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The Lochaber Narrow Gauge Railway was a 3 ft (914 mm) narrow-gauge industrial railway. It was a relatively long line, built for the construction and subsequent maintenance of a 15-mile-long (24-kilometre) tunnel from Loch Treig to a factory near Fort William in Scotland . [ 1 ]
Pages in category "Narrow gauge railroads in Virginia" The following 2 pages are in this category, out of 2 total. ... Potomac, Fredericksburg and Piedmont Railroad
Virginia Central Railroad: C&O: 1850 1868 Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad: Virginia Central Railway: VC 1926 1983 N/A Virginia and Kentucky Railroad: SOU: 1852 1876 Bristol Coal and Iron Narrow-Gauge Railroad: Virginia and Kentucky Railway: 1902 1916 Norton and Northern Railway: Virginia and Maryland Railroad: VAMD 1977 1981 Eastern Shore Railroad ...
The Oahu Railway and Land Company was the largest narrow-gauge class-one common-carrier railway in the US (at the time of its dissolution in 1947), and the only US narrow-gauge railroad to use signals. The OR&L used Automatic Block Signals, or ABS on their double track mainline between Honolulu and Waipahu, a total of 12.9 miles (20.8 km), and ...
Fersit (Scottish Gaelic: Fearsaid Mhòr) is a hamlet close to Tulloch railway station in Lochaber, Scottish Highlands and is in the Highland council area. The River Treig, the outlet of Loch Treig, runs past Fersit. Fersit had a small station on the West Highland Line, known as Fersit Halt.
Cripple Creek and Victor Narrow Gauge Railroad: Operational. H. K. Porter tank. CO-31 CCVNGR Engine No. 4 Steam 0-4-4-0 T: 1947 built Cripple Creek and Victor Narrow Gauge Railroad: Under long term overhaul. W. G. Bagnall. CO-32 Rio Grande 463: Steam 2-8-2, narrow-gauge 1903 built 1975 NRHP-listed Cumbres and Toltec Scenic Railroad, CO/NM ...
A Narrow-gauge rail on display at the Richmond Railroad Museum in Richmond, Virginia. [14] The Tidewater and Western, eventually had to be sold. George M. Wilson, who had been treasurer of this railroad and two predecessors operated the railroad until he died in April 1917.
This is the Railroad Bed of the Brighthope Railway at Winterpock, Virginia. Following the path of the old railroad today travels down Virginia State Route 10 from Bermuda Hundred on the north side of the Appomattox River and then east on Carver Heights Drive, Chester, through a landfill and housing complex, next to Bright Hope Road then along Beach Road then South on Coalboro Rd.