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Indiana, Illinois and Iowa Railroad: NYC: 1881 1906 Chicago, Indiana and Southern Railroad: Indiana, Illinois and Iowa Railway: NYC: 1893 1898 Indiana, Illinois and Iowa Railroad: Indiana and Illinois Southern Railroad: IC: 1886 1890 St. Louis, Indianapolis and Eastern Railroad: Indiana Interstate Railway: IIRC 1978 1980 N/A Indiana and Lake ...
The Indiana, Bloomington and Western Railway was a railroad that once operated in Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio.. Its immediate predecessor, the Indianapolis, Bloomington and Western Railway, was formed on July 20, 1869, from the merger of the Indianapolis, Crawfordsville and Danville Railroad with the Danville, Urbana, Bloomington and Pekin Railroad. [1]
The history of rail transport in Serbia began in the mid-19th century when most of the territory was still held by the Austro-Hungarian and Ottoman Empires. The first rail line on the present-day territory of Serbia was inaugurated on 20 August 1854, between Lisava-Oravica-Bazijaš and the train operated on horse-drawn traffic which was replaced in 1856 by steam locomotives.
The Onion Belt, more formally known as the Chicago & Wabash Valley Railroad (C&WV), was a private railroad in Lake County and Jasper County owned and built by Benjamin J. Gifford for transporting crops, including the onions for which it is informally named, and livestock from his 34,000 acres (14,000 ha) farmholdings in north-western Indiana.
Share of the Vandalia Railroad Company, issued 7. December 1910. The Vandalia Railroad Company was incorporated January 1, 1905, by a merger of several lines in Indiana and Illinois that formed a 471-mile railroad consisting of lines mostly west of Indianapolis.
Illinois and Indiana Railroad: Illinois Farmers' Railroad: CB&Q: 1867 1872 Jacksonville, North Western and South Eastern Railway: Illinois Grand Trunk Railway: CB&Q: 1859 1899 Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad: Illinois and Indiana Railroad: IC: 1899 1906 Indianapolis Southern Railroad: Illinois, Iowa and Minnesota Railway: MILW: 1902 1908
The place was born as a railroad town after the Illinois Central established a station in the 1850s near Raccoon Grove, an area deeded by treaty to the descendants of Indiana fur trapper Joseph ...
The Chicago, Attica and Southern Railroad (reporting mark CAS), nicknamed the "Dolly Varden Line", was a railroad linking small towns in west central and northwestern Indiana to the Chicago and Eastern Illinois Railway (C&EI) near Momence, Illinois (where traffic continued on to Chicago).