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  2. 2-8-4 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2-8-4

    Under the Whyte notation, a 2-8-4 is a steam locomotive that has two unpowered leading wheels, followed by eight coupled and powered driving wheels, and four trailing wheels. This locomotive type is most often referred to as a Berkshire, though the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway used the name Kanawha for their 2-8-4s.

  3. Southern Pacific Class T-1 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southern_Pacific_Class_T-1

    Operators. Southern Pacific Railroad. Class. T-1. Numbers. 2235-2273. Disposition. Two preserved, remainder scrapped. The Southern Pacific Class T-1 is a class of 4-6-0 "Ten-Wheeler" steam locomotives built by the Cooke Locomotive and Machine Works and the Schenectady Locomotive Works for the Southern Pacific Railroad.

  4. 2-8-8-4 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2-8-8-4

    The Northern Pacific Railway was the first railroad to order a 2-8-8-4. The first was built in 1928 by American Locomotive Company; at the time, it was the largest locomotive ever built. It had the largest firebox ever applied to a steam locomotive, some 182 square feet (16.9 m 2) in area, to burn Rosebud coal, a cheap low-quality coal.

  5. Category:Southern Pacific Railroad locomotives - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Southern_Pacific...

    Southern Pacific 1673. Southern Pacific 1744. Southern Pacific 2353. Southern Pacific 2355. Southern Pacific 2467. Southern Pacific 2472. Southern Pacific 2579. Southern Pacific 2706. Southern Pacific 2718.

  6. History of the Southern Pacific - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../History_of_the_Southern_Pacific

    The Southern Pacific depot located in Burlingame, California, c. 1900; completed in 1894 and still in use, it was the first permanent Southern Pacific structure to be constructed in the Mission Revival Style. One of the original ancestor-railroads of SP, the Galveston and Red River Railway (GRR), was chartered on March 11, 1848, by Ebenezer ...

  7. Southern Pacific 4449 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southern_Pacific_4449

    No. 4449 was the last steam engine manufactured in Southern Pacific's first order of GS-4 (Golden State/General Service) locomotives. No. 4449 was placed into service on May 30, 1941, and spent its early career assigned to the Coast Daylight, Southern Pacific's premier passenger train between San Francisco and Los Angeles, California, but it also pulled many other of the SP's named passenger ...

  8. Nickel Plate Road 765 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nickel_Plate_Road_765

    Added to NRHP. September 12, 1996. Nickel Plate Road 765 is a class "S-2" 2-8-4 "Berkshire" type steam locomotive built for the New York, Chicago & St. Louis Railroad, commonly referred to as the "Nickel Plate Road". In 1963, No. 765, renumbered as 767, was donated to the city of Fort Wayne, Indiana, where it sat on display at the Lawton Park ...

  9. 4-8-4 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/4-8-4

    Union Pacific 844, the only steam locomotive never retired by a North American Class I railroad. The 4-8-4 wheel arrangement was a progression from the 4-8-2 Mountain type and, like the 2-8-4 Berkshire and 4-6-4 Hudson types, an example of the "Super Power" concept in steam locomotive design that made use of the larger firebox that could be supported by a four-wheel trailing truck, which ...