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Cincinnati, New Orleans and Texas Pacific Railway

The Cincinnati, New Orleans and Texas Pacific Railway (abbreviated: CNO&TP; (reporting mark CNTP)) is a railroad that owns the Cincinnati Southern Railway from Cincinnati, Ohio, south to Chattanooga, Tennessee, and leases it to the Norfolk Southern Railway system.

Cincinnati, New Orleans and Texas Pacific Railway
Overview
HeadquartersCincinnati, Ohio
Reporting markCNTP
LocaleOhio, Kentucky, Tennessee
Dates of operation1881–present
Technical
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Previous gaugeoriginally
5 ft (1,524 mm), converted to
4 ft 9 in (1,448 mm) in 1886[1]
Length337 miles (542 km)
No. of tracks1–2
Operating speed20–60 mph (32–97 km/h)
Route map

to Gest Street Yard &
CSX Cincinnati
3.00
Ludlow
8.00
Corby
9.80
Erlanger
12.50
Rice
22.00
Bracht
32.00
Reid
38.10
Williamstown
43.00
Mason
46.80
Blanchet
60.00
Rohan
56.60
Sadieville
62.20
Rogers Gap
65.40
Delaplain
Delaplain Yard
69.40
Georgetown
72.20
Akers
77.40
Greendale
Lexington Yard
81.70
Lexington
RJCC Central
Kentucky Lines
83.20
Rosemont
85.60
Bishop
93.00
Nicholasville
95.70
Jessamine
98.20
Wilmore
102.50
High Bridge
105.00
Brown
109.00
Burgin
110.70
Faulkner
NS Louisville District
112.60
North Wye
113.20
SJ Tower
116.40
DV Tower
116.60
Danville Yard
First District
Second District
118.30
South Danville
120.80
Junction City
123.40
Bowen
130.20
Palm
132.40
Geneva
134.80
South Fork
139.20
Kings Mountain
142.10
Waynesburg
148.70
Gradison
154.80
Norwood
160.90
Somerset
162.80
Woods
167.60
Burnside
Burnside Yard
167.60
General
on main 1 (right) track only
170.20
Tateville
176.70
KD Tower
North District
South District
181.50
Cumberland Falls
190.40
Whitley
194.70
Revilo
200.69
Kentucky
Tennessee
202.40
Ratliff
209.40
Oneida
211.50
Pemberton
215.30
Helenwood
215.40
Phillips
New River Railway
221.90
Robbins
225.80
Glen Mary
231.40
Sunbright
241.50
Lancing
244.20
CW Tower
249.00
Coleman
251.20
Camp Austin
252.70
North Oakdale
254.40
Oakdale
254.20
Tunnel 25
255.50
Tunnel 26
256.50
North Waters
257.80
South Waters
258.20
Harriman Jct
Oakdale Branch
259.70
Strange
EG Line
260.00
McCoy
Harriman &
Northeastern
260.50
Emory Gap
261.40
EG Tower
267.7
269.1
 
Rockwood
275.4
277.3
 
Roddy
283.2
285.1
 
Spring City
292.2
295.0
 
Evensville
299.2
300.7
 
Dayton
309.7
311.8
 
Sale Creek
321.00
Daisy
325.00
Cave Springs
328.70
Hixson
331.10
Tenbridge
Chattanooga
Terminal District

The physical assets of the road were initially financed by the city of Cincinnati in the 1870s, and until March 2024 had been owned by the city. It had been the only such long-distance railway owned by a municipality in the United States. The CNO&TP now owns that property and operates one rail line, the Cincinnati Southern Railway, between Cincinnati and Chattanooga.

History edit

The line opened completely in 1880, and was financed by the city of Cincinnati. Construction was spurred by a shift of Ohio River shipping, important to the local economy. Fearing the loss of shipping traffic and the local salaries and tax revenue that came with it, the city recognized the need to remain competitive. The Ohio Constitution forbade cities from forming partnerships in stock corporations, so the city, led by Edward A. Ferguson,[2] took upon itself the building of the railway.

With wide popular approval, city voters voted for $10 million in municipal bonds in 1869 to begin construction. With 337 miles of track and many tunnels to construct, another bond for an additional $6 million was necessary. Some portions were open by 1877, and the entire line opened February 21, 1880. The last spike was placed on December 10, 1879. It opened for passenger service on March 8, 1880.[3]

Routing edit

 
The Cincinnati Southern Railway heading southward through Queensgate.

The CNO&TP main line has three districts: the First District from Cincinnati, Ohio, to Danville, Kentucky; the Second District from Danville to Oakdale, Tennessee; and the Third District from Oakdale to Chattanooga.[4]

The Second District is known as the "Rathole" due to steep grades, 27 tunnels, and numerous curves which were once this line's signature. While several projects over the span of 60 years eliminated several problem areas, the Southern Railway's line improvement project between 1959 and 1963 is the best known.[5] This project saw numerous cuts and line relocations to bypass tunnels and reduce the steep grades and tight curves. Only Tunnels #22 and #24 at Nemo, Tennessee and Tunnels #25 and #26 at Oakdale remain on the line; all but #25 were built new in the 1960s.

Originally built to 5 ft (1,524 mm) broad gauge, the line was converted to standard gauge, 4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm), in 13 hours in 1886.

The late 1990s saw another improvement with the Norfolk Southern Railway double tracking the segment south of Somerset, Kentucky, between Tateville and KD Tower (near Greenwood, Kentucky). As of 2013, a massive project is underway to double track from Woods, also known as Somerset, to Grove just north of Burnside. This project will straighten a curve near the Kentucky Route 914 bypass overpass, allowing improved train handling. NS planners and engineering officials are still considering improving the company's second most profitable line, including the initial $65 million in line improvement projects from 1959 to 1963 and 1996 to 2010. Norfolk Southern is projected to have spent over $1 billion in a span of 60 years.

Queen and Crescent Route edit

After two years of leasing the property to local companies, in 1881 the city entered a 25-year lease to an entity called Cincinnati, New Orleans and Texas Pacific Railway, which was held by an English corporation controlled by German-born Parisian banker Frédéric Émile d'Erlanger. Soon Erlanger held all five segments of railroad from Cincinnati to New Orleans, and west from Meridian, Mississippi to Shreveport, Louisiana. This was dubbed the Queen and Crescent Route, connecting the Queen City to the Crescent City.[6]

Erlanger sold his interest in 1890. In 1894 the CNO&TP was one of many properties reorganized by Samuel Spencer into the vastly expanded Southern Railway.

 
dining car, postcard, date unknown

The railroad inaugurated a named passenger train for the route, the Queen and Crescent Limited, in 1926. Never a financial success, the train carried both coaches and Pullman sleepers and a dining car. The train was discontinued in 1949.

1911 strike edit

White firemen of the CNO&TP struck on January 9, 1911, when the company refused their demand that their black counterparts be fired within 90 days. Trains continued to run, with black firemen on their crews, in the vicinity of Kings Mountain, Kentucky, Somerset, Kentucky, and Oakdale, Tennessee, in terrain well-suited for sniper attacks. Within four days, sharpshooters killed at least eleven people: nine black railroad employees and two detectives.[7]

Cincinnati Southern Railway edit

The present-day Cincinnati Southern Railway runs 337 miles (542 km) from Cincinnati to Chattanooga.[3] It is still owned by the City of Cincinnati and is leased to the CNO&TP under a long-term lease; it is the only such long-distance railway owned by a municipality in the United States. The CNO&TP's lease of the Cincinnati Southern Railway is currently set to expire in 2026, with an option for a 25-year renewal.[8]

The agreement is governed by the five-member Trustees of the Cincinnati Southern Railway, who are appointed by the Mayor of the City of Cincinnati.[9][10]

The Cincinnati, New Orleans and Texas Pacific is operated by Norfolk Southern as part of the Alabama Division. Between Cincinnati and Somerset the line is under control of the North End Dispatcher, Knoxville, Tennessee. Somerset to Hixson, Tennessee, is dispatched by the South End Dispatcher, Knoxville. The CT (Chattanooga Terminal) Dispatcher controls the last few miles and a few surrounding lines into Chattanooga.

More than 50 trains a day can be seen on the CNO&TP, with the heaviest concentration between Danville and Harriman, Tennessee. Quite a bit of the traffic is intermodal and automotive. General manifests, local freights, grain, coal, and other bulk commodities make up the rest of the traffic.

In 1925 CNO&TP reported 1688 million ton-miles of revenue freight (not including Harriman & Northeastern) on 338 route-miles operated; in 1967 it had 4116 million ton-miles on 337 route-miles. Revenue passenger-miles were 134 million in 1925 and 15 million in 1967.

In 2023 it was announced that Norfolk Southern had reached an agreement to buy the Cincinnati Southern for $1.6 billion, subject to approval by voters in Cincinnati, the Surface Transportation Board and the Ohio General Assembly.[11] The Surface Transportation board has since given its approval.[12] In November 2023, Cincinnati voters approved the deal to sell Cincinnati Southern.[13] The Norfolk Southern closed on the acquisition in March 2024.[14]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "The Days They Changed the Gauge".
  2. ^ "Cincinnati Southern Railway | Edward A. Ferguson, the father of the Cincinnati Southern Railway".
  3. ^ a b "The Birth of an Idea". Cincinnati Southern Railroad.
  4. ^ "Cincinnati to Chattanooga".
  5. ^ Appel, Walter A. (June 26, 2019). "Like hell they will". Classic Trains Magazine. Retrieved July 4, 2019.
  6. ^ Kleber, John C., ed. (2015). The Kentucky Encyclopedia. University Press of Kentucky. p. 191. ISBN 9780813159010. Retrieved 4 April 2016.
  7. ^ "Eleven Men Killed in Firemen's Strike". New York Times. 13 March 1911. Retrieved 2 April 2016. Subsequent reports of a total twenty dead are harder to substantiate: see "Twenty Dead Now in Firemen's Strike". New York Times. 16 March 1911. Retrieved 2 April 2016.
  8. ^ Barry M. Horstman (2009-08-14). "Sell or Keep City Railroad?". The Cincinnati Enquirer.
  9. ^ "Cincinnati Municipal Code". §205. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  10. ^ Charles Gilbert Hall (1902). The Cincinnati Southern Railway. Cincinnati: The McDonald Press.
  11. ^ "News Briefs". Trains. Kalmbach Media. February 2023. p. 6.
  12. ^ "Cincinnati May Sell One of the US's Last Publicly Owned Rail Lines to Norfolk Southern". Jacobin, October 11, 2023. Retrieved October 11, 2023.
  13. ^ "Voters narrowly approve Cincinnati Southern sale". Trains. November 8, 2023. Retrieved December 11, 2023.
  14. ^ https://www.progressiverailroading.com/norfolk_southern/news/NS-city-close-sale-of-Cincinnati-Southern-Railway--71494#:~:text=The%20Cincinnati%20Southern%20Railway%20Board,deferred%20transaction%20fees%20from%20NS.
  • Southern Railway Ties, August 1963
  • Trackside Guide No. 1 - Cincinnati, Trains September 2002
  • Railroads of Cincinnati, includes a history of the CNO&TP with photos

Further reading edit

  • Z. Harrison (1878), Description of the Cincinnati Southern Railway from Cincinnati to Chattanooga, Cincinnati: Spencer & Craig printing works, OCLC 13741078, OL 6937907M
  • Cincinnati, New Orleans and Texas Pacific Railway (1902). Hall, Charles Gilbert (ed.). The Cincinnati Southern Railway: A History. Cincinnati: McDonald Press. OCLC 612363026 – via Google Books.
  • Ferguson, Edward Alexander (1905). Founding of the Cincinnati Southern Railway. Cincinnati: The Robert Clarke Company. OCLC 1578693 – via Google Books.
  • Bogart, Charles H. (2009). "Cincinnati Southern Railroad". In Tenkotte, Paul A.; Claypool, James C. (eds.). The Encyclopedia of Northern Kentucky. Lexington, Kentucky: University Press of Kentucky. pp. 181–182. ISBN 978-0-8131-2565-7 – via Google Books.
  • Tate, Curtis. "Tunnel Trouble: Building and Rebuilding the Cincinnati Southern, 1869–1999." Ohio Valley History 12.3 (2012): 68–77. excerpt

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Particularly Everything Blog - Queen and Crescent: Cincinnati, New Orleans and Texas Pacific Railway

cincinnati, orleans, texas, pacific, railway, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, book. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Cincinnati New Orleans and Texas Pacific Railway news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2015 Learn how and when to remove this message The Cincinnati New Orleans and Texas Pacific Railway abbreviated CNO amp TP reporting mark CNTP is a railroad that owns the Cincinnati Southern Railway from Cincinnati Ohio south to Chattanooga Tennessee and leases it to the Norfolk Southern Railway system Cincinnati New Orleans and Texas Pacific RailwayOverviewHeadquartersCincinnati OhioReporting markCNTPLocaleOhio Kentucky TennesseeDates of operation1881 presentTechnicalTrack gauge4 ft 8 1 2 in 1 435 mm standard gaugePrevious gaugeoriginally5 ft 1 524 mm converted to4 ft 9 in 1 448 mm in 1886 1 Length337 miles 542 km No of tracks1 2Operating speed20 60 mph 32 97 km h Route mapLegend to Gest Street Yard amp CSX Cincinnati Terminal Subdivision Cincinnati Southern Bridgeover Ohio River 3 00 Ludlow 8 00 Corby 9 80 Erlanger 12 50 Rice CSX LCL Subdivision 22 00 Bracht 32 00 Reid 38 10 Williamstown 43 00 Mason 46 80 Blanchet 60 00 Rohan 56 60 Sadieville 62 20 Rogers Gap 65 40 Delaplain Delaplain Yard 69 40 Georgetown 72 20 Akers 77 40 Greendale Lexington Yard 81 70 Lexington RJCC CentralKentucky Lines 83 20 Rosemont 85 60 Bishop 93 00 Nicholasville 95 70 Jessamine 98 20 Wilmore 102 50 High Bridge Kentucky River 105 00 Brown 109 00 Burgin 110 70 Faulkner NS Louisville District 112 60 North Wye 113 20 SJ Tower 116 40 DV Tower 116 60 Danville Yard First DistrictSecond District 118 30 South Danville L amp N Lebanon Branch 120 80 Junction City 123 40 Bowen 130 20 Palm 132 40 Geneva 134 80 South Fork 139 20 Kings Mountain 142 10 Waynesburg 148 70 Gradison 154 80 Norwood 160 90 Somerset 162 80 Woods Cumberland River 167 60 Burnside Burnside Yard 167 60 Generalon main 1 right track only 170 20 Tateville 176 70 KD Tower North DistrictSouth District 181 50 Cumberland Falls 190 40 Whitley 194 70 Revilo 200 69 KentuckyTennessee 202 40 Ratliff 209 40 Oneida 211 50 Pemberton 215 30 Helenwood 215 40 Phillips New River Railway New River 221 90 Robbins 225 80 Glen Mary 231 40 Sunbright 241 50 Lancing 244 20 CW Tower 249 00 Coleman 251 20 Camp Austin 252 70 North Oakdale 254 40 Oakdale 254 20 Tunnel 25 255 50 Tunnel 26 256 50 North Waters 257 80 South Waters 258 20 Harriman Jct Oakdale Branch 259 70 Strange EG Line 260 00 McCoy Harriman amp Northeastern 260 50 Emory Gap 261 40 EG Tower 267 7269 1 Rockwood 275 4277 3 Roddy 283 2285 1 Spring City 292 2295 0 Evensville 299 2300 7 Dayton 309 7311 8 Sale Creek 321 00 Daisy 325 00 Cave Springs 328 70 Hixson 331 10 Tenbridge ChattanoogaTerminal District This diagram viewtalkedit The physical assets of the road were initially financed by the city of Cincinnati in the 1870s and until March 2024 had been owned by the city It had been the only such long distance railway owned by a municipality in the United States The CNO amp TP now owns that property and operates one rail line the Cincinnati Southern Railway between Cincinnati and Chattanooga Contents 1 History 1 1 Routing 1 2 Queen and Crescent Route 1 3 1911 strike 2 Cincinnati Southern Railway 3 See also 4 References 5 Further reading 6 External linksHistory editThe line opened completely in 1880 and was financed by the city of Cincinnati Construction was spurred by a shift of Ohio River shipping important to the local economy Fearing the loss of shipping traffic and the local salaries and tax revenue that came with it the city recognized the need to remain competitive The Ohio Constitution forbade cities from forming partnerships in stock corporations so the city led by Edward A Ferguson 2 took upon itself the building of the railway With wide popular approval city voters voted for 10 million in municipal bonds in 1869 to begin construction With 337 miles of track and many tunnels to construct another bond for an additional 6 million was necessary Some portions were open by 1877 and the entire line opened February 21 1880 The last spike was placed on December 10 1879 It opened for passenger service on March 8 1880 3 Routing edit nbsp The Cincinnati Southern Railway heading southward through Queensgate The CNO amp TP main line has three districts the First District from Cincinnati Ohio to Danville Kentucky the Second District from Danville to Oakdale Tennessee and the Third District from Oakdale to Chattanooga 4 The Second District is known as the Rathole due to steep grades 27 tunnels and numerous curves which were once this line s signature While several projects over the span of 60 years eliminated several problem areas the Southern Railway s line improvement project between 1959 and 1963 is the best known 5 This project saw numerous cuts and line relocations to bypass tunnels and reduce the steep grades and tight curves Only Tunnels 22 and 24 at Nemo Tennessee and Tunnels 25 and 26 at Oakdale remain on the line all but 25 were built new in the 1960s Originally built to 5 ft 1 524 mm broad gauge the line was converted to standard gauge 4 ft 8 1 2 in 1 435 mm in 13 hours in 1886 The late 1990s saw another improvement with the Norfolk Southern Railway double tracking the segment south of Somerset Kentucky between Tateville and KD Tower near Greenwood Kentucky As of 2013 a massive project is underway to double track from Woods also known as Somerset to Grove just north of Burnside This project will straighten a curve near the Kentucky Route 914 bypass overpass allowing improved train handling NS planners and engineering officials are still considering improving the company s second most profitable line including the initial 65 million in line improvement projects from 1959 to 1963 and 1996 to 2010 Norfolk Southern is projected to have spent over 1 billion in a span of 60 years Queen and Crescent Route edit After two years of leasing the property to local companies in 1881 the city entered a 25 year lease to an entity called Cincinnati New Orleans and Texas Pacific Railway which was held by an English corporation controlled by German born Parisian banker Frederic Emile d Erlanger Soon Erlanger held all five segments of railroad from Cincinnati to New Orleans and west from Meridian Mississippi to Shreveport Louisiana This was dubbed the Queen and Crescent Route connecting the Queen City to the Crescent City 6 Erlanger sold his interest in 1890 In 1894 the CNO amp TP was one of many properties reorganized by Samuel Spencer into the vastly expanded Southern Railway nbsp dining car postcard date unknown The railroad inaugurated a named passenger train for the route the Queen and Crescent Limited in 1926 Never a financial success the train carried both coaches and Pullman sleepers and a dining car The train was discontinued in 1949 1911 strike edit White firemen of the CNO amp TP struck on January 9 1911 when the company refused their demand that their black counterparts be fired within 90 days Trains continued to run with black firemen on their crews in the vicinity of Kings Mountain Kentucky Somerset Kentucky and Oakdale Tennessee in terrain well suited for sniper attacks Within four days sharpshooters killed at least eleven people nine black railroad employees and two detectives 7 Cincinnati Southern Railway editThe present day Cincinnati Southern Railway runs 337 miles 542 km from Cincinnati to Chattanooga 3 It is still owned by the City of Cincinnati and is leased to the CNO amp TP under a long term lease it is the only such long distance railway owned by a municipality in the United States The CNO amp TP s lease of the Cincinnati Southern Railway is currently set to expire in 2026 with an option for a 25 year renewal 8 The agreement is governed by the five member Trustees of the Cincinnati Southern Railway who are appointed by the Mayor of the City of Cincinnati 9 10 The Cincinnati New Orleans and Texas Pacific is operated by Norfolk Southern as part of the Alabama Division Between Cincinnati and Somerset the line is under control of the North End Dispatcher Knoxville Tennessee Somerset to Hixson Tennessee is dispatched by the South End Dispatcher Knoxville The CT Chattanooga Terminal Dispatcher controls the last few miles and a few surrounding lines into Chattanooga More than 50 trains a day can be seen on the CNO amp TP with the heaviest concentration between Danville and Harriman Tennessee Quite a bit of the traffic is intermodal and automotive General manifests local freights grain coal and other bulk commodities make up the rest of the traffic In 1925 CNO amp TP reported 1688 million ton miles of revenue freight not including Harriman amp Northeastern on 338 route miles operated in 1967 it had 4116 million ton miles on 337 route miles Revenue passenger miles were 134 million in 1925 and 15 million in 1967 In 2023 it was announced that Norfolk Southern had reached an agreement to buy the Cincinnati Southern for 1 6 billion subject to approval by voters in Cincinnati the Surface Transportation Board and the Ohio General Assembly 11 The Surface Transportation board has since given its approval 12 In November 2023 Cincinnati voters approved the deal to sell Cincinnati Southern 13 The Norfolk Southern closed on the acquisition in March 2024 14 See also edit nbsp Railways portal Queen and Crescent Route Interstate Commerce Commission v Cincinnati New Orleans and Texas Pacific Railway Co Cincinnati Blue Ash Airport formerly owned by the City of Cincinnati outside the corporation limits French Park Amberley Ohio also owned by the City of Cincinnati outside the corporation limitsReferences edit The Days They Changed the Gauge Cincinnati Southern Railway Edward A Ferguson the father of the Cincinnati Southern Railway a b The Birth of an Idea Cincinnati Southern Railroad Cincinnati to Chattanooga Appel Walter A June 26 2019 Like hell they will Classic Trains Magazine Retrieved July 4 2019 Kleber John C ed 2015 The Kentucky Encyclopedia University Press of Kentucky p 191 ISBN 9780813159010 Retrieved 4 April 2016 Eleven Men Killed in Firemen s Strike New York Times 13 March 1911 Retrieved 2 April 2016 Subsequent reports of a total twenty dead are harder to substantiate see Twenty Dead Now in Firemen s Strike New York Times 16 March 1911 Retrieved 2 April 2016 Barry M Horstman 2009 08 14 Sell or Keep City Railroad The Cincinnati Enquirer Cincinnati Municipal Code 205 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Charles Gilbert Hall 1902 The Cincinnati Southern Railway Cincinnati The McDonald Press News Briefs Trains Kalmbach Media February 2023 p 6 Cincinnati May Sell One of the US s Last Publicly Owned Rail Lines to Norfolk Southern Jacobin October 11 2023 Retrieved October 11 2023 Voters narrowly approve Cincinnati Southern sale Trains November 8 2023 Retrieved December 11 2023 https www progressiverailroading com norfolk southern news NS city close sale of Cincinnati Southern Railway 71494 text The 20Cincinnati 20Southern 20Railway 20Board deferred 20transaction 20fees 20from 20NS Southern Railway Ties August 1963 Trackside Guide No 1 Cincinnati Trains September 2002 Railroads of Cincinnati includes a history of the CNO amp TP with photosFurther reading editZ Harrison 1878 Description of the Cincinnati Southern Railway from Cincinnati to Chattanooga Cincinnati Spencer amp Craig printing works OCLC 13741078 OL 6937907M Cincinnati New Orleans and Texas Pacific Railway 1902 Hall Charles Gilbert ed The Cincinnati Southern Railway A History Cincinnati McDonald Press OCLC 612363026 via Google Books Ferguson Edward Alexander 1905 Founding of the Cincinnati Southern Railway Cincinnati The Robert Clarke Company OCLC 1578693 via Google Books Bogart Charles H 2009 Cincinnati Southern Railroad In Tenkotte Paul A Claypool James C eds The Encyclopedia of Northern Kentucky Lexington Kentucky University Press of Kentucky pp 181 182 ISBN 978 0 8131 2565 7 via Google Books Tate Curtis Tunnel Trouble Building and Rebuilding the Cincinnati Southern 1869 1999 Ohio Valley History 12 3 2012 68 77 excerptExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cincinnati New Orleans and Texas Pacific Railway Official website Particularly Everything Blog Queen and Crescent Cincinnati New Orleans and Texas Pacific Railway Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cincinnati New Orleans and Texas Pacific Railway amp oldid 1221786488, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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