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William Mason is a 4-4-0 steam locomotive currently on display at the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Museum in Baltimore, Maryland, United States. It was built for the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad , carrying that railroad's number 25.
William Mason (September 2, 1808 – May 21, 1883) was a master mechanical engineer and builder of textile machinery and railroad steam locomotives. He founded Mason Machine Works of Taunton, Massachusetts .
Mason Machine Works, ca.1898 A Mason Locomotive A Mason self-acting mule, ca.1898 View of the foundry, Mason Machine Works, 1898 Hecla & Torch Lake Railroad Number 3, a Mason Bogie locomotive operating at Greenfield Village. The Mason Machine Works was a machinery manufacturing company located in Taunton, Massachusetts, between 1845
William Mason (locomotive builder) (1808–1883), American engineer and builder of locomotives; William Mason (gunsmith) (1837–1913), American engineer and inventor working for Remington, Colt, and Winchester; William H. Mason (masonite) (fl. 1920s), American inventor; first patented masonite
Mason's first Fairlie locomotive was the Janus, an 0-6-6-0 T Double Fairlie built in 1871. [1] Janus was not commercially successful and was not repeated, so Mason experimented with a different design. In 1869, a Single Fairlie locomotive 0-4-4 T had been designed and constructed by Alexander McDonnell for the Great Southern and Western Railway ...
Built by Baldwin in 1918, No. 4500 was the very first USRA standard 2-8-2 locomotive ever built, and it operated on the B&O's Ohio Division mainly hauling freight until it was retired from service in 1958, but not before being renumbered to 300 in order to make way for four-digit numbered diesel locomotives. In 1960, the locomotive was donated ...
The first known 0-6-6T locomotive was built for the 3 ft (914 mm) gauge New Bedford Railroad by Mason Machine Works in May 1874. It was apparently not numbered, but bore the name Wm. Mason . The locomotive later went to the Boston, Clinton & Fitchburg as its no. 23, then to the Old Colony as its no. 108 and finally to the New York, New Haven ...
William Mason (locomotive) This page was last edited on 31 March 2024, at 17:32 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 ...