List_of_never_used_railways

List of unused railways

List of unused railways

Add article description


This is a list of unused railways, comprising railways and rail infrastructure on which some construction work took place but which were never used for revenue traffic as intended:

Railways not operated

These are projects which failed completely, receiving no revenue traffic.

Australia

Australia

Belgium

Belgium

  • Charleroi Metro, Chatelet line - line from Waterloo to Leopold constructed in the 1980s. Completed and track laid to Centenaire but never opened.

Canada

Canada

Newfoundland
  • Newfoundland Railway - branch lines from Northern Bight to Terranceville and from Deer Lake to Bonne Bay were abandoned uncompleted at the outbreak of the First World War in 1914.[1]
Nova Scotia
  • Blomidon Railway - began work to build a line from Wolfville to Cape Split in 1911, but ceased on the outbreak of the First World War in 1914.[2]
  • Chignecto Ship Railway - a portage railway was begun across the Isthmus of Chignecto in 1888, in lieu of a ship canal. Ships were to be pulled along it in cradles. The work was abandoned uncompleted in 1891.
Ontario

Eritrea

Eritrea

  • Eritrean Railway, Teseney Line - extension from Bishia to Teseney begun 1932 was never finished, although later projected to Kassala, Sudan in 1940 after that area was briefly occupied by the Italians.

France

France

Greece

Greece

  • Kalambaka - Kozani - Veria line (197 km): normal gauge line begun 1927 and abandoned 1932. Completion of 63 km, partial completion of 48 km. Stations completed: Mourgani (demolished), Oxynia, Xiropotamos, Aghiofyllo, Karpero, Karvounis, Mikro, Kalochi, Mikroklisoura, Pasagefyri, Siatista (demolished), Xirolimni (demolished), Vatero (demolished), Asomata. 20 tunnels were completed. Work abandoned owing to 1930's crisis.
  • Thessaloniki to Tsagezi Line - less than 5% of about 150 km completed, work abandoned owing to World War II (1940).

Ireland

Republic of Ireland

Italy

Italy Because much of the Italian railway network was promoted and paid for by government authority, the abandonment of uncompleted lines often had a political dimension.

  • Emilia-Romagna:
  • Friuli:
    • A small network of electric lines in progress between the world wars, but none of it was completed:
      • Ferrovia Bertiolo-Palmanova-Savogna[23] - line between Bertiolo and existing station at Savogna d'Isonzo. Stations: Talmassons, Castions di Strada (junction with Ferrovia Udine-Castions di Strada), Gonars, Palmanova (already open, proposed junction), Jalmicco-San Vito al Torre, Medea, Mariano-Romans and Farra-Gradisca Provesano.
      • Ferrovia Teglio Veneto-Bertiolo-Udine[24] - line between existing stations at Teglio Veneto and Udine. Stations: Teglio-Suzzolins, Morsano al Tagliamento, Madrisio, Varmo-Rivignano, Bertiolo (junction with Ferrovia Bertiolo-Palmanova-Savogna), Sclaunicco, Pozzuolo del Friuli and Campoformido.
      • Ferrovia Udine-Castions di Strada[25] - line from Udine to Castions di Strada. Stations: Pozzuolo del Friuli and Mortegliano.
    • Ferrovia Cormons-Redipuglia[26] - A freight bypass line for Gorizia but a passenger service was intended from Cormons to Redipuglia, with stations at Mariano del Friuli and Gradisca Borgo Trevisan. Work began 1949, and was abandoned 1989.
    • Ferrovia Udine-Majano[27] - a line from Udine to Majano, begun 1914 and abandoned 1932. Stations: Colugna-Rizzi, Feletto Umberto, Pagnacco, Fontanabona, Colloredo di Monte Albano, Vendoglio, Treppo, Buja and Avilla-Santo Stefano.
  • Piedmont:
    • Ferrovia Bivio Orba-Cantalupo-Felizzano - a suburban line for Alessandria, begun 1939 from Felizzano to Cantalupo and diverging to Bivio Orba and Alessandria Smistamento, abandoned unfinished 1966.[28]
  • Rome:
    • Cintura Nord[29] - an attempt to provide Rome with a northern orbital railway, running from Roma San Pietro railway station to Roma Nomentana railway station. Work was in progress between 1913 and 1931. Stations were to have been at Prati di Castello, Ponte Milvio and Salario.
  • Sicily:
    • Ferriovia Bronte-Cuccovia[30] - line from Bronte to an obscure location called Cuccovia.
    • Ferrovia Caltanissetta-Misteci - an unfinished mineral branch of 5 km, from Caltanissetta south to Misteci, work abandoned 1927 when the mine was closed.[31][32]
    • Ferrovia Canicattì-Caltagirone[33] - narrow gauge from Canicatti to San Michele di Ganzaria to serve sulphur mines, work was done on the portion to Riesi but from there to San Michele no construction was undertaken. Work had begun in 1906, and was only formally abandoned in the Fifties.
    • Ferrovia Leonforte-Nicosia[34] - a narrow gauge railway from Leonforte to the small cathedral city of Nicosia was under construction between 1921 and 1929, and was almost finished when abandoned. Station buildings exist for Bivio Paternò, Rocca Vutura, Villadoro, Sperlinga (request stop) and the terminus at Nicosia.
    • Ferrovia Palermo-Salaparuta[35] - a narrow gauge line from Palermo to Salaparuta via Monreale, begun 1926 and effectively abandoned (although not officially) in the early Fifties. Construction work beyond Camporeale did not begin.
    • Ferrovia Salemi-Kaggera[36] - narrow gauge from Salemi to Kaggera (now known as Calatafimi-Segesta with stations at Salemi-Città, Vita and Calatafimi-Città. Work abandoned 1921.
    • Ferrovia Santo Stefano di Camastra-Reitano-Mistretta[37] - a narrow gauge line begun from Santo Stefano di Camastra to Mistretta via Reitano. Construction took place in the 1920s.

Mexico

Mexico

  • Peninsular Railway of Lower California - the Mexican Land and Colonization Company was a British firm which obtained a concession to settle English wheat farmers in Baja California, and which began the enterprise in 1891 with a base at San Quintin. Baja California is semi-desert, and the venture was a disaster. A network of railroads had been planned, and a start made on a line from San Quintin to Ensenada and Tijuana. 27 km (17 mi) of this was finished,[38] ending at a place called San Ramón.[39]

United Kingdom

United Kingdom

United States

United States The railroad history of the United States is marked by many companies which began construction work but never completed any of it. For example, the Panic of 1873 interrupted the construction of a number of railroads, several of which were never resumed. The published evidence for these abortive railroads is poor, and available citations are often lacking.

Alabama

Alaska

Arizona

  • American-Mexican Pacific Railway - incorporated 1905 to build a 2000-mile (3200 km) system of trunk lines west from Phoenix to Los Angeles and San Diego, and south-east into Mexico via Florence, Tucson and Nogales with a branch from Canoa south of Tucson to Naco.[65] Began work on the line from Phoenix to Naco but opened nothing. Some of the routes were later occupied by Southern Pacific Railroad lines.[66]
  • Arizona Narrow Gauge Railroad - began construction of a line from Tucson to Globe in 1882, built 10 miles to Magee Road, graded another 20 miles, never operated despite re-incorporating as the Tucson, Globe and Northern Railroad in 1887.[67]

Arkansas

California

Colorado

Connecticut

Delaware

  • Delaware Electric Traction - began 1900 on a line from Smyrna via Leipsic to Dover and Milford with a branch to Woodland Beach. Abandoned when almost finished 1906, after having bought ten passenger cars for operation.[86]

Georgia

  • Gainesville and Dahlonega Railroad - began a narrow gauge line between Gainesville and Dahlonega, Georgia, in 1878, became the Gainesville and Dahlonega Electric Railway in 1905 and went bankrupt in 1909. Completed the line to the Chattahoochee River and left earthworks northwards, but never ran a public service.[87][88]

Illinois

Indiana

This state had a high number of interurban electric railway proposals, many of which began construction.[94]

Kansas

Louisiana

Maryland

  • Elkton and Middletown Railroad - 1895 attempt by the Pennsylvania Railroad to give its Delmarva Peninsula lines better access from the Washington direction with a cut-off from Elkton to Middletown. The company had a monopoly on the peninsula, and decided that it couldn't be bothered to short-haul itself. Only a half-mile spur at Elkton was built.[110]

Massachusetts

Michigan

Minnesota

Missouri

New Jersey

New Mexico

  • Albuquerque Eastern Railway - began 1909 on a line from Albuquerque through the Tijeras Canyon to Moriarty with a branch to coal mines at Hagan. Work was abandoned unfinished.[123] Hagan did obtain a railroad, the Rio Grande Eastern Railroad, but that arrived from the north-west.[124]
  • Northern New Mexico and Gulf Railroad - 1905 began construction between Española and Abiquiu. Proposed to the north-west corner of the state.[125]
  • Santa Fe, Liberal and Englewood Railroad - promoted by mine owners at Raton, New Mexico, 1907, to run from the Santa Fe, Raton and Des Moines Railroad at Des Moines to Woodward, Oklahoma, via Liberal, Kansas, and Englewood, Kansas. This was partly graded in 1907.[126] In 1914, it had 0.75 miles (1.21 km) of track, and in 1920 it was abandoned.[127]

New York

New York State is a hot-spot for unfinished railroads.[128]

North Carolina

Ohio

  • Cincinnati and Dayton Short Line Railroad - 1852 began a direct line between Cincinnati and Dayton, via the Deer Creek Tunnel under Walnut Hills. The incomplete tunnel was abandoned 1855, although another attempt was made in 1872 by the Cincinnati Railway Tunnel Company.[168]
  • Cincinnati Subway - the city of Cincinnati began the construction of an underground rapid transit line in 1916, but this was abandoned unfinished in 1929 after available funds ran out.[169]
  • Cincinnati Western Railroad - began 1854 to build a line to New Castle, Ohio. Abandoned works are traceable near Cincinnati, including a tunnel under Roll Hill.[170]
  • Clinton Air Line - chartered 1854 to build a line from New York to Omaha, based at Hudson. Grading was effected in places on the route in Ohio between Kinsman[171] via Hudson to Fostoria through New London and Republic.[172]

Oklahoma

Oregon

Pennsylvania

South Dakota

  • Forest City and Western Railroad - 1883 graded between Forest City and Hoven on its proposed line from the former place to Bowdle.[209]

Tennessee

Texas

Utah

Vermont

  • Burlington and Hinesburg Railroad - 1890 began a steam road from Burlington to Hinesburg. Was still incomplete in 1903, when it became the Burlington and Southeastern Railway. This proposed to electrify as an interurban, and extend to Windsor. Abandoned 1905 with grading to Hinesburg completed and four miles (6.5 km) of track laid.[262][263]

Virginia

Washington State

West Virginia

Wisconsin

  • Bayfield, Lake Shore and Western Railroad - 1905 consolidated several tiny railroad companies operating around Bayfield and began a line from Racket Creek to Superior via Cornucopia. Only graded to the latter place, and laid some track. The railroad history of Bayfield is extremely complicated.[270]

Changed plans leaving unfinished works

The following projects had their aims altered when under construction, with work in hand being abandoned as a result.

Australia

Australia

Canada

Canada

  • Hudson Bay Railway -the original terminus of Hudson Bay was to have been Port Nelson, Manitoba, and the line was graded to here in 1912. The terminus was changed to Churchill instead in 1927, and the grade to Port Hudson abandoned. The railway's sharp change of direction at Amery is a reminder.

United Kingdom

United Kingdom

  • Louth and Lincoln Railway - began 1866 on a direct line from Louth to Lincoln, reaching the latter place via a junction with the Great Northern Railway at Five Mile House. The western terminus was changed to Bardney, with a junction facing away from Lincoln. This was to save some money, but the proposed Louth-Lincoln service was abandoned in favour of accessing iron ore deposits that proved uneconomic to exploit.
  • London Underground, Fleet Line - A section of what is now called the Jubilee line between Charing Cross and Aldwych was constructed with the first phase of the line in the 1970s along the planned route for phase 2 to the City of London. Phase 2 was cancelled and when the line was eventually extended, the route followed a more southerly route from Green Park. A short section of tunnel was also constructed to test construction techniques near New Cross on what would have been phase 3 of the Jubilee line; this has never been used.[271]
  • Manchester and Milford Railway - The company changed its northern terminus from Llanidloes to Aberystwyth. Llanidloes to Strata Florida, with a heavily engineered summit section, was abandoned as being too expensive to complete, including a 2.2 km tunnel and a long high viaduct over the Afon Ystwyth at Pont Rhyd-y-groes. The portion from Llanidloes to Llangurig was briefly opened as the Llangurig branch, and there are traces of works on both of the Myherin Tunnel portals at Blaen Myherin and Cae Gaer Roman fort. There is also evidence on maps between Llangurig and a point 2 km west at Pont Aberbidno where it would have crossed to the south side of the A44. The line would have travelled via the Afon Merin valley to Devil's Bridge before heading south to Strata Florida. The M&MR completed the rail link from Carmarthen to the north by diverting the line at Strata Florida to Aberystwyth.[272]
This bridge at Beddgelert was built for the Portmadoc, Beddgelert and South Snowdon Railway but never carried trains

United States

United States

Massachusetts
Missouri
New York
Texas
  • Panhandle and Gulf Railway - 1899 set out to build a line from Sweetwater to Laredo via San Angelo, with the hope of going on to the Mexican Pacific coast at Topolobampo. Taken over 1900 by the Kansas City, Mexico and Orient Railway which had the same idea. Began extending north to around Quanah, but the KCMO revised its proposed route and the 15 miles (24 km) completed from Sweetwater north-east to Sylvester as well as a 7 mile (11 km) stub running south-east were abandoned.[274]

Railways partly operated (original intentions unfulfilled)

These projects were partial failures, with work on uncompleted portions being abandoned.

Australia

Australia

Canada

Canada

Alberta
British Columbia
New Brunswick
Nova Scotia
Ontario
Quebec

Haiti

Haiti

Honduras

Honduras

  • Ferrocarril Nacional de Honduras - work on an interoceanic railway from Puerto Cortés to La Brea was begun in 1869, but never got beyond Potrerillos despite several attempts.[292]

Italy

Italy

  • Ferrovia Subappennina Italica[293] - a major main line railway project, intending to provide an alternative inland route to the coastal main line between Rimini and Ancona. It was to run from Santarcangelo di Romagna to Fabriano, was begun in 1894 but the project was terminated in 1933. The section between Urbino and Fabriano was completed and opened. That between Santarcangelo and San Leo was abandoned incomplete, with stations at Poggio Berni, Verucchio and Pietracuta (the last two and part of the route then being used for a different successful railway project). From San Leo to Auditore no work was done. From Auditore to Urbino construction was also abandoned, with stations at Schieti and Trasanni.

Mexico

Mexico

Russia

Russia

  • Salekhard–Igarka Railway (Трансполярная магистраль or Transpolar Mainline) was a Soviet Union infrastructure project under construction as part of the Gulag from 1947 to 1953. Some portions were completed, either entering operation or being abandoned and awaiting rebuilding.

Spain

Spain

  • Ferrocarril Lérida-La Pobla is the completed part of a major international railway project to build a railway over the Pyrenees from Lleida to Saint-Girons in France with a tunnel under the Port de Salau. The scheme received final approval in 1907, and the line Balaguer was opened in 1924. Work on the Spanish side then slowed, and opening to La Pobla de Segur was in 1954. The Spanish government then announced that it was abandoning further work.
  • Ferrocarril Santander - Mediterráneo[297] - begun in 1925 to connect the ports of Santander and Valencia with a new line from the former to a junction at Calatayud with the Ferrocarril Central de Aragón. The line from Calatayud to Cidad-Dosante south of Santander was finished and opened in 1930. Construction continued on the unfinished portion to the latter city until abandonment in 1959. This had to cross the Cantabrian Mountains, and the Engaña Tunnel would have been the longest railway tunnel in Spain.

Turkey

Turkey

  • İzmir–Eğirdir railway - was intended to reach Konya, but work beyond Eğirdir was stopped at the outbreak of the First World War and never resumed. The line from Bozanönü to Eğirdir was abandoned 2003.

United Kingdom

United Kingdom

United States

United States American lumber companies could have a sense of humor when naming their railroads. Titles such as Atlanta, Skeetercloud and Gulf are not, on their own, reliable indicators of unfinished projects.

Alabama

  • Birmingham and Gulf Railway and Navigation - the Black Warrior River was made navigable to Tuscaloosa in the 1890s, and in response this company bought the city's streetcar system in 1907 with the intention of using it to switch freight from riverboats and of extending to Birmingham as an electric passenger and freight line. The scheme collapsed in 1912, and the city lost its streetcars.[54]
  • Birmingham, Laney and Piedmont Railroad - began a line from Laney (south-east of Gadsden) east to Piedmont in 1892, but abandoned in 1895.[54][304]
  • Cullman Coal and Coke Company - attempted to build a public railroad from Cullman to Bremen 1911-17 but only completed six miles which were leased to a private lumber company.[305][306]
  • Montgomery and Southern Railway - began 1880 to build a narrow-gauge line south from Montgomery to the Gulf coast, but only got as far as Luverne by 1889. This town grew around the terminus.
  • Tennessee River, Ashville and Coosa Railroad - began in 1890 to build from Anniston to Sheffield, 189 miles (304 km). Completed a spur of 6 miles (9.5 km) from Whitney to Ashville but failed and the track had been scavenged by 1900.[307][308]

Arizona

Arkansas

California

Colorado

Connecticut

Florida

  • Tampa and Jacksonville Railroad - in 1906 took over the Gainesville and Gulf Railroad from Sampson City through Gainesville to Micanopy as part of a proposed main line from Jacksonville to Tampa, but only completed a dead-end extension to Emathla.[329]
  • Pensacola, Mobile and New Orleans Railroad - begun in 1907 to build a direct link between Pensacola and Mobile with terminal facilities for the trunk line railroads using the two ports. Only built from Pensacola to a dead-end location called Pemona AL, and operated as a logging railroad. Became the Gulf Ports Terminal Railway in 1917. This is quoted as an example of a publicly expressed proposal being possibly fraudulent, to mislead investors.[330]
  • South Florida and Gulf Railway - graded 1914 from Kenansville to Basinger, and laid tracks to Prairie Ridge. This was part of an attempt to bring the area into cultivation, but it comprises fossil sand dunes and the railroad was scrapped in 1918.[331][332]
  • Tallahassee, Perry and Southeastern Railroad - built from Tallahassee through Covington to Waylonzo, and graded to Perry before abandoning work in 1907.[333]

Georgia

Idaho

Illinois

Indiana

Iowa

Kansas

Kentucky

Louisiana

Maine

Maryland

  • Kent County Railroad - began a dead-end line from Massey to Chestertown in 1870, and made two abortive attempts to reach the Chesapeake Bay. The original terminus was to have been Rock Hall from Worton, begun by the Bay Extension Railroad 1872 but only completed as a stub to a place called Belair, Fairlee, Parsons or Nicholson. There is evidence for a second stub from Chestertown, and possibly two stub termini (Nicholson was the northern one) with a triangular layout if the project had completed.[374] In 1873, the projected terminus was altered to Tolchester Beach from Nicholson, and this route was graded and a steamer pier begun by the Smyrna and Delaware Bay Railroad before the second abandonment the same year.[375]
  • Washington, Brandywine and Point Lookout Railroad - it and its predecessors only built from Brandywine to Mechanicsville, although much of the route to Point Lookout was later used by the US Navy line to Patuxent. Also graded a stub in east Washington, the East Washington Railroad. appropriated illegally by the Chesapeake Beach Railway and later a short line in its own right.

Michigan

Minnesota

Mississippi

Missouri

Montana

Nebraska

New Jersey

New Mexico

  • Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway - Colmor Cutoff was begun 1930 from Felt, Oklahoma, the terminus of a line from Dodge City, Kansas, to Colmor (north of Wagon Mound) via Mount Dora. This was to have been part of the company's transcontinental route. Only finished a stub from Mount Dora to Farley, and the rest was abandoned unfinished.[402]
  • Santa Fe, Raton and Des Moines Railroad - began 1906 on a line from mines at Carisbrooke east of Raton to Des Moines via Cunningham on the St. Louis, Rocky Mountain and Pacific Railway. The line from Cunningham to Des Moines was ready for rails when work was abandoned. This would have linked to the failed Santa Fe, Liberal and Englewood Railroad scheme.[403]
  • St Louis, Rocky Mountain and Pacific Railroad - 1907 did some work on an extension from its terminus at Ute Park to Taos, including a tunnel at Eagle Nest Lake.[404]

New York

North Carolina

  • Appalachian Interurban Railway - 1905 proposed an electric interurban from Hendersonville to Asheville,[422] and in the following year also from Hendersonville to Rutherfordton via Chimney Rock.[423] Opened a horsecar line from Laurel Park to Rainbow Lake as the first part of the former.[424] The equipment was three cars and three horses named Appalachian, Electric and Interurban. Taken over by the local streetcar company, Henderson Traction (which used battery cars), in 1912.[425][426]
  • Asheville and Northern Railway - 1905 projected as a steam road from Asheville north-eastwards via Weaverville, Mars Hill, Faust and English to the Tennessee border and a connection with the Clinchfield Railroad beyond.[427] Affiliated with the Asheville and Craggy Mountain Railroad.[428] Morphed into a small electric interurban to Weaverville, the Asheville and Eastern Tennessee Railroad, which got no further.[429]
  • Blue Ridge and Atlantic Railroad - 1888 bought a pre-existing railroad from Cornelia, Georgia, to Tallulah Falls, Georgia, in order to extend it to Maryville, Tennessee, and create a low-level trunk route from Knoxville, Tennessee, to Savannah, Georgia. Failed, but its successor the Tallulah Falls Railway built on its grade to Franklin.
  • Carolina and Northeastern Railroad - formed 1917 and opened a line from Gummberry near Weldon to Lasker. Lasker to Ahoskie was never completed.[430]
  • Carolina and Tennessee Southern Railroad - 1915 intended to connect with the Tennessee and Carolina Southern Railroad through the Deals Gap, but only got to Fontana from Bushnell.[431] This was the last of several attempts at this low-level route from Knoxville to Savannah. See Blue Ridge and Atlantic Railroad above.[432]

North Dakota

Ohio

Oklahoma

  • Denver, Wichita and Memphis Railway - operated 1905 to 1910,[456] a 14 mile (22.5 km) stub[457] running south-east of Catoosa.[458]
  • Oklahoma, New Mexico and Pacific Railway - 1913 began a line from Ardmore to Lawton but only opened to Ringling. Incorporated a subsidiary, the Ringling and Oilfields Railway to build to Oklahoma City 1916, which opened a short stub to Healdton.[459]
  • Oklahoma-Southwestern Railway - 1920 began a line from Bristow to Okmulgee but only completed to Nuyaka.[460]

Oregon

Pennsylvania

South Carolina

South Dakota

[478]

Tennessee

Texas

Utah

Virginia

Washington State

West Virginia

  • Parkersburg and Ohio Valley Electric Railway - began 1903 to build a major electric interurban between Wheeling and Parkersburg. Opened five miles (8 km) between Sistersville and Friendly. The latter place was claimed as one of the smallest settlements in the USA with a dedicated interurban service, since it only had 217 residents at the time.[531]

Wisconsin

Wyoming

Military railway facilities

The following abortive projects were intended for the use of armed forces.

Australia

Australia

  • During World War II a number of extra crossing loops were built between Werris Creek and Wallangarra, but were not brought into use.
  • During World War II triangle junctions were built at Griffith, Stockinbingal, which were removed soon after the war. A triangle at Goobang Junction near Parkes from west to south was only partly built. It was finally completed around 2000.

Germany

Germany

  • Strategic Railway Embankment - The German government ordered the construction of a dedicated military railway in 1904, running from the Ruhr towards the western border of Germany. This was solely in order to enable the rapid deployment of troops. The project was never completed.

Construction interrupted for decades

The following projects were completed long after initial abandonment.

Australia

Australia

Mexico

Mexico

  • Ferrocarril Kansas City, Mexico y Oriente - this Mexican subsidiary of the Kansas City, Mexico and Orient Railway was to have been part of a trunk line from Kansas City to the Pacific port of Topolobampo. When the company went bankrupt in 1912 it had built three separate sections between Topolobampo and Presidio, Texas: Pacific Division between Topolobampo and El Fuerte, Mountain Division between Sánchez and Miñaca and Chihuahua Division between Chihuahua City and Marquéz. El Fuerte to Sánchez only opened in 1961 as part of the Ferrocarril Chihuahua al Pacífico, and Marquéz to Presidio opened in 1930.[535]

United Kingdom

United Kingdom

Unused infrastructure improvements

The following projects resulted in abortive improvements to existing railways.

Provided for unfulfilled future needs

Australia

Australia

United Kingdom

United Kingdom

Interrupted by outbreak of war

Germany

Germany

  • Freilassing–Berchtesgaden railway - Work was suspended on double-tracking in 1938, and part of line left with work uncompleted was abandoned and replaced with a bus service.

United Kingdom

United Kingdom

Failed motive power systems

Work was done on prototypes of the following newly invented motive power systems, which proved to be failures by either not entering commercial operation at all or needing speedy abandonment once installed.

France

France

  • Aérotrain - a hover monorail system was developed between 1965 and 1977 by Jean Bertin. Four experimental tracks (one in the USA) and five prototypes were built before abandonment.

Germany

Germany

  • Scherl Monorail - the German publisher August Scherl arranged a one-day demonstration of a Gyro monorail at the Berlin Zoological Garden on 10 November 1909. The small railcar stayed on one rail owing to the conservation of angular momentum supplied by two heavy horizontal flywheels rotating in opposite directions. No investor interest was forthcoming. See Shilovsky Monorail and Brennan Monorail below.

Russia

Russia

United Kingdom

United Kingdom

  • Atmospheric Railway - the Samuda and Clegg System was developed from 1838 and initially used by the London and Croydon Railway and the South Devon Railway Company. It involved an iron pipe containing a piston attached by a rod to the train, which was pulled along by pumping the air out of the pipe in front of the piston. This was a materials technology failure, since the continuous valve containing the piston rod was sealed by leather which quickly perished. Also used on the Dalkey Atmospheric Railway in Ireland, and the Paris to Saint-Germain Railway in France.
  • Bennie Railplane - George Bennie opened a short prototype demonstration line of his elevated monorail system in 1930, at Milngavie in Scotland. The individual cars hung on a single rail, with guide rails underneath. The propulsion was by propeller, hence the name. The idea was to build lines above conventional railways, and use them for fast passenger traffic. The idea attracted no investment, and Bennie went bankrupt in 1937.
  • Behr Monorail - Fritz Behr developed the successful Lartigue Monorail system to create a high-speed electric monorail, which he demonstrated as a full-scale model at the Brussels International Exposition (1897). As a result, the Manchester and Liverpool Electric Express Railway was authorised in 1901 to run between the two cities via Eccles and Warrington. Only minor preliminary work was done, as Behr could not attract funding.[536][537]
  • Brennan Monorail - Louis Brennan patented his monorail system in 1903. This was a gyro monorail, whereby the train stayed on one rail owing to the conservation of angular momentum supplied by a pair of heavy vertical flywheels, rotating in opposite directions. He demonstrated a full-sized model at the Japan–British Exhibition of 1910, and photos taken of the two trains were widely circulated. He failed to attract backers, and abandoned work.
  • Great Eastern Railway, Decapod - the GER did not have the funds to electrify its London suburban lines at the start of the 20th century, so instructed its motive power department to create a steam engine (locomotive) that could match the speed and acceleration of an electric train and so take charge of these services. The result was a ten-wheel (0-5-0) monster. Unfortunately the permanent way department was not consulted, and the engine was too heavy for both track and bridges. Only the prototype was built, and hauled no revenue train before being rebuilt for goods (freight) service.
  • Kearney High-Speed Tube - Elfric Wells Chalmers Kearney promoted his monorail underground rapid transit system from 1905 to the 1940s in Britain and elsewhere, but only a single prototype passenger car was built.
  • Rammell Pneumatic Railway - Thomas Webster Rammell was the engineer for the London Pneumatic Despatch Company, which involved cars being pushed along underground tubes by stationary air pumps. He demonstrated a passenger version at Crystal Palace in 1864, as a prototype subway system. This involved a carriage in a large tube with a ring of bristles at one end forming a seal, being moved back and forth by alternately pumping in and extracting the air in the tube. The system was taken up by the failed Waterloo and Whitehall Railway.
  • Ro-Railer - in 1931 the Karrier Company built an experimental single-decker bus with a wheel arrangement that allowed it to run both on roads and on rails. The wheels needed to be adjusted when transferring from one to the other.[538] It ran a brief scheduled London, Midland and Scottish Railway service in 1932 from Blisworth railway station to Stratford Old Town railway station over the former Stratford-upon-Avon and Midland Junction Railway, then by road to the Welcombe Hotel. The service was abandoned after a few weeks when an axle broke.

United States

United States

  • Beach Pneumatic Transit - this was the first attempt to build an underground public transit system in New York City. The system was developed by Alfred Ely Beach in 1869, and a short demonstration subway line running on pneumatic power was opened in 1870. It was abandoned in 1873. The independently developed Rammell Pneumatic Railway (see above) in England was very similar.
  • Boynton Bicycle Railroad - after a successful demonstration under steam of this monorail system at Coney Island, in 1894 a demonstration electric line was built between Bellport and East Patchogue as the first section of a proposed suburban system on Long Island. Nothing further was achieved.[140]
  • Centennial Monorail - this was similar to the relatively successful Lartigue Monorail system, but independently developed in the US. The inventor Roy Stone demonstrated it at the Centennial International Exhibition of 1876, which was held in Philadelphia (Pennsylvania) to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence.[539] The system was used for the Bradford and Foster Brook Railway, opened 1878 and abandoned in a year after a train wreck and boiler explosion.
  • Macke's Three-Rail System - this three-rail elevated urban rapid transit system was proposed for Boston between 1888 and 1891, and discussed by the Massachusetts state legislature. Unlike its competitor the Meigs system (see below), no demonstration line was built. It features two load-bearing rails and a third traction rail in a gully between the two, with vertical driving wheels attached to the rail by wrap-round flanges.[540]
  • Meigs Elevated Railway - this elevated steam-powered urban rapid transit system is often described as a monorail but was technically pre-electric third rail. It was invented in by Josiah Vincent Meigs (also known as Joe Meigs or Joe Vincent Meigs), of Lowell, Massachusetts, and was demonstrated on a short experimental line in a suburb of Boston called East Cambridge from 1886 to 1894.[541]
  • Miami and Erie Transportation Company - the Miami and Erie Canal ran from ran from Cincinnati to Toledo, Ohio, and like all canals in the 19th century relied on horses and mules to tow the boats. The idea was floated to replace the animals with electric locomotives, running on rails laid on the towpath (Electric Mules). Rails were laid from Cincinnati through Dayton by 1904. The idea failed in general because of the new availability of internal combustion engines to power boats, and specifically because the canal was already moribund.[542]
  • Tunis Monorail - the inventor Howard Hansel Tunis demonstrated his monorail system the Jamestown (Virginia) exposition of 1907, and this was used for the Pelham Park and City Island Railway which was a New York suburban transit line. The monorail had s single ground rail, and two elevated guide rails. It ran from 1910 to 1914, and was then replaced by conventional streetcars.

References

  1. "Newfoundland Railway, The Branch Lines". January 2011. Retrieved 15 December 2019.
  2. Miller, Carman: A Knight in Politics: A Biography of Sir Frederick Borden 2010 p. 303
  3. "Brockville and New York Bridge" (PDF). Retrieved 25 January 2020.
  4. See French wikipedia fr:Ligne transcévenole
  5. see French wikipedia fr:Gare de Caldaniccia
  6. "Randonnée des Tunnels de Charabotte/Chaley (Ain)". Archived from the original on 2016-05-18. Retrieved 2016-05-26.
  7. "Langon/Gabarret (Eauze)". Retrieved 12 December 2019.
  8. Clare, Liam: The Bray and Enniskerry Railway Nonsuch 2007
  9. See Italian wikipedia it:Ferrovia Rolo-Mirandola
  10. See Italian wikipedia it:Ferrovia Udine-Majano
  11. See Italian wikipedia it:Cintura Nord
  12. "Linea incompiuta Bronte - Cuccovia". Retrieved 11 December 2019.
  13. "Misteci Mine". Retrieved 11 December 2019.
  14. See Italian wikipedia it:Ferrovia Leonforte-Nicosia
  15. See Italian wikipedia it:Ferrovia Salemi-Kaggera
  16. Heath, Hilarie J. (July 2011). "The failed Baja California Northern District peninsular railway project, 1887–1892". Estudios Fronterizos. 12 (24): 185–221. doi:10.21670/ref.2011.24.a07. Retrieved 19 March 2020.
  17. The Universal Atlas of the World Rand McNally and Company, 1893, Mexico West map
  18. "Hinckley Branch Line". Retrieved 5 December 2019.
  19. "Bordesley-Duddeston Viaduct". Retrieved 3 December 2019.
  20. Moore, R.F: Paddy Waddell's Railway 1987
  21. "The Railway from Windsor to Ascot". Retrieved 5 December 2019.
  22. Grant, D.J: Directory of the Railway Companies of Great Britain 2017 p. 305.
  23. Fisher, Stuart (2013), British River Navigations: Inland Cuts, Fens, Dikes, Channels and Non-tidal Rivers, Bloomsbury, p. 57
  24. Peacock: Mistley, Thorpe and Walton Railway 1946
  25. "Monnow Valley Railway". Retrieved 7 December 2019.
  26. "Some English Railway Might-Have-Beens" (PDF). Retrieved 3 October 2020.
  27. "Skipton to Colne -Brief History". Retrieved 5 December 2019.
  28. "Railway Embankment Never Saw a Train". Archived from the original on 15 December 2019. Retrieved 2 December 2019.
  29. Grant, D.J: Directory of the Railway Companies of Great Britain 2017 p. 491
  30. Connelly, E.B: Railroad Operations 2002 Vol. 1 p. 103
  31. Marvyn Scudder Manual of Extinct Or Obsolete Companies 1930 p. 628
  32. Poor's Manual of Railroads 1890 p. 1391
  33. Alabama Railroad Commissioners' Map, Chicago 1888
  34. The Railway Age Vol. 41 p. 942
  35. Connelly, E.B: Railroad Operations 2002 Vol. 3 p. 127
  36. Fleming, H: Narrow Gauge Railways in America 1876 p. 76
  37. Connelly, E.B: Railroad Operations 2002 Vol. 3 p. 104
  38. Connelly, E.B: Railroad Operations 2002 Vol. 3 p. 139
  39. "Railroad Approval for Mobile and Pensacola". The Onlooker. 5 June 1919. p. 1. Retrieved 17 December 2019.
  40. Walker, M: SPV's Comprehensive Railroad Atlas of North America, Pacific Northwest 1998 p. 7
  41. "American-Mexican Pacific Railway". Retrieved 18 February 2020.
  42. Moody's Manual of Railroads and Corporation Securities 1907 p. 1039
  43. "Bentonville Railroad History". Retrieved 16 January 2020.
  44. Connelly, E.B: Railroad Operations 2002 Vol. 4 p. 138
  45. Railway Age Vol. 52 1912 p. 37
  46. Morrow, L: The Ozarks in Missouri History University of Missouri Press 2013 p. 128
  47. The Railway and Engineering Review, Vol. 57, p. 842
  48. "The History of Marion County". Retrieved 16 December 2019.
  49. Connelly, E.B: Railroad Operations 2002 Vol. 3 p. 146
  50. "Early Monterey Bay Railroad Companies". Retrieved 20 December 2019.
  51. "Earlier Attempt on Monterey Fresno Railroad" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 December 2019. Retrieved 20 December 2019.
  52. "Owens River Red Apple Railroad". Retrieved 21 December 2019.
  53. Railroad Gazette Vol. 21 1889 p. 861
  54. Connelly, E.B: Railroad Operations 2002 Vol. 2 p. 23
  55. Railway Age Gazette Vol. 54 pp. 231, 822
  56. Walker, M: SPV's Comprehensive Railroad Atlas of North America, Colorado & Utah 1995 p. 9
  57. "Ridgefield and New York Railroad". Retrieved 15 January 2020.
  58. "Danbury Railways". Retrieved 15 January 2020.
  59. "Ridgefield and New York Railroad - Remnants". 6 May 2018. Retrieved 15 January 2020.
  60. Hayman, J.C: Rails Along the Chesapeake, A History of Railroading on the Delmarva Peninsula, 1827-1978 Marvadel Publishers 1979, p. 103
  61. Poor's Manual of Railroads, Vol. 24 1891 p. 216
  62. Historic Gainesville & Hall County: An Illustrated History Hall County Historical Society 2001 p. 30
  63. Hilton & Due: Electric Interurban Railways in America Stanford University Press 1963 p. 352
  64. Solomon, Gruber and Blaszak: Chicago, America's Railroad Capital Voyageur Press 2014 p. 30
  65. American Railroad Journal, Vol. 45 1872 p. 109
  66. Electric Railway Journal 1910 p. 60
  67. Kingsbury, R.C. An Atlas of Indiana 1970 p. 79 for a map of proposals.
  68. Hilton & Due: Electric Interurban Railways in America Stanford University Press 1963 p. 41
  69. Electric Railway Journal Vol. 41 1913 p. 874
  70. Moody's Manual of Railroads and Corporation Securities 1907 p. 1467
  71. Metropolitan Vol. 3 1907 p. 238
  72. "RIVER TO RAIL: BUILDING THE RAILROAD". Retrieved 15 January 2020.
  73. Young, J: Studebaker and the Railroads Vol. 2 p. 21
  74. Mariette, J: Electric Railroads of Indiana 1980 p. 175
  75. Electric Traction Weekly Vol. 5 1909 p. 704
  76. Brough & Graebner: From Small Town to Downtown, A History of the Jewett Car Company 1893-1919 2004 p. 151
  77. Chandler, A: Trolleys Through the Countryside Sage Books 1963 p. 21
  78. Poor's Manual of Railroads Vol. 48 1915 p. 841
  79. Atlas of Railway Progress 1888 p. 99
  80. Connelly, E.B: Railroad Operations 2002 Vol. 5 p. 33
  81. Connelly, E.B: Railroad Operations 2002 Vol. 5 p. 74
  82. Annual Report of the Louisiana Railroad Commission 1916 p. 38
  83. Connelly, E.B: Railroad Operations 2002 Vol. 2 p. 70
  84. Annual Report of the Massachusetts Board of Railroad Commissioners, Vol. 5 1874 p. 2
  85. The Grand Rapids Spectator Vols. 1-3 1912 p. 16
  86. Connelly, E.B: Railroad Operations 2002 Vol. 3 p. 37
  87. "Bates County History". Retrieved 16 January 2020.
  88. Morrow, L: The Ozarks in Missouri History University of Missouri Press 2013 pp. 125ff
  89. Acts of the General Assembly of the State of New-Jersey. I. Collins. 1871. pp. 1338–1339. Retrieved January 3, 2019.
  90. "Railroad Program Next Wednesday". Verona-Cedar Grove Times. Verona, New Jersey. September 17, 2015. p. D1. Retrieved January 3, 2019 via Newspapers.com. Open access icon
  91. "The Tunnel". The Bergen Evening Record. Hackensack, New Jersey. July 22, 1903. p. 1. Retrieved January 3, 2019 via Newspapers.com. Open access icon
  92. "Don Lee's PRSLHS page". Retrieved 17 January 2020.
  93. Moodys Manual of Railroads and Corporation Securities 1921 p. 1660
  94. Eid & Gunmere: Streetcars of New Jersey - Atlantic Coast 2007 p. 51
  95. J. & B. Sherman: Ghost Towns and Mining Camps of New Mexico University of Oklahoma Press 1975 p. 107
  96. Walker, M: SPV's Comprehensive Railroad Atlas of North America - Arizona & New Mexico 2006 p. 32
  97. Moody's Manual of Railroads and Corporation Securities 1907 p. 1044
  98. Reports of the Department of the Interior Vol.2 1907 p. 594
  99. Connelly, E.B: Railroad Operations 2002 Vol. 4 p. 162
  100. "Brookfield Railroad". Retrieved 21 January 2020.
  101. "Brookfield Railroad State Forest". Retrieved 21 January 2020.
  102. Electric Railway Review Vol. 12 1902 p. 164
  103. The Atlantic and Great Western Railway : connections, stations, distances, map, &c., &c. : the great through route between the East and West, Northwest, South, and Southwest 1866 p. 5
  104. "Farming Bovina". Archived from the original on 20 February 2020. Retrieved 19 January 2020.
  105. Annual Report of the Railroad Commissioners of the State of New York 1903 p. 1514
  106. "Dunderberg Spiral Railway". Retrieved 23 January 2020.
  107. "Elizabethtown History". Retrieved 23 January 2020.
  108. Poor's Manual of Railroads Vol. 26 1893 p. 304
  109. "East Patchogue Monorail". Retrieved 25 January 2020.
  110. Poor's Manual of Railroads 1909 p. 1202
  111. Annual Report of the Board of Railroad Commissioners of the State of New York 1904 p. 1554
  112. "Fort Plain & Richfield Springs". Retrieved 23 January 2020.
  113. Poor, H. V. History of the Railroads and Canals of the United States Vol. 1 1860 p. 297
  114. "Ogdensburgh, Clayton & Rome". Retrieved 23 January 2020.
  115. "Black River & Utica". Retrieved 25 January 2020.
  116. "Otselic Valley Railroad". 26 March 2016. Retrieved 25 January 2020.
  117. Electric Railway Journal Vol. 48 1916 p. 999
  118. "Panama Traction Company". Retrieved 25 January 2020.
  119. "The Sodus Bay Railroad That Never Ran" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 December 2019. Retrieved 2 December 2019.
  120. "Racquette River Railroad". Retrieved 26 January 2020.
  121. Railway World Vol. 35 1891 p. 497
  122. Corwen, H. J. Lewis County 2012 p. 127
  123. Poor's Manual of Railroads Vol. 4 1871 p. 9
  124. "Penn Yan, Lake Keuka & Southern". Retrieved 25 January 2020.
  125. Railway Age Vol. 32 1900 p. 118
  126. Steam Shovel and Dredge Vol. 16 1912 p. 482
  127. "Burt Line". Retrieved 22 January 2020.
  128. Poor's Manual of Railroads 1884 p. 110
  129. Brown, F. H: Harvard University in the War of 1861-1865 1886 p. 45
  130. Burt Line op.cit.
  131. Connelly, E.B: Railroad Operations 2002 Vol. 1 p. 257
  132. Walker, M: SPV's Comprehensive Railroad Atlas of North America - Appalachia and Piedmont 2004 p. 26 (erroneously shown as extant)
  133. Walker, M: SPV's Comprehensive Railroad Atlas of North America - Appalachia and Piedmont 2004 p. 25 (erroneously shown as completed)
  134. Chapman, J. H: The Deep River Coalfield 2017 p. 85
  135. Connelly, E.B: Railroad Operations 2002 Vol. 4 p. 87
  136. "Norfolk Southern Railroad". Retrieved 27 January 2020.
  137. Mecklenborg: Cincinnati's Incomplete Subway, The Complete History 2010
  138. "Cincinnati Western Railroad". 24 June 2016. Retrieved 11 February 2020.
  139. Kinsman, Arcadia Publishing, 2010 p. 47
  140. "Daniel Willard". Retrieved 10 February 2020.
  141. Connelly, E.B: Railroad Operations 2002 Vol. 1 p. 44
  142. The Railway Age Vol. 45 1908 p. 397
  143. Bulletin of the Pan American Union, Vol. 7 1899 p. 475
  144. Moody's Manual of Railroads and Corporation Securities 1907 p. 1041
  145. Connelly, E.B: Railroad Operations 2002 Vol. 2 p. 111
  146. "Arkoma". Retrieved 19 February 2020.
  147. Connelly, E.B: Railroad Operations 2002 Vol. 2 p. 275
  148. Moody's Manual of Railroads and Corporation Securities 1907 p. 1042
  149. International Railway Journal Vol. 12 p. 78
  150. The Railway Age Vol. 41 1906 p. 458
  151. Connelly, E.B: Railroad Operations 2002 Vol. 4 p. 149
  152. Steam Shovel and Dredge Vol. 13 1909 p. 941
  153. Moody's Manual of Railroads and Corporation Securities 1907 p. 1046
  154. Moody's Manual of Railroads and Corporation Securities Vol. 11 1910 p. 1195
  155. The Railway Age, Vol. 21, part 1 1901 p. 263
  156. The Railway Age Vol. 33 1902 p. 420
  157. The Railway Age Vol. 29 1900 p. 266
  158. Connelly, E.B: Railroad Operations 2002 Vol. 3 p. 51
  159. Railway Age and Railway Review Vol. 49 1910 p. 671
  160. Connelly, E.B: Railroad Operations 2002 Vol. 3 p. 68
  161. Iron Age Vol. 88 1911 p. 436
  162. Walker, M: SPV's Comprehensive Railroad Atlas of North America -Northeast 2007 p. 88 A1
  163. The Railway News Vol. 18 1872 p. 284
  164. Railway Times Vol. 38 1877 p. 697
  165. Poor's Manual of Railroads 1887 p. 1048
  166. Connelly, E.B: Railroad Operations 2002 Vol. 4 p. 51
  167. Venango County, Pennsylvania: her Pioneers and People 1919 p. 562
  168. Christopher T. Baer: A GENERAL CHRONOLOGY OF THE PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD COMPANY 1865 2015 p. 78
  169. Franklin & Hungerford: History of that part of the Susquehanna and Juniata Valleys 1886 p. 445
  170. Poor's Manual of the Railroads 1894 p. 95
  171. South Dakota's Railroads, A Historic Context, South Dakota State Historic Preservation Office 2007 p. 77
  172. Railroad Gazette, Vol. 21 p. 203
  173. Connelly, E.B: Railroad Operations 2002 Vol. 2 p. 134
  174. Biennial Report By Tennessee. Department of Agriculture 1874 p. 1158
  175. "The Unfinished Line to Stevenson". 10 December 2014. Retrieved 29 February 2020.
  176. The North American Review Vol. 153 1891 p. 41
  177. Railroad Gazette Vol. 33 1901 p. 960
  178. Poor's Cumulative Daily Digest of Corporate News 1917 p. 70
  179. "Estacado and Gulf Railroad". Retrieved 6 March 2020.
  180. Engineering News Vol. 22 1889 p. 428
  181. Railway Review Vol. 38 1898 p. 83
  182. The South Western Reporter Vol. 57 1900 p. 873
  183. Annual Reports of the War Department Vol. 2 Part 1 1898 p. 534
  184. The Railway Review Vol. 55 1914 p. 731
  185. Edson, W: Railroad Names 1999 p. 43
  186. Edson, W: Railroad Names 1999 p. 44
  187. The Railway Age Vols. 38-39 1905 p. 436
  188. Railway Review Vol. 54 1914 p. 130
  189. "Gulf and West Texas Railway page". Retrieved 13 April 2023.
  190. The Railway Age Vol. 20 1895 p. 392
  191. Poor's Manual of Railroads 1893 p. 227
  192. "PAN AMERICAN RAILWAY". Retrieved 9 March 2020.
  193. Steam Shovel and Dredge Vols. 9-10 1905 p. 145
  194. Moody's Manual 1907 p. 1045
  195. Connelly, E.B: Railroad Operations 2002 Vol. 5 p. 114
  196. The Railway Review Vol. 55 1914 p. 29
  197. Poor's Manual 1914 p. 1944
  198. Town Development Vols. 6-7 1912 p. "c"
  199. Encyclopaedia Britannica 1912, map for Texas article.
  200. Electrical World Vol. 46 1905 p. 1010
  201. Poor's Manual of Railroads, Vol. 26 1893 p. 618
  202. Moody's Manual 1907 p. 1046
  203. Manufacturers Record Vol 53 1908 p. 71
  204. Railway Age Gazette Vol. 57 1914 p. 780
  205. "Utah Rails, Johnson Manuscript". Retrieved 12 March 2020.
  206. Walker, M: SPV's Comprehensive Railroad Atlas of North America - Colorado & Utah 1995 pp. 36, 38
  207. "Utah Central Railway (1890-1897)". Retrieved 12 March 2020.
  208. "Railroad Trainman's Journal Vol. 7 1890 p. 159". The Brotherhood. 1890. Retrieved 12 March 2020.
  209. Hilton & Due: The Electric Interurban Railways in America Stanford University Press 1960 p. 325
  210. Weiser, E: The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad 2013 p. 67
  211. The Railway Age Vol. 24 1897 p. 1004
  212. Ruby & Brown: The Spokane Indians, Children of the Sun 2006 p. 256
  213. Engineering News-Record Vol. 73 1915 p. 189
  214. Hilton & Due: The Electric Interurban Railways in America Stanford University Press 1960 p. 393
  215. Connelly, E.B: Railroad Operations 2002 Vol. 1 p. 152
  216. Horne, Mike (2000). The Jubilee Line. Capital Transport. p. 37. ISBN 1-85414-220-8.
  217. Interstate Commerce Commission Reports Vol. 41 1933 p. 677
  218. "Panhandle and Gulf Railway". Retrieved 8 March 2020.
  219. "The Alberta Midland Railway". Retrieved 14 December 2019.
  220. "Unfinished CN Railway Line at Fort Macleod". 14 June 2013. Retrieved 15 December 2019.
  221. "Abandoned Peavine Rail Line". 20 June 2019. Retrieved 15 December 2019.
  222. SPV's Comprehensive Railroad Atlas of North America: Western Canada 2006 p. 34
  223. Poor's Manual of Railroads 1893 p. 1123
  224. SPV's Comprehensive Railroad Atlas of North America: New England & Maritime Canada 1999 p. 39
  225. Statues of Nova Scotia 1905 p. 160
  226. Campbell, D.F: Banking on Coal Cape Breton University Press p. 33
  227. "Celtic Shores Railway Heritage" (PDF). Retrieved 16 December 2019.
  228. "Walkerton & Lucknow Railway". Retrieved 15 December 2019.
  229. "Midland Railway". Retrieved 17 January 2020.
  230. Poor's Manual of Railroads Vol. 24 1891 p. 1046
  231. Poor's Manual of Railroads, Vol. 48 1915 p. 14
  232. Long, William Rodney: Railways of Central America and the West Indies 1925 p. 283
  233. Long, William Rodney: Railways of Central America and the West Indies 1925 p. 54
  234. Long, William Rodney: Railways of Mexico 1925 p. 13
  235. Long, William Rodney: Railways of Mexico 1925 p. 143
  236. Long, William Rodney: Railways of Mexico 1925 p. 179
  237. Railway Times Vol. 40, p. 321
  238. "Railways at Gwaun-cae-gurwen". Retrieved 3 December 2019.
  239. Booth, Chris: The Lancashire Derbyshire and East Coast Railway. A Pictorial View of the ?Dukeries Route? and Branches Volume 2: Langwith Lunction to Lincoln, the Mansfield Railway and Mid-Notts Joint Line. Fonthill Media 2019.
  240. "Bradford's Through Railway Schemes". Retrieved 8 December 2019.
  241. Grant, D.J: Directory of the Railway Companies of Great Britain 2017 p. 470
  242. Poor's Directory of Railway Officials 1892 p. 452
  243. Connelly, E.B: Railroad Operations 2002 Vol. 1 p. 299, Vol. 2 p. 206
  244. Sterling, R: People and Things from the Cullman, Alabama Tribune 1898 - 1913 2013 p. 248
  245. Poor's Manual of the Railroads of the United States, Vol. 27 1894
  246. Connelly, E.B: Railroad Operations 2002 Vol. 1 p. 299, Vol. 2 p. 10
  247. "Cochise-Douglas Branch". Retrieved 19 December 2019.
  248. Walker, M: SPV's Comprehensive Railroad Atlas of North America, Arizona & New Mexico 2006 p. 26
  249. Poor's Manual of Railroads 1893 p. 211
  250. Walker, M: SPV's Comprehensive Atlas of North America, Praries East and Ozarks 2004 p. 13
  251. Walker, M: SPV's Comprehensive Railroad Atlas of North America, Prairies East and Ozarks 2004 p. 6
  252. Poor's Manual of Railroads, Vol. 44 1911 p. 1030
  253. Hammonds Pictorial Atlas of the World 1918, Arkansas map
  254. The Official Guide of the Railways, February 1916 p. 1221
  255. Transit Journal Vol. 27 p. 226
  256. Hilton & Due: Electric Interurban Railways of America Stanford University Press 2000 p. 398
  257. "The Age of Railroads". Archived from the original on 3 October 2012. Retrieved 19 December 2019.
  258. "Arkasnsas Valley Railway". Retrieved 9 July 2020.
  259. "Denver, Laramie, & Northwestern Railroad". 30 August 2016. Retrieved 22 December 2019.
  260. "Neglected Colorado Heritage". 29 July 2010. Retrieved 21 December 2019.
  261. Railroads and the Rockies: A Record of Lines in and Near Colorado Saga Books 1963 p. 265
  262. Turner, G: A Short History of Florida Railroads Arcadia Publishing 2003 p. 113
  263. "Gulf Ports Terminal Railway". Retrieved 18 December 2019.
  264. Connelly, E.B: Railroad Operations 2002 Vol. 4 p. 209
  265. "Prairie Ridge Ghost Town". Retrieved 22 December 2019.
  266. Poor's Manual of Railroads, Volume 56 1923 p. 218
  267. Brock Waldorf, G: The Genesis of Grady County, Georgia Sentry Press 2006. p. 381
  268. Merton Coulter, E: James Monroe Smith, Georgia Planter Before Death and After University of Georgia Press 1961 p. 60
  269. "It's a Short Line But a Long Story". Retrieved 24 December 2019.
  270. "Railroads of the Camus Prairie". Retrieved 24 December 2019.
  271. Interstate Commerce Commission Reports: Decisions of the Interstate Commerce Commission of the United States 1928 p. 180
  272. Idaho Yesterdays Vol. 36 p. 7
  273. Hilton & Due: The Electric Interurban Railways in America Stanford University Press 1960 p. 351
  274. Corliss, C.J. Trails to Rails 1934 p. 38
  275. Hilton & Due: The Electric Interurban Railways in America Stanford University Press 1960 p. 346
  276. Schafer, M: Rockford Area Railroads Arcadia 2010 p. 9
  277. Official Guide June 1922 p. 893
  278. Hilton & Due: The Electric Interurban Railways in America Stanford University Press 1960 p. 338
  279. Hilton & Due: The Electric Interurban Railways in America Stanford University Press 1960 p. 349
  280. Hilton & Due: The Electric Interurban Railways in America Stanford University Press 1960 p. 344
  281. Hilton & Due: The Electric Interurban Railways in America Stanford University Press 1960 p. 352
  282. Hilton & Due: Electric Interurban Railways of America Stanford University Press 2000 p. 282
  283. Hilton & Due: Electric Interurban Railways of America Stanford University Press 2000 p. 284
  284. Hilton & Due: Electric Interurban Railways of America Stanford University Press 2000 p. 276
  285. Wilson, B.H: Iowa and the Narrow Gauge, 1932 p. 146
  286. Poor's Manual of Railroads 1899 p. 666
  287. "Winterset Newspaper Archives". 18 June 1956. Retrieved 24 December 2019.
  288. Poor's and Moody's Manual Consolidated 1915, p. 271
  289. Poor's Manual of Railroads 1917 p. 733
  290. Hilton & Due: Electric Interurban Railways of America Stanford University Press 2000 p. 367
  291. Interstate Commerce Commission Reports Vol. 43 1933 p. 795
  292. "Kansas Ordnance Plant Sidings". Retrieved 4 January 2020.
  293. Herr: The Louisville and Nashville Railroad, 1850-1963 2015 p. 178
  294. Walker, M: SPV's Comprehensive Railroad Atlas of North America, Appalachia and Piedmont 2004 p. 12
  295. "Kentucky Midland Railway". Retrieved 5 January 2020.
  296. Hilton & Due: Electric Interurban Railways of America Stanford University Press 2000 p. 291
  297. Poor's Manual of Railroads 1887 p. 678
  298. Connelly, E.B: Railroad Operations 2002 Vol. 3 p. 190
  299. Pacific Rail News Issues 374-379 p. 27
  300. The Railway Age Vol. 39 1905 p. 660
  301. Encyclopaedia Britannica 1912, map in Louisiana article.
  302. Interstate Commerce Commission Reports 1926 pp 705, 708
  303. Walker, M: SPV's Comprehensive Railroad Atlas of North America, Northeast 1993 p. 12
  304. Interstate Commerce Commission Reports Vol. 28 1933 p. 681
  305. "The Railroad that Went Nowhere" (PDF). Retrieved 10 January 2020.
  306. Rand McNally and Company, Map of Southern Michigan 1898
  307. "The Ragweed Line". Retrieved 11 January 2020.
  308. "Luce Line Railroad". Retrieved 11 January 2020.
  309. Hilton & Due: Electric Interurban Railways of America Stanford University Press 2000 p. 358
  310. Moody's Manual of Railroads and Corporation Securities Vol. 11 1910 p. 142
  311. "Mobile & North Western Railroad". Retrieved 12 January 2020.
  312. Hathorn, J. C.: A History of Grenada County p. 50
  313. Connelly, E.B: Railroad Operations 2002 Vol. 1 p. 103, Vol. 5 p. 74
  314. American Railroad Journal Vol. 40 1867 p. 507
  315. Walker, M: SPV's Comprehensive Railroad Atlas of North America, Southern States 2002 p. 42
  316. Hayes, W. E: Iron road to Empire, Simmons-Boardman 1953 p. 174
  317. Hilton & Due: Electric Interurban Railways of America Stanford University Press 2000 p. 366
  318. Railway Review Vol. 60 1917 p. 146
  319. Railway Age Vol. 74 1923 p. 120
  320. "Blaine News and Tidbits". Retrieved 15 January 2020.
  321. Twentieth Century Peerless Atlas Crowell Publishing 1908, Nebraska map
  322. "Interurban Projects in Nebraska" (PDF). Retrieved 15 January 2020.
  323. "OL&B History". Retrieved 15 January 2020.
  324. "Melick v. Cross". Retrieved 17 January 2020.
  325. Railway Review Vol. 45 p. 932
  326. The Railway Age Vol. 33 1902 p. 406
  327. Electric Railway Journal Vol. 50 1917 p. 693
  328. Myrick, D. F: New Mexico's Railroads: A Historical Survey UMN Press 1990 p. 23
  329. Myrick, D. F: New Mexico's Railroads: A Historical Survey UMN Press 1990 p. 163
  330. Myrick, D. F: New Mexico's Railroads: A Historical Survey UMN Press 1990 p. 161
  331. "Boston Hartford & Erie Railroad". Retrieved 19 January 2020.
  332. Hilton & Due: Truhe Electric Interurban Railways in America 2002 p. 38
  333. Edson, W. E: Railroad Names 1999 p. 21
  334. "Buffalo, Corning & New York". Retrieved 21 January 2020.
  335. Moody's Manual of Railroads and Corporation Securities 1907 p. 1106
  336. Hungerford, E: THE STORY of the Rome, Watertown and Ogdensburgh Railroad 1922 p. 219
  337. Moody's Manual of Railroads and Corporation Securities 1909 p. 516
  338. Walker, M: SPV's Comprehensive Railroad Atlas of North America - Northeast 2007 p. 56
  339. Poor's Manual of Railroads 1909 p. 82
  340. Vernon, E: American Railroad Manual Vol. 2 1874 p. 107
  341. "Delhi & Middletown". Retrieved 23 January 2020.
  342. Documents of the Senate of the State of New York Vol. 4 1863 p. 68
  343. "Murdock Line". Retrieved 23 January 2020.
  344. "New York, Boston & Montreal". Retrieved 24 January 2020.
  345. Railway World Vol. 27 1883 p. 922
  346. "Sackets Harbor & Saratoga". Retrieved 26 January 2020.
  347. The Railway World Vol. 49 1905 p. 238
  348. The Street Railway Journal Vol. 28 pt 2 1906 p. 1231
  349. "A Short History of Laurel Park, p. 5" (PDF). Retrieved 27 January 2020.
  350. Poor's Manual of Railroads 1909 p. 1220
  351. Coleman, A: Railroads of North Carolina Arcadia 2008 p. 54
  352. "The Howland Lines". Retrieved 5 March 2020.
  353. Coleman, A: Railroads of North Carolina Arcadia 2008 p. 16
  354. Official Guide of the Railways February 1916 p. 493
  355. Transportation of Coal: Hearings Before a Subcommittee of the Committee on Naval Affairs, United States Senate 1914 p. 671
  356. Official Guide of the Railways February 1926 p. 1020
  357. "PRR 1889 p. 64" (PDF). Retrieved 13 February 2020.
  358. "Cincinnati and Fayetteville Railroad". Retrieved 13 February 2020.
  359. "Kingston & Adelphi Railroad History". Retrieved 13 February 2020.
  360. "Cincinnati, Georgetown and Portsmouth Railroad". 5 June 2019. Retrieved 13 February 2020.
  361. Moody's Manual of Railroads and Corporation Securities 1907 p. 1129
  362. The Railway Age Vol. 41 1906 p. 455
  363. Hilton & Due: Electric Interurban Railways of America Stanford University Press 2000 p. 264
  364. The Official Guide of the Railways 1898 p. 429
  365. "South Bloomingville Railroad". Retrieved 10 February 2020.
  366. Hilton & Due: Electric Interurban Railways of America Stanford University Press 2000 p. 275
  367. "FP&E History". Retrieved 18 February 2020.
  368. Hilton & Due: Electric Interurban Railways of America Stanford University Press 2000 p. 263
  369. "Lake Erie and Pittsburgh Railway". Retrieved 10 February 2020.
  370. Interstate Commerce Commission Reports Vol. 31 1930 p. 830
  371. "Cincinnati, Columbus and Hocking Valley Railroad". 13 February 2019. Retrieved 13 February 2020.
  372. Hilton & Due: Electric Interurban Railways of America Stanford University Press 2000 p. 260
  373. Interstate Commerce Commission Reports 1927 p. 647
  374. Interstate Commerce Commission Reports Vol. 42 1933 p. 678
  375. Poor's Manual of Railroads 1884 p. 585
  376. Connelly, E.B: Railroad Operations 2002 Vol. 2 p. 24
  377. Poor's Manual of Railroads 1909 p. 2098
  378. Interstate Commerce Commission Reports: Reports and Decisions Vol. 133 1928 p. 407
  379. Preston George & Sylvan R. Wood: The Railroads of Oklahoma, The Railway and Locomotive Historical Society Bulletin No. 60 1943 p. 79
  380. "Oregon Pacific Railway Map". Retrieved 20 February 2020.
  381. Short trolley routes in the Lehigh River Valley p. 86
  382. Poor's Manual of Railroads Vol. 25 1892 p. 1032
  383. Connelly, E.B: Railroad Operations 2002 Vol. 1 p. 204
  384. Koehler, L: Three Feet on the Panhandle: A History of the Waynesburg and Washington Railroad, Railhead Publications 1983 p. 87
  385. "Mather Station". 21 November 2008. Retrieved 14 December 2019.
  386. Hilton & Due: The Electric Interurban Railways in America Stanford University Press 2000 p. 301
  387. "The Spring City Trolley". 9 September 2011. Retrieved 25 February 2020.
  388. Annual Report of Pennsylvania Department of Internal Affairs 1889 p. 535
  389. Walker, M: SPV's Comprehensive Railroad Atlas of North America - Northeast 2007 p. 68
  390. Treese, L: Valley Forge: Making and Remaking a National Symbol 2010 p. 64
  391. Report on the Internal Commerce of the United States 1889 p. 161
  392. South Dakota's Railroads, A Historic Context, South Dakota State Historic Preservation Office 2007 p. 84
  393. South Dakota's Railroads, A Historic Context, South Dakota State Historic Preservation Office 2007 p. 76
  394. Poor's Manual of Railroads, Vol. 48 1915 p. 746
  395. "Old Railroad Bed Road". Retrieved 4 March 2020.
  396. Killebrew: Tennessee: Its Agricultural & Mineral Wealth 1876 p. 35
  397. Connelly, E.B: Railroad Operations 2002 Vol. 2 p. 200
  398. Edson: Railroad Names 1999 p. 90
  399. "Oneida & Western Railroad". 26 July 2019. Retrieved 4 March 2020.
  400. "Tennessee Midland". Retrieved 3 March 2020.
  401. Connelly, E.B: Railroad Operations 2002 Vol. 5 p. 10
  402. Rand McNally & Company's Indexed Atlas of the World 1889, KY and TN map
  403. Poor's Manual of Railroads Vol. 26 1893 p. 628
  404. Manual of the Railroads of the United States, Vol. 27 1896 p. 882
  405. Electric Railway Journal Vol. 47 1916 p. 1162
  406. Railroad Gazette Vol. 33 1901 p. 887
  407. "Gulf and Brazos Valley Railway". Retrieved 8 March 2020.
  408. "Sonora TX". Retrieved 9 March 2020.
  409. Official Guide February 1926 p. 657 map
  410. Poor's Manual of Railroads 1893 p. 228
  411. "Rio Grande Northern Railroad". Retrieved 8 March 2020.
  412. "Peach River Lines map". Retrieved 10 March 2020.
  413. "PEACH RIVER AND GULF RAILWAY". Retrieved 10 March 2020.
  414. Connelly, E.B: Railroad Operations 2002 Vol. 4 p. 107
  415. Biennial Report of the Secretary of State for Texas 1911 p. 135
  416. "TEXAS WESTERN RAILWAY". Retrieved 10 March 2020.
  417. "Castle Valley Railway". Retrieved 13 March 2020.
  418. "Castle Valley Branch History". Retrieved 13 March 2020.
  419. "Utah Western Railway (1874-1881)". Retrieved 13 March 2020.
  420. Poor's Manual of Railroads Vol. 27 1894 p. 259
  421. Ashley Valley, Arcadia Publishing 2011 p. 67
  422. "Utah Eastern Railroad". Retrieved 13 March 2020.
  423. Interstate Commerce Commission Reports: Decisions Vol. 26 1930 p. 381
  424. Connelly, E.B: Railroad Operations 2002 Vol. 4 p. 202
  425. Solyard, D: Big Bend Railroads Arcadia 2015 p. 7
  426. Iron Age - Vol. 81 1908 p. 1105
  427. "Northern Pacific History". Retrieved 15 March 2020.
  428. Hilton & Due: The Electric Interurban Railways in America 1960 p. 385
  429. Robertson, D: Encyclopedia of Western Railroad History: Oregon, Washington Caxton Press 1986 p. 288
  430. Poor's Manual of Railroads, Vol. 31 p. 274
  431. Hilton & Due: The Electric Interurban Railways in America Stanford University Press 1960 p. 305
  432. "The Cazenovia Southern Railroad". Retrieved 17 March 2020.
  433. Thybony et al: The Medicine Bows p. 137
  434. "Wyoming North and South Railroad". Retrieved 18 March 2020.
  435. J. Wallace Higgins, III: THE ORIENT ROAD: A History of the KANSAS CITY, MEXICO AND ORIENT RAILROAD The Railway and Locomotive Historical Society Bulletin No. 95 (OCTOBER, 1956), pp. 10-46 (available on JSTOR)
  436. Day & McNeil: Biographical Dictionary of the History of Technology 2002 p. 88
  437. Grant, D.J: Directory of the Railway Companies of Great Britain 2017 p. 356
  438. "The LMS Ro-Railer". Retrieved 26 June 2020.
  439. "General LeRoy Stone's Centennial Monorail". The Museum of Retro Technology. Archived from the original on 2011-05-20. Retrieved 2020-06-25.
  440. Cheney & Sammarco: When Boston Rode the EL Arcadia 2000 p. 12
  441. Robert Campbell and Peter Vanderwarker: "MEIGS ELEVATED RAILWAY" Archived 2005-01-01 at the Wayback Machine. Boston Globe, February 23, 1992.
  442. Oeters & Gulick: The Miami and Erie Canal Arcadia 2014 pp. 47ff.

Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article List_of_never_used_railways, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.