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S-4 14 engines built 1953; RS-2 2 engines built 1949, and later sold to Lehigh Valley Railroad; RSD-5 26 engines built 1952; RS-1 2 engines built 1953; RS-3 2 engines built 1955; RSD-12 10 engines built 1956; RSD-7 12 engines built 1956, retired and traded to GE 1969; C-630 4 engines built 1967, and later sold to Robe River Mining of Australia
Collects steam at the top of the boiler (well above the water level) so that it can be fed to the engine via the main steam pipe, or dry pipe, and the regulator/throttle valve. [2] [5] [6]: 211–212 [3]: 26 Air pump / Air compressor Westinghouse pump (US+) Powered by steam, it compresses air for operating the train air brake system.
Cleveland, Columbus, Cincinnati and Indianapolis Railway: NYC: 1868 1889 Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago and St. Louis Railway: Cleveland, Delphos and St. Louis Railroad: ACY: 1881 1885 Cleveland and Western Railroad: Cleveland, Fort Wayne and Chicago Railroad: NKP: 1865 1879 Ohio Railway: Cleveland, Lorain and Wheeling Railroad: B&O: 1883 1893
The Cleveland and Pittsburgh Rail Road Company, herein called the Cleveland and Pittsburgh, a single and double-track railroad extending from Rochester, Pa., to Cleveland, Ohio, 122.193 miles, and from Yellow Creek, Ohio, to Bellaire, Ohio, 43.453 miles, with a branch from Bayard, Ohio, to Canal Dover and Roswell, Ohio, 39.687 miles, or 205.333 miles in all.
The lease covered 25 miles (40 km) of Norfolk Southern track between the Von Willer yard (near E. 93rd Street and Harvard Avenue) in Cleveland and Aurora, Ohio. [ 9 ] [ 12 ] [ 13 ] In January 2011, the CCR signed an agreement with the Cleveland-Cuyahoga County Port Authority, which operates the Port of Cleveland, to run a new switching service ...
The Chesapeake and Ohio Railway's K-4 class were a group of ninety 2-8-4 steam locomotives purchased during and shortly after World War II. [1] Unlike many other railroads in the United States, the C&O chose to nickname this class "Kanawha", after the river in West Virginia, rather than "Berkshire", after the region in New England.
The Cleveland, Akron and Cincinnati Railway Company, herein called the Cleveland, Akron and Cincinnati, a single-track railroad extending from Hudson to Columbus, Ohio, 143.767 miles, and from Killbuck to Morrow, Ohio, 182.033 miles, with a branch line from Kramore Junction, Ohio, to a point near West Lebanon, Ohio, 9.3S6 miles, or 335.186 miles in all.
From the Cleveland and Mahoning, constructed by that company— Cleveland to Youngstown, Ohio, 1849 to 1856. 65.341 Youngstown to connection with Westerman Coal and Iron Railroad at the Ohio-Pennsylvania State line, 1865. 14.977 Youngstown to Hazelton, Ohio, 1861. 1.633 81.951