired and traded to GE 1969; C-630 4 engines built 1967, and later sold to Robe River Mining of Australia