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Conrail 6114, a GE Dash 8-40CW, leads a train westbound out of Altoona, Pennsylvania. A Conrail train led by EMD GP40 3209 at Duncannon, Pennsylvania. Since Conrail was divided between Norfolk Southern Railway and CSX Transportation in 1999, all remaining locomotives have been successively repainted, and many remain in service. CR units had ...
PC (PRR) Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago and St. Louis Railway: PC (NYC) Connecting Railway: PC (PRR) Dayton Union Railway: PC (NYC/PRR) Delaware Railroad: PC (PRR) Delaware and Bound Brook Railroad: RDG Detroit Manufacturers Railroad: PC (NYC) Dover and Rockaway Railroad: CNJ East Pennsylvania Railroad: RDG Erie and Kalamazoo Railroad: PC (NYC)
On October 11, 1994, the new Camp Chase Industrial Railroad bought the line from Conrail. [6] In 1996, it was reported that the railroad had one engine and traffic of 3,000 cars a year, carrying newsprint, grain, flour and lumber. [6] The Camp Chase Industrial Railroad has been marketed under the name Camp Chase Railroad beginning around 2009.
The Monongahela Railway (reporting mark MGA) was a coal-hauling Class II railroad in Pennsylvania and West Virginia in the United States.It was jointly controlled originally by the Pennsylvania Railroad, New York Central subsidiary Pittsburgh and Lake Erie Railroad, and the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, with NYC and PRR later succeeded by Penn Central Transportation.
Penn Central declared bankruptcy in 1970, and in 1976 many of Big Four's lines were included in the government-sponsored Conrail. Conrail was privatized in 1987 and in 1997 was jointly acquired by CSX and Norfolk Southern.
Map of Final System Plan Freight Service Lines Operated by Conrail. Plan formulated by United States Railway Association. Date: July 1975: Source "United States Railway Administration Final System Plan" Author: United States Railway Association, Washington, DC: Permission (Reusing this file)
The main line, formerly part of the Pennsylvania Railroad's "Panhandle," was acquired from Conrail in 1992. It begins in Columbus along CSX Transportation and Norfolk Southern Railway tracks and stretches to Mingo Junction, Ohio near Steubenville on the Ohio River. It interchanges with CSX at Columbus, and Norfolk Southern at Columbus and Mingo ...
These were all acquired by the New York Central Railroad in 1910, and later passed to Penn Central and then Conrail. [6] In 1999 it became part of Norfolk Southern Railway . [ 5 ] The majority of the line was acquired by Watco to form the Kanawha River Railroad in 2016, with the exception of a 9-mile segment owned by CSX Transportation in ...