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The Jupiter (officially known as Central Pacific Railroad #60) was a 4-4-0 steam locomotive owned by the Central Pacific Railroad.It made history when it joined the Union Pacific No. 119 at Promontory Summit, Utah, during the golden spike ceremony commemorating the completion of the first transcontinental railroad in 1869.
CP 60 Jupiter (replica) 4-4-0: Original scrapped, replica is operational, Golden Spike National Historic Site, Promontory, Utah: CP 63 "Leviathan" (replica) 4-4-0: Original scrapped, replica is operational, later relettered as Pennsylvania Railroad No. 331, owned by Stone Gable Estates, Elizabethtown, Pennsylvania: 219: 0-4-0T
Middletown and Hummelstown Railroad (working railroad, but with emphasis on tourist trains) New Hope Railroad (working railroad that also operates tourist trains) New Jersey Transit Rail Operations (Atlantic City Line commuter train travels from Philadelphia) Oil Creek and Titusville Lines (working railroad, but with emphasis on tourist trains)
Mars station is a historic train station in Mars, Pennsylvania. It was constructed in 1897 by the Pittsburgh and Western Railroad. For nearly fifty years, the station served the community by helping to transport freight and passengers in the area. The station is located halfway between the cities of Pittsburgh, and Butler.
Built new for the US Army as 1685, later B-1685, later bought in 2016 by the PA & Southern in Chambersburg, PA. Acquired by McHugh Locomotive in 2023, and later sold to Northern Central Railway in September of 2024. 6076 GP9: Diesel: EMD: 1957 Built for the Pennsylvania Railroad. 7580 GP10: Diesel EMD 1957 Built for the Pennsylvania Railroad.
Henry Roe Campbell was born on September 9, 1807, in Woodbury, New Jersey, to Amos Campbell, (1779 in Bucks County, Pa; died 1868) and Ann Roe . [5] Amos Campbell was a bridge builder and of Scottish descent, settled in Pennsylvania in 1837.
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Commuters on PA 228 can easily reach Interstate 76 (Pennsylvania Turnpike) via I-79 or US 19 in Cranberry Township. The second busiest road in Mars is the Mars-Evans City Road, which was originally Pennsylvania Route 855. It is an important connecting road for Mars and the borough of Evans City.