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Frisco 76 and Frisco 77, 2-8-0 Consolidation-type engines built as Numbers 40 and 41 by the Baldwin Locomotive Works in December, 1920 for the Jonesboro, Lake City and Eastern Railroad. [20] When that line became part of the Frisco, the locomotives were re-numbered as 76 and 77. [ 20 ]
Katy Railroad Historical Society, Katy Railroad Passenger Service Archived 2010-09-13 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved January 20, 2008. Museum of the American Railroad, A Brief History of Railroads in Dallas. Retrieved January 20, 2008. Schafer, Mike; Welsh, Joe (2002). Streamliners: History of a Railroad Icon. Saint Paul, MN: MBI. ISBN 0 ...
Meteor The Meteor at left, with the Texas Special as diesel equipped trains and new colors. Overview Service type Inter-city rail Status Discontinued Locale Midwestern United States / Southwestern United States First service 1902 Last service 1965 Former operator(s) St. Louis – San Francisco Railway Route Termini St. Louis, Missouri Lawton, Oklahoma Distance travelled 631.5 miles (1,016.3 km ...
"Old 4524," the last of the Frisco railroad's steam locomotives, on the track before its final journey to Grant Beach Park. Published in the Springfield Leader & Press on Nov. 2, 1953.
The railway had connections with AT&SF at Olathe; with the Kansas City, Fort Scott and Memphis Railway (as leased to the St. Louis-San Francisco Railway, known as the “Frisco”) at Olathe and Ash Grove; with the Missouri, Kansas and Texas Railway (later the Missouri–Kansas–Texas Railroad]] at Clinton and Harrisonville, Missouri; with the ...
No. 73 is a 2-6-0 “Mogul” built by Baldwin in 1916. [13] It has 19" cylinders and 49-1/2" driving wheels. [13] Numbered as 34 by the Jonesboro, Lake City and Eastern Railroad before that line was sold to the St. Louis-San Francisco Railway ("Frisco") in 1925, the locomotive was renumbered to 73 and kept by the Frisco until sold on September 19, 1945, to the Delta Valley and Southern. [13]
The St. Louis, San Francisco and Texas Railway (reporting mark SLSF) was a subsidiary railway to the St. Louis-San Francisco Railway (Frisco) operating 159 miles of railway line in Texas. The Frisco, including the subsidiary, formed a large X-shaped system across the states of Kansas, Missouri, Oklahoma, Texas, Arkansas, Mississippi and Alabama ...
Logo_of_Frisco,_Texas.png (240 × 129 pixels, file size: 24 KB, MIME type: image/png) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.