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J&L Narrow Gauge Railway in Youngstown, Ohio 7613 J&LS #60 March 1944 - - 0-4-0 T: Undergoing restoration to operating condition Youngstown Steel Heritage Museum in Youngstown, Ohio 8147 J&LS #62 October 1947 - - 0-4-0 T: Awaiting restoration Youngstown Steel Heritage Museum in Youngstown, Ohio - H.K. Porter #1 1921 - 3 ft 4 in 0-4-0 T -
Santa Fe Railroad (located in Freedomland U.S.A.) (separate 3 ft (914 mm) gauge railway named Horse Trolley also present) (defunct) North Carolina: Mideast Railroad [6] (located in Ederville) (operating) Museum of Life and Science (operating) Pullen Park (operating) Ohio: J&L Narrow Gauge Railroad [7] (located in Youngstown Steel Heritage ...
Cornellá, No 14, Narrow gauge railway Palamós–Girona–Banyoles and later narrow gauge railway Valdepeñas–Puertollano [39] 4135: 1910: 0-4-0+t: 750 mm (2 ft 5 + 1 ⁄ 2 in) 70 hp: Mercedes, No 15, Narrow gauge railway Palamós–Girona–Banyoles and later narrow gauge railway Valdepeñas–Puertollano [39] 4201: 1910: 2-6-0: 2 ft (610 ...
Previously owned by Welsh Slate and on long term display at the Narrow Gauge Railway Museum, Tywyn, the locomotive was purchased by the Vale of Rheidol in 2020. [37] North British: 17111 1906 4-6-2 T: 2 ft 6 in (762 mm) 666 ex South Eastern Railway of India CC class Parlakimidi Light Railway, India. [37] Orenstein & Koppel: 3770 1909 0-4-4-0
The Monongahela Connecting Railroad (reporting mark MCRR) or Mon Conn was a three-mile industrial railroad line in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. It was a subsidiary of the Jones & Laughlin Steel Company and a large portion of its work was for its parent company, though it also served other industries along the line.
Until 1941, the Colorado and Southern Railway used both standard-gauge and narrow-gauge tracks, and had a dual-gauge line between Denver and Golden, Colorado. Until the 1960s, the Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad's Alamosa–Durango Line from Alamosa, Colorado, to Antonito was dual-gauge (914 mm (3 ft) and 1435 mm (4 ft 8 + 1 ⁄ 2 in)).
1808 engraving of John Stevens estate, Castle Point, Hoboken. Currently the site of Stevens Institute of Technology. Replica of John Stevens' steam carriage. Col. John Stevens, III (June 26, 1749 – March 6, 1838) was an American lawyer, engineer, and inventor who constructed the first U.S. steam locomotive, first steam-powered ferry, and first U.S. commercial ferry service from his estate in ...
Edward Thomas is a narrow gauge steam locomotive. Built by Kerr Stuart & Co. Ltd. at the California Works, Stoke-on-Trent in 1921, it was delivered new to the Corris Railway where it ran until 1948. After that railway closed, the locomotive was brought to the Talyllyn Railway in 1951, then restored, and remains in working order at the heritage ...