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Washington and Old Dominion Railroad

The Washington and Old Dominion Railroad (colloquially referred to as the W&OD and sometimes the "Virginia Creeper") was an intrastate short-line railroad located in Northern Virginia, United States. The railroad was a successor to the bankrupt Washington and Old Dominion Railway and to several earlier railroads, the first of which began operating in 1859. The railroad closed in 1968.

Washington and Old Dominion Railway/Railroad
The former W&OD 57, a General Electric 70-ton diesel–electric switcher locomotive built in 1956, at the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad's Riverside Yard in Baltimore in January 1969.[1]
Overview
HeadquartersWashington, D.C., Arlington, Virginia
Reporting markWOD
LocaleVirginia
Dates of operation1912–1968
Technical
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Length72 miles (116 kilometres)

The Railroad's oldest line extended from Alexandria on the Potomac River northwest to Bluemont at the base of the Blue Ridge Mountains near Snickers Gap, not far from the boundary line between Virginia and West Virginia. The railroad's route largely paralleled the routes of the Potomac River and the present Virginia State Route 7. The single-tracked line followed the winding course of Four Mile Run upstream from Alexandria through Arlington to Falls Church. At that point, the railroad was above the Fall Line and was able to follow a more direct northwesterly course in Virginia through Dunn Loring, Vienna, Sunset Hills (now in Reston), Herndon, Sterling, Ashburn and Leesburg. The line turned sharply to the west after passing through Clarke's Gap in Catoctin Mountain west of Leesburg. Its tracks then continued westward through Paeonian Springs, Hamilton, Purcellville and Round Hill to reach its terminus at Bluemont. A branch connected the line to Rosslyn.

The W&OD was one of the major commercial and transportation corridors of the northern Virginia area from the mid-nineteenth century through the mid-twentieth century. Though it never reached the Shenandoah Valley or the West Virginia coal country, or allowed Alexandria to compete with Baltimore for western trade as envisioned, it did play a significant role in the development of northern Virginia. It served as a local carrier that was extensively used and fought over during the Civil War; served Washington vacationers headed to the Blue Ridge mountains; hauled agricultural products into Washington; aided the development of Falls Church and Dunn Loring; and, at the end of its operational life, hauled materials used in the construction of Dulles Airport and the Capital Beltway. It is one of the few steam railroads in America to have transitioned to both electric and diesel operations.[2]

After the closure of the railroad, the track was removed. The Washington and Old Dominion Railroad Trail (W&OD Trail), the Bluemont Junction Trail, the Mount Jefferson Park and Greenway Trail, several other trails, Interstate 66 (I-66), and Old Dominion Drive (VA Route 309) have replaced much of the railroad's route.

History edit

Predecessors of the W&OD (1855–1911) edit

 
Library of Congress
Lewis McKenzie, between 1860 and 1875
 
A Union Army train running on the line was the focus of a Confederate States Army attack in the 1861 Battle of Vienna, Virginia

The Washington and Old Dominion Railroad was originally incorporated as the Alexandria and Harper's Ferry (A&HF) Railroad in 1847. The goal of the A&HF was to connect to the Winchester and Potomac River Railroad in Harper's Ferry and thus redirect trade from the Shenandoah that had started going to Baltimore via the Baltimore and Ohio (B&O) Railroad. But in 1848, the Winchester and Potomac became part of the B&O putting an end to that plan.

In 1853 the charter of the A&HF was amended to change the name to the Alexandria, Loudoun and Hampshire (AL&H) Railroad and change the route to pass as close as possible to Leesburg, then through Clarke's Gap and into the Blue Ridge Mountains through the Bloomery Gap of Cacapon to Paddytown in what is now West Virginia and there connect with a railroad serving the coal fields. Construction on the line began in 1855, under the presidency of Lewis McKenzie.[3] Still intending to cross the Blue Ridge Mountains and the Shenandoah River to reach the coal fields that are now within Mineral County, West Virginia, the AL&H began operating to Vienna in 1859 from a terminal near Princess and Fairfax Streets in Alexandria's present Old Town neighborhood.[4][2]

In early 1860, service was extended to Ashburn and in May to Leesburg in Loudoun County, and the right-of-way had been graded all the way to Clarke's Gap. One of the early passengers was President James Buchanen when visiting his summer White House, the Sterling Hotel in Sterling.[2]

Because of its proximity to Washington, D.C., the line saw much use and disruption during the Civil War.[5] In May 1861 it was seized by Union forces and incorporated into the U.S. Military Railroad. A month later, under General Lee's orders, retreating Confederate troops destroyed much of the line west of Vienna. The Union primarily used the railroad to bring wood into Washington and to supply Union troops at camps south of the city. On June 17, 1861, it was the site of a small battle, when troops from South Carolina ambushed the train near Vienna. The line also benefited from the war, because the Union built connections from it to the Alexandria & Washington railroad and the Orange and Alexandria as well as a new railroad bridge across the Potomac with the AL&H was able to access. At the end of the war, the railroad helped transport the Army of the Potomac back to Washington and on August 8, 1865, it was returned to its original owners. Because of the damage and neglect, service was not restored to Herndon until 9 January, 1866 and to Leesburg until 1867.[2]

After the war, the line was extended along the grade built before the war, reaching Clarke's Gap in 1868; and the planned western terminus was changed from Paddy Town via Vestal's gap to Piedmont, WV via Snicker's Gap.[6] In 1870 the western terminus was changed again, this time to Point Pleasant, WV, which required a charter with the new state of West Virginia. In compliance with the new charter the name of the line was changed to the Washington and Ohio Railroad. At the same time, the line was extended to Hamilton (then called Irene Station) and passenger service was doubled[7] In 1874, the line was extended to Purcelleville and then Round Hill, grading began on the Winchester extension (which included a cup through rocks at Scotland Gap between Round Hill and Snickersville) and a new 131-foot Howe truss bridge was erected over Broad Run.[6]

The expense of expansion, the Panic of 1873 and the burden of debt took their toll and in 1878, the Washington and Ohio went into receivership.[8] It was acquired by new owners in 1882 and they changed the name to the Washington and Western Railroad, but it only lasted a year before defaulting on their debt. It was sold again in 1883 and the name changed to the Washington, Ohio and Western (WO&W) Railroad.[9] During this time, owners purchased new rolling stock and upgraded the rail and several bridges.[2]

In 1886, through a series of consolidations, purchases and leases the Richmond and Danville Railroad took control of the WO&W through a lease agreement.[10][8] The Richmond and Danville also acquired a branch that paralleled the WO&W while traveling between Manassas and Strasburg, Virginia, where it connected to railroads in the Shenandoah Valley west of the Blue Ridge that the WO&W did not reach (see: Manassas Gap Railroad).[10][8] In 1888, the Richmond and Danville began to operate the WO&W's trains between Washington, D.C., and Round Hill.[10][8] During this time, President Grover Cleveland frequently rode the train to Leesburg to fish and the town of Dunn-Loring was platted along the tracks.[2]

In 1894, the newly formed Southern Railway absorbed the Richmond and Danville Railroad and acquired the WO&W.[11][12][13] In 1900, the Southern Railway extended the line westward for four miles from Round Hill to Snickersville, which was then renamed Bluemont; but abandoned all plans to go to West Virginia.[14] The extension was done to service tourist and day-trippers from Washington. The Southern Railway designated the line as its Bluemont Branch.[11][12]

 
John Roll McLean (1904)
 
Stephen Benton Elkins

When the Spanish-American War broke out, the War Department built Camp Alger near Dunn Loring and the WO&W found new business ferry soldiers back and forth to the base. It even carried President William McKinley to Camp Alger to see the troops.[2]

By 1908, steam locomotives were hauling Southern Railway passenger trains from the new Union Station in Washington, D.C., to Alexandria Junction (north of old town Alexandria), where they switched to travel westward on the Bluemont Branch.[11] Connecting trains shuttled passengers between Alexandria Junction and the former AL&H terminal in old town Alexandria.[11] On weekends, express trains carried vacationers from Washington to Bluemont and other towns in western Loudoun County in which resorts had developed.[11][12][15]

Meanwhile, in 1906, electric trolleys began to run on the Great Falls and Old Dominion Railroad (GF&OD) northwest to Great Falls from Georgetown in Washington, D.C.[16][17] The line, which John Roll McLean and Stephen Benton Elkins owned at the time, crossed the Potomac River on the old Aqueduct Bridge and passed through Rosslyn. The trolleys then traveled northwest on a double-tracked line through Arlington and Fairfax County to reach an amusement park (trolley park) that the railroad company constructed and operated near the falls.[16] The GF&OD had been such a success, that they began to look for opportunities to expand and the Bluemont Branch made a desirable target.[2]

Maps edit

Washington and Old Dominion Railway (1911–1936) edit

 
Diagram of Washington area trolley lines c. 1920–1925 (enlargeable image showing the Great Falls Division of the W&OD Railway in dark green and the Bluemont Division in light green).

In 1911, McLean and Elkins formed a new corporation, the Washington and Old Dominion Railway.[18] In that year, they concluded negotiations with the Southern Railway to lease the Southern's Bluemont Branch and to take over all service on the branch on July 1, 1912.[19] The lease excluded the portion of the Southern's route that connected Potomac Yard with the former AL&H terminal in old town Alexandria.[19]

In 1912, the GF&OD became the "Great Falls Division" of the W&OD Railway, while the Southern's Bluemont Branch became a part of the W&OD Railway's "Bluemont Division".[20] The W&OD electrified all of its operations over the next four years, becoming an interurban electric trolley system that carried passengers, mail, milk and freight.[21]

From that time onward, W&OD trains crossed over Potomac Yard, which opened in 1906, on a 1300-foot long trestle constructed around the same time for the Southern Railway.[22] In contrast to the Southern Railway's earlier Bluemont Branch service, the W&OD Railway's Bluemont Division did not serve Washington's Union Station.[23]

In the first few months, they invested in several upgrades to the system. To join its two lines, the W&OD Railway constructed a double-tracked Bluemont Division connecting line that traveled between two new junctions in Arlington: Bluemont Junction on the Alexandria-Bluemont line and Thrifton Junction on the Georgetown-Great Falls line.[19][24] They also constructed a turning wye at Bluemont Junction which ended between 7th and 8th street N. The connecting line passed through Lacey (near the west end of Ballston), crossing on a through girder bridge over a competing interurban electric trolley line, the Fairfax line of the Washington-Virginia Railway (see Northern Virginia trolleys).[25][26] By October 1912 they had electrified the Bluemont Division from Bluemont Junction to Leesburg and by December all the way to Bluemont.[2]

Most of the Bluemont Division's passenger cars or trains ran on the W&OD Railway's Great Falls Division's line from Georgetown over the Aqueduct Bridge through Rosslyn to Thrifton Junction. From Thrifton Junction, the trains ran on the Bluemont Division's connecting line to Bluemont Junction, where they met other Bluemont Division passenger cars or trains that ran from Alexandria, following Four Mile Run in Arlington. Some of the Bluemont Division cars or trains then continued their trips through Falls Church, Vienna, Herndon, Sterling, Ashburn, Leesburg, Clarke's Gap and Purcellville to terminate in Bluemont, Virginia, at the base of the Blue Ridge Mountains, following a route that was similar to that of Virginia State Route 7.[27]

The railway's electrification system distributed 650 volts direct current (DC) to its Bluemont Division cars and trains through overhead catenary lines, even though by 1912 this system was becoming obsolete by 1200 V systems.[28] Single overhead lines carried the Great Falls Division's electricity over its tracks.[29] Stationary and movable electrical substations containing Westinghouse alternating current (AC) to DC converters were located at Round Hill, Leesburg, Herndon, and Bluemont Junction. .[28][30]

The W&OD's main passenger line ran from Georgetown and Rosslyn through Thrifton Junction, Bluemont Junction and westward to Bluemont.[31] However, after crossing the Potomac River from Georgetown, many W&OD passengers transferred in Rosslyn to the trolleys of the competing Washington-Virginia Railway.[32] Most of the W&OD's freight trains ran between Potomac Yard, Bluemont Junction and either Rosslyn or various locations along the Bluemont Division.[31]

In 1917, John McLean died from cancer and the railroad ownership passed to his heirs and those of Elkins. The heirs had little interest in running the railroad and in 1918 and 1922 the Virginia Corporation Commission ordered the railroad to make improvements, which the absentee owners never did.[2]

In 1923, the W&OD Railway ceased operating from Georgetown when the federal government replaced the aging Aqueduct Bridge with the new Francis Scott Key Bridge.[33] At the same time, the railroad constructed a new passenger station in Rosslyn which became its "Washington" terminal.[33]

The W&OD Railway lost money every year after 1912 and fell upon particularly hard times during the Great Depression.[34] In 1932, the railway went into bankruptcy and was again placed in receivership.[35] The receivers chose new management that cut employees, service and rolling stock in an effort to reduce costs. To further cut costs, the railway abandoned operations on the Great Falls Division between Thrifton Junction and Great Falls in stages with the process completed in June 1934, with the last train run on June 8. Several of the cars that ran on the Great Falls line were dismantled later that year and the tracks were pulled up in mid-1935. The abandoned railway route then became Old Dominion Drive (Virginia State Route 309).[33][36][37] In 1979, the Great Falls Divisions old rail trestle over Difficult Run, the last physical piece of rail infrastructure still in use from that line, was demolished after years of carrying automobile traffic on Old Dominion Drive.[38] In addition, the receivers also ended passenger service between Bluemont Junction and Alexandria in 1934. With the reduced service they were able to cut their rolling stock by more than half that year.[33]

Washington and Old Dominion Railroad (1936–1965) edit

 

In 1936, the Washington and Old Dominion Railroad, a new corporation that Davis Elkins (the son of Stephen Benton Elkins) had created, assumed operation of the remnants of the W&OD Railway, which consisted only of the Railway's Bluemont Division and the portion of the former Great Falls Division that had remained between Rosslyn and Thrifton (which was no longer a junction).[39][40] They negotiated a new, cheaper lease with Southern Railway.

Shortly thereafter, in 1939, the railroad began to scale back. It abandoned the western end of its line which had connected the towns of Purcellville and Bluemont. This section had seen steep declines from passengers and from the closing of the flour mill in Round Hill and the railroad couldn't afford to repair the Round Hill trestle when it needed it.[39][41] Service ended in February and the rails and electrical equipment were delivered to Southern as salvage. In the same year, the signature station in Rosslyn was torn down to make way for a better entrance to the Key Bridge.[42] On April 23, 1941, it ended all passenger service, although freight and mail service continued.[43]

The 1940s were a time of continued change for the W&OD. In 1941, not only did the railroad end passenger service (temporarily, as it would turn out), but it began to convert its operations from electric to diesel or gasoline power; a process that it completed in 1944. The retrenchment and diesels, coupled with growth in Arlington - and an accompanying increased demand for building supplies - led to, starting in 1940, the first profits in 28 years.[40][44]

Mail service by trolley railway was unusual, and in 1941 it was believed to be the only trolley railway postal service east of the Mississippi.[45] After some of the trolley wire had been removed in 1942 and sold as scrap to support the United States' World War II effort,[46] the W&OD was forced in March 1943 to resume passenger service between Rosslyn and Leesburg to reduce the need for tires due to shortages caused by the war.[47][48] After finding few riders, the railroad asked to discontinue passenger service in June, noting that it was using gasoline, which was also being curtailed for the war.[49]

In late 1943, the railroad leased a used Budd two-car streamlined gas-electric passenger train and in February 1944 expanded passenger service to Leesburg and Purcellville using gas–electric motor cars and cars pulled by diesel–electric locomotives.[50][51] At first passenger demand was great enough to justify three round trips a day, but after the war ridership dropped and in 1950 it was scaled back. When the post office department canceled its mail service contract in 1951, the railroad stopped carrying both passengers and mail. The last passenger car ran on May 31, 1951; thereafter, the railroad carried only freight.[52][53]

In 1945, the W&OD Railroad acquired ownership of the section of line between Potomac Yard and Purcellville that they had leased from the Southern Railway.[54] The Southern Railway retained ownership of the easternmost section of the railroad's route, which still connected Potomac Yard to the Southern's freight and passenger stations in old town Alexandria.

Chesapeake and Ohio ownership edit

In 1956, believing that the Potomac Electric Power Company (PEPCO) would select a site near the W&OD's route in Sterling for a new coal-fired power plant, the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway (C&O) purchased the W&OD from Elkins, but did not change the railroad's name.[55] However, PEPCO instead chose a site in Maryland for its power plant after the C&O had concluded the purchase.[56]

In 1957, the W&OD's prospects improved with the construction of Dulles Airport, for which it had the nearest railhead. Between 1958 and 1960, thirteen bridges between Sterling and Potomac Yards, including the one at Difficult Run that dated back to 1884, were replaced with larger ones and worn-out rails and ties were replaced. In 1959, hauling traffic for both the construction of Dulles and the Capital Beltway the railroad had its most profitable year ever.[57]

The 1960s were a decade of decline and closure for the W&OD as the Virginia highway department saw the right-of-way as potential highways and trucking continued to take away business.[58] The highway department began negotiations to purchase the Rosslyn spur in 1960 and was trying to buy the mainline as early as 1962 for the construction of a road that was to become Interstate 66 (I-66).[59] In July 1962, the highway department bought the Rosslyn spur for $900,000 and in September 1963, the railroad stopped operating to Rosslyn. The railroad then removed its tracks between Lacey (south of Washington Boulevard) and Rosslyn by November 1964.[60][61]

Abandonment (1965—1968) edit

In February 1965, the Commonwealth of Virginia contracted to buy 30.5 miles (49.1 km) of the mainline between Herndon and Alexandria for $3.5 million. The C&O Railway then petitioned the Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) for permission to abandon the railroad's remnant. The purchase would eliminate the need to build a grade separation where the railroad crossed the Henry G. Shirley Memorial Highway (now part of Interstate 395 (I-395)) at grade and at another grade separation for I-66. The purchase would also provide 1.5 miles (2.4 km) of right-of-way for I-66, saving the state $5 million.[62]

Business interests in Loudoun County, the Arlington County Chamber of Commerce, various state, county and local officials, railway labor organizations and 21 of the 133 shippers who still used the railroad's freight service opposed the purchase. The Northern Virginia Transportation Commission (NVTC), which was interested in converting the line to a commuter rail service, also opposed the purchase.[62] The Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority (WMATA), which at the time was planning to construct a rapid transit system for the Washington area, tried to postpone the abandonment in the hopes of using part of the right-of-way for transit.[63]

The highway department simultaneously made plans to secretly sell all but 4 miles (6.4 km) of the route to the Virginia Electric and Power Company (VEPCO) (now Dominion Virginia Power), whose transmission lines were running along the railroad's right-of-way.[64] In addition, the W&OD agreed to sell to VEPCO the remaining 17.5 miles (28.2 km) of right-of-way not purchased by the highway department. This included the 12 miles (19.3 km) north of Herndon, a 4-mile section at Vienna, one mile at the Alexandria end and two 1000 foot long sections at Sunset Hills and Falls Church. The sale would thus prevent the NVTC from buying the land for mass transit.[65]

In August 1967, transit advocates led by Del. Clive L. DuVal II (Fairfax-Falls Church) and WMATA secured a 60-day postponement of the abandonment while they put together a plan to use the right-of-way for transit.[66] However, according to WMATA general manager Jackson Graham, the estimated cost of using the full right-of-way for commuter rail was $70 million. Because WMATA did not expect the proposed transit line to be able to generate enough ridership to be cost-effective, WMATA rejected that option.[67]

 
The former W&OD 55, a Whitcomb 75-ton diesel–electric switcher locomotive built in 1950, at the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad's Riverside Yard in Baltimore in January 1969.[1]

On November 10, 1967, WMATA announced that it had come to an agreement with the highway department that would give WMATA a two–year option to buy a 5 miles (8.0 km) stretch of the right of way from Glebe Road (Virginia Route 120) to the Capital Beltway (now Interstate 495 (I-495)), where I-66 was to be built. WMATA would operate mass transit in the highway's median strip. WMATA would have a 2-year option to buy the 10 miles (16.1 km) of right-of-way from the Beltway to Herndon for the use of commuter trains, an option that WMATA did not exercise.[68] A last minute offer to buy the railroad at its salvage cost and keep it running that the railroad's customers made was rejected in 1967.[69]

In January 1968, the ICC decided to permit the C&O to abandon and sell its line and the railroad planned to run their last train on January 30, 1968. But a temporary restraining order kept the line open until the U.S. District Court in Alexandria sustained the decision in July setting the last for August 27, 1968.[70][71] On the last day, B&O switcher 9155 pulled two empty lumber cars to Potomac Yard from the Murphy and Ames Lumber Company siding in Falls Church.[72] On August 30, the railroad shipped its three diesel locomotives to the B&O's Baltimore engine terminal, from which a salvage dealer purchased them.[72] In October 1968, the Virginia State Highway Department started condemnation proceedings to acquire the right-of-way, which was eventually donated to the state, where it crossed Shirley Highway. The section where it crossed the future Interstate 66 was also donated.[73] The Northern Virginia Transportation Commission asked the ICC to reconsider its decision but in November 1968 it rejected that request.[71]

Removal edit

By 1969, the C&O had removed all of its tracks and ties (the ties were sold in bundles of 25 for $75),[74] except for some tracks that were crossing paved roads; and the County started covering those in late 1968.[75] In late 1969, bulldozers started tearing up the right-of-way for construction of I-66 and the Metrorail line.[76]

In August 1970, the 80 year old East Falls Church station, located south of the tracks on the west side of Washington Street/Langston Boulevard, was torn down also to make room for I-66 and the Metrorail line.[77][2][78] The station was torn down piece by piece and given to Arthur Brown who moved it to Amissville, VA for use as a trading post. As of 1973 he had not reconstructed it because of uncertainty about widening US-211.[79] Two older buildings that had served as the East Falls Church station had been removed from the site, reused and then eventually destroyed.[80]

The bridge over U.S. Route 29 (Lee Highway at the time and Langston Boulevard later) had been partially removed by early 1970 and the remainder removed by 1979.[81]

After the W&OD stopped running passenger trains in 1951, the Dunn Loring station served as the town's post office, but was then torn down in 1963.[82][83]

The bridge over the Capital Beltway, built along with the beltway around 1963, was torn down in 1974 to accommodate Beltway widening.[84]

Legacy edit

In 1999, Virginia Department of Historic Resources staff determined that the "Washington and Old Dominion Railroad Historic District" was eligible for listing on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP).[85] A 2000 NRHP registration form states that the Historic District is eligible for the listing because the District "is associated with events that have made a significant contribution to the broad patterns of our history". The form contains an in-depth description of the District's historical resources and of the railroad's history, as well as maps that show the locations of the Districts's major historical features.[82]

Park edit

Great Falls Park was eventually purchased by the Fairfax Park Authority in 1953 and in 1966 transferred to the National Park Service wherein it became a National Park.

Right-of-way edit

45 miles of the railroad's original 54 mile long, 100 foot wide Bluemont Divition right-of-way remain today as the Washington and Old Dominion Railroad Regional Park, which features the W&OD Trail. Sections used to build I-66 and near Shirley Highway, not I-495, were transferred to Virginia Department of Highways and then later that year, the land that lay west of the Alexandria/Arlington boundary was sold for $4.91 million to Virginia Electric and Power Company (VEPCO) (part of which was incorporated into Dominion Virginia Power in 2000) for power line right-of-way.[86] In 1977 VEPCO agreed to sell their land to the Northern Virginia Regional Park Authority (NVRPA) (now NOVA Parks) for $3.6 million, retaining an easement for the power lines.[87][88] The NVRPA completed the trail to Purcellville in 1988.[89]

The Virginia highway department retained the section of the railroad's route that crossed the Henry G. Shirley Memorial Highway along the Arlington-Alexandria boundary and the portion of the route in Arlington immediately east of Falls Church, on which it built I–66.[87] WMATA then constructed a part of Washington Metro's Orange Line within the median strip of I-66 on that portion of the railroad's former route.[90]

The western 11 miles of the 15-mile right-of-way of the Great Falls and Old Dominion Division became Old Dominion Drive. The easternmost 1.25 miles became part of I-66 and the 1.25 miles in between became part of Langston Drive.

The easternmost 1.25 miles of the Bluemont-Thrifton Division also was used to create I-66, the westernmost 1.4 miles was used to build the Bluemont Junction Trail and on the 1000 feet in between, the Ballston Wetland was built.

Scotland Heights Road west of Round Hill passes through the cut in rock at Scotland Gap made for the W&OD.

Bridges edit

The railroad traveled along Four Mile Run on the east side and perpendicular to the flow of water on the west which resulted in numerous bridges. The bridge spans have all been removed, and in most cases replaced, but the bridge abutments and piers and stone arches remain.

Abutments and piers exist at the numerous Four Mile Run crossings, Piney Branch, Difficult Run, Broad Run, Goose Creek, Sycolin Creek, Tuscarora Creek and Leesburg Town Branch and almost all cases a trail deck now extends across them. At Tuscarora, the trail runs alongside the piers and abutments crossing the creek on a low-water crossing. The longest and highest bridge is the one at Goose Creek. The stone abutments and piers date from the original pre-Civil War period of construction, but other components have been replaced several times, most recently in 1981 when the current bridge span was built.[2]

Six stone arch bridges remain. They can be found at Clark's Gap, Sugarland Run, Piney Branch, Hamilton, Paeonian Springs and Four Mile Run. The oldest of these is the one at Sugarland Run that dates back to the original construction.[2]

Additionally, abutments carrying an old road over the tracks can be found in Loudoun County between Crosstrail Boulevard and the access trail to Rhonda Place, SE.[2]

Culverts edit

Numerous stone and cast iron culverts remain from the railroad along the right-of-way. These carry the trail over smaller streams and drainages. On the eastern side the culverts are more likely to have been replaced by modern culverts as part of modern storm water management efforts.[2]

Tracks edit

Little, if any, of the track or ballast remain. When the railroad ceased operation most of the track was removed. Some may survive at intersections where the rails would be found under the road pavement. Portions of track were visible near the W&OD Trail's crossing of Ruritan Circle (VA Route 859) in Sterling during 2016.[91]

One exception is the spur from the CSX mainline at the Slater's Lane Interlocking in Northeast Alexandria to the old Potomac River Generating Station site along the Alexandria Waterfront. The track was used by the plant until late 2013 when the plant's switcher was hauled away because the power plant was closed and being redeveloped.[92] The tracks continued to be used for a short time after that by the Robinson Terminal, but that too was closed after it was sold for redevelopment in late 2013.[93] The last train ran sometime in late 2013 or early 2014. For now, the tracks remain all the way to N.Union Street, but as part of the power plant redevelopment plan, the tracks between Abingdon Drive and 3rd Street will be removed to create a linear park. A siding track to the power plant was removed in 2021-2022.[94]

Stations edit

Nine stations or depots, and one grain elevator remain today:

Vienna has the easternmost surviving station which dates back until before the Civil War. Located at the center of Ayr Hill and Dominion Roads, the Vienna Train Depot has served as the home of the Northern Virginia Model Railroaders Club since 1975.[82][95]

The Sunset Hills (or Wiehle) Station survives just east of Reston Parkway. It served for some time after the railroad ended operations as a ranger station for the nearby park, but is currently unused.[82][96]

The Herndon depot survives as a museum. It was built prior to 1857, but did not reach its current form until around 1881. On June 18, 1979, the Heritage Conservation and Recreation Service of the United States Department of the Interior added it to the NRHP.[82][97]

The Leesburg Freight House was moved two blocks north to Market Station in 1984. The building housed a pizza restaurant in 2016.[98]

The Paeonian Springs Shelter originally stood at the site of railroad's earlier Clark's Gap station. After the railroad closed, the NVRPA installed the shelter at the site of the Paeonian Springs station, which had burned in 1941.[82][99]

The Hamilton Station was built in 1870 and has an old grain mill next to it.[82][100]

The Purcellville train station was built around 1903–1904. It was purchased by the Purcellville Preservation Association (PPA) in June 1993 and subsequently restored in 1998–2002.[82][101] It serves trail users as a rest stop and community members as meeting space. It was added to the NRHP On May 28, 2010, by the National Park Service to the NRHP.[102] The Virginia Department of Historic Resources has added both it and the Herndon Station to the Virginia Landmarks Register.[103]

The Round Hill freight depot at 34 Main Street in Round Hill, built in 1890, was recently restored and turned into a 3-bedroom cottage, but has served for a home for several decades.[104][105] Across the street is the restored Round Hill Passenger Station which is also a personal residence.[104][106]

The Bluemont station burned down in 1920, but the grain elevator was left standing (and later built taller to serve as cell phone tower). A scaled-down replica of the old station was built at the foot of the grain elevator.[107]

 
Herndon Depot, August 2012
 
Purcellville Station, August 2008

Bluemont Division, Alexandria-Bluemont line edit

 
Stone arch at Clarke's Gap, August 2008

After the W&OD Railroad closed, the Southern Railway and its successor, the Norfolk Southern Railway, operated a spur between the Alexandria waterfront and a north–south route that traveled through Potomac Yard before the Yard closed in 1989.[108] The spur formerly served trains traveling from the eastern end of the Bluemont Division to the Southern Railway's freight and passenger stations in old town Alexandria.[108] As the Southern Railway owned and operated the spur and the stations, this section of track remained in operation after the W&OD closed.[108] Railroad operations ended on the spur in 2012–2013 when GenOn Energy's Potomac River Generating Station and the Robinson Terminal's Oronoco Street warehouse closed.[109]

A paved trail in Alexandria's linear Mt. Jefferson Park has replaced part of the Bluemont Division's course through that city.[110] NOVA Parks' 44.6 miles (71.8 km)-long W&OD Trail travels in the Washington and Old Dominion Railroad Regional Park within the Bluemont Division's former right-of-way from the Alexandria/Arlington boundary through Bluemont Junction to Purcellville.[111] The section of the Bluemont Division between Purcellville and Bluemont has not become a part of any trail, as the W&OD Railroad abandoned this section in 1938, thirty years before the remainder of its line closed.

Until 2023 some of the warehouses along the old W&OD in Alexandria (between Calvert and Swann) that were built to be serviced by it - with doors that opened toward the railroad - remained, but they were torn down to make room for the Del Ray Corner development.[112]

Great Falls Division edit

In 1906, the 15-mile electrified Great Falls and Old Dominion Railroad (GF&OD) began operating from Georgetown in Washington, D.C. to the present site of Great Falls Park in Virginia. From Georgetown, the railroad crossed the Potomac River on the old Aqueduct Bridge to Rosslyn in Arlington. From Rosslyn, the railroad traveled northwest along the later routes of Lee Highway (U.S. Route 29) and Old Dominion Drive (Virginia State Route 309) until it reached Great Falls. In 1912, the GF&OD became the Great Falls Division of the W&OD, sharing trackage with the W&OD's Bluemont Division between Rosslyn and Thrifton Junction.[113]

Thrifton-Bluemont Junction connecting line edit

The Thrifton-Bluemont Junction connecting line, a component of the W&OD's Bluemont Division, opened in 1912. The line connected the W&OD's Great Falls Division (formerly the Great Falls and Old Dominion Railroad) with the Bluemont Division's Alexandria-Bluemont line. The line closed in sections in 1963 and 1968.[114] I–66 and the adjacent Custis Trail replaced the line between Thrifton and Washington Boulevard in Ballston. Arlington County's Bluemont Junction Trail replaced the line between Washington Boulevard and Bluemont Junction.

Bluemont Junction, where the Bluemont Junction Trail now meets the W&OD Trail, presently contains an Arlington County railroad display that features a Southern Railway bay window caboose at Bluemont Park [ceb].[115] The caboose was built in 1971, three years after the W&OD Railroad closed.[116]

Surviving Locomotives edit

At least four locomotives that the W&OD had owned or leased still survived in 2017.

 
IATR 50 (former W&OD 50) and IATR 54 in Mason City, Iowa, in 2009

In addition, at least one of the old auto-railers may still exist.

  • The W&OD purchased several auto-railer cars from the defunct Arlington & Fairfax Auto Railway. #109 was acquired by the Chicago, South Shore & South Bend RR in 1955 and equipped with a platform on the roof for working on the overhead wires in East Chicago, IN.[136] Sometime in the 1950s it was sold to the Grasse River Railroad in New York. Sometime after the GRR went under in 1959, it passed into private ownership and as of 2021 was stored at Clark's Trading Post in Lincoln, New Hampshire. It is the last known, remaining piece of rolling stock from the Washington-Virginia streetcars, but it has not been maintained and has been stored outside for 60+ years.[137]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Multiple sources:
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o "Washington & Old Dominion Railroad Historic District Registration Form" (PDF). Retrieved August 18, 2023.
  3. ^ Williams, p. 3.
  4. ^ Harwood, pp. 12—15.
  5. ^ Multiple sources:
    • Williams, pp. 8–10.
    • . Archived from the original on November 7, 2005.
  6. ^ a b Multiple sources:
    • Williams, p. 27.
    • Harwood, p. 20—22.
  7. ^ Multiple sources:
    • Harwood, p. 20-21.
    • The Washington and Ohio Rail Road Company (1873). "The Washington and Ohio Railroad. A Glance at the country through which it passes, between Washington D.C., and the Ohio River, a distance of 325 miles". Philadelphia: Collins, Printer. Retrieved July 24, 2019 – via Internet Archive.
  8. ^ a b c d Multiple sources:
    • Harwood, p. 24.
    • Williams, p. 28.
  9. ^ Williams, pp. 27–28.
  10. ^ a b c Multiple sources:
  11. ^ a b c d e Williams, pp. 42–43.
  12. ^ a b c Harwood, p. 26.
  13. ^ "1895 system map of Southern Railway". from the original on November 11, 2009.
  14. ^ Falknor, Susan Freis (March 11, 2008). "History of Bluemont - Railroad days". Welcome to Bluemont: Articles. Bluemont, Virginia: Bluemont Citizens Association. from the original on June 24, 2019. Retrieved January 19, 2020.
  15. ^ "Complete Schedule Between Washington and Bluemont". Southern Railway Company. May 28, 1911. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |url= (help) at Harwood, p. 29.
  16. ^ a b Harwood, pp. 33–41.
  17. ^ Williams, pp. 44, 71.
  18. ^ Harwood, p. 45.
  19. ^ a b c Harwood, p. 46.
  20. ^ Harwood, pp. 46, 49.
  21. ^ Williams, pp. 45, 72.
  22. ^ Multiple sources:
    • Harwood, pp. 32, 46–47.
    • "W&OD bridge over Potomac Yard north of the Yard's St. Asaph station" (photograph). from the original on October 22, 2018. Retrieved October 22, 2018 – via Pinterest.
  23. ^ Williams, pp. 43–44.
  24. ^ Williams, p. 72.
  25. ^ Williams, pp. 107, 144, 156.
  26. ^ ""Lacey Car Barn" marker". HMdb.org: The Historical Marker Database. from the original on October 14, 2017. Retrieved October 14, 2017. In 1896, the Washington, Arlington & Falls Church Railway began running electric trolleys from Rosslyn to Falls Church on the present routes of Fairfax Drive and I-66. By 1907, the line linked downtown Washington to Ballston, Vienna, and the Town of Fairfax. In 1910, the railway built at this location a car barn, rail yard, workshop, electrical substation, and general office. In 1912, the rival Washington & Old Dominion Railway began crossing the tracks on a bridge 200 yards west of here, traveling the present route of I-66 from Rosslyn. The line to Fairfax closed in 1939, but Metrorail's Orange Line follows its route through Arlington.
  27. ^ Multiple sources:
    • Williams, p. 43.
    • Washington and Old Dominion Railway timetables:
      Bluemont Division: Williams, pp. 40, 68.
      Great Falls Division: Williams, p. 67.
  28. ^ a b Harwood, pp. 48–49.
  29. ^ Harwood, pp. 39, 48–49.
  30. ^ Williams, pp. 70–71.
  31. ^ a b Harwood, p. 47.
  32. ^ Harwood, p. 38.
  33. ^ a b c d Multiple sources:
    • Williams, p. 74.
    • Harwood, pp. 68–69.
  34. ^ Multiple sources:
    • Williams, pp. 74, 93.
    • Harwood, pp. 73–79.
  35. ^ Multiple sources:
    • Williams, p. 93.
    • Harwood, p.73.
  36. ^ Harwood, pp. 77–78.
  37. ^ King, 1934 (map)
  38. ^ Hanson, Christoper (April 9, 1979). "A Rusted Old Trestle Falls, A Relic of the Car Era". The Evening Star.
  39. ^ a b Harwood, pp. 79–80.
  40. ^ a b Williams, p. 91.
  41. ^ "Round Hill Trestle". Retrieved March 14, 2024.
  42. ^ "Old Station Being Removed". The Washington Post. April 15, 1939.
  43. ^ "Old Dominion Rail Passenger Service Ends". The Washington Post. April 13, 1941.
  44. ^ Harwood, pp. 83–84.
  45. ^ "W&OD Offers 'Most Unusual' mail service, writer declares". Loudoun News. October 16, 1941. Retrieved July 12, 2023.
  46. ^ "Power Lines Salvaged for War Purposes". Blue Ridge Herald. December 17, 1942. Retrieved June 7, 2023.
  47. ^ "Scarcity of Tires May Bring New Life to Local Railroad". Loudoun News. January 1, 1942. Retrieved July 13, 2023.
  48. ^ "W.&O.D. Re-Opens Passenger Service". Blue Ridge Herald. March 18, 1943. Retrieved July 14, 2023.
  49. ^ "Fight over W&OD Still Goes on". Loudoun News. June 10, 1943. Retrieved July 11, 2023.
  50. ^ Multiple sources:
    • Harwood pp. 81, 83–88, 137–138.
    • Williams, pp. 93–94.
  51. ^ "W.&O.D. Service is increased". Fairfax Herald. February 4, 1944. Retrieved July 14, 2023.
  52. ^ Multiple sources:
    • Harwood, pp. 90–91.
    • Williams, p. 95.
  53. ^ Troxell, Margaret (June 1951). "Gay Crowd and TV Cameras Bid Farewell to Passenger Train". The Arlington Sun. Retrieved July 17, 2023.
  54. ^ Multiple sources:
    • Harwood, p. 90.
    • Williams, p. 94.
  55. ^ Multiple sources:
    • Harwood, p. 97.
    • Williams, p. 96.
  56. ^ Harwood, pp. 97-99.
  57. ^ Harwood, pp. 99-101
  58. ^ McCray, Paul. "The W&OD's Odyssey from Rail to Trail". Loudoun Now. Retrieved November 13, 2023.
  59. ^ Multiple sources:
    • "Senate Enacts W.& O.D. Bill". The Washington Post. March 9, 1960.
    • Dewar, Helen (January 21, 1962). "Virginia Drops Plan To Buy W&OD Line". The Washington Post.
  60. ^ "Rail Spur Quiet for While: But the Old W&OD Route Soon Will Hum With Autos". The Washington Post. November 16, 1964.
  61. ^ "W&OD Rail Spur Bought by State". The Washington Post. July 10, 1962.
  62. ^ a b Multiple sources:
    • "ICC Examiner Favors Death of W&OD Line". The Washington Post. March 8, 1966.
    • "Want W&OD to Stay". The Washington Post. March 17, 1965.
    • Douglas, Walter B (February 9, 1965). "Railroad Agrees to Sell Right of Way to Virginia". The Washington Post.
  63. ^ Flor, Lee (August 30, 1967). "Delay of Transit Talk May Bear on W&OD".
  64. ^ Multiple sources:
    • Harwood, pp. 106–107.
    • Williams, p. 109.
  65. ^ "Secret Deal Disclosed on W&OD Line". The Washington Post. March 10, 1966.
  66. ^ Multiple sources:
    • "DuVal Asks Salvaging Of W&OD". The Washington Post. June 21, 1967.
    • Jay, Peter A. (August 2, 1967). "Transit Unit Wins Delay In Rail Case". The Washington Post.
  67. ^ Multiple sources:
    • "Law to Save W&OD Rails To Be Sought". The Washington Post. September 13, 1967.
    • "Two Steps Advance Accord on Transit". The Washington Post. September 9, 1967.
  68. ^ Multiple sources:
    • Corrigen, Richard (November 2, 1967). "WMATA Agrees On Rail Bed Route". The Washington Post.
    • "Ailing Va. Railroad Allowed to Quit in '68". The Washington Post. January 25, 1968.
  69. ^ "Plant Owners Along W&OD Again Try to Keep Line Going". The Washington Post. November 20, 1967.
  70. ^ Multiple sources:
    • McLaughlin, Maureen (January 30, 1968). "Judge's Order Delays Closing of W&OD". The Washington Post.
    • "W&OD Limping to Extinction". The Washington Post. August 3, 1968.
  71. ^ a b "W&OD Decision Review Denied". The Evening Star. November 6, 1968.
  72. ^ a b Harwood, p. 106.
  73. ^ Green, Stephen (October 5, 1968). "Virginia Road Unit Buys Hot Shoppes at Twin Bridges". The Evening Star.
  74. ^ Yarbrough, Charles (November 4, 1969). "Dulles Seen As Our Savior". Evening Star.
  75. ^ "Action Line". The Evening Star. December 7, 1968.
  76. ^ "Hits loss of W&OD". Northern Virginia Sun. December 5, 1969. Retrieved February 2, 2024.
  77. ^ "Coming Down to Go Up". Northern Virginia Sun. August 22, 1970. Retrieved February 22, 2024.
  78. ^ Multiple sources:
    • Yarbrough, Charles (November 4, 1969). "Dulles Seen as Our Savior". The Washington Evening Star.
    • Braaten, David (April 7, 1974). "Bridge Taking a Hike". The Washington Evening Star.
    • Beckham, Nancy (June 12, 1970). "Old Station at End of Line". Washington Evening Star.
  79. ^ "Then and Now: Falls Church Station". February 27, 1973. Retrieved February 22, 2024.
  80. ^ "EAST FALLS CHURCH HISTORY: Train Stations" (PDF). Retrieved February 26, 2024.
  81. ^ "Action Line". The Evening Star. January 25, 1970.
  82. ^ a b c d e f g h Neville, Ashley M. (Gray & Pape, Inc., Richmond, Virginia) (July 25, 2000). "United States Department of the Interior: National Park Service: National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Washington & Old Dominion Railroad Historic District (Virginia Department of Historic Resources (DHR) No. 053-0276)" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on January 26, 2020. Retrieved January 26, 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) In Appendix J of Northern Virginia Regional Park Authority - Pre-filed Direct Testimony of Mr. Hafner, Mr. Mcray and Mr. Simmons, November 30, 2005 (Part 4), Case No. PUE-2005-00018, Virginia State Corporation Commission. Obtained in "Case Docket Search". Virginia State Corporation Commission. Retrieved September 28, 2017.
  83. ^ "Dunn Loring Station". from the original on September 28, 2023. Retrieved February 3, 2023. In "Historical marker(s) in Washington and Old Dominion Railroad Markers series". HMdb.org: The Historical Marker Database. from the original on October 6, 2023. Retrieved February 3, 2023.
  84. ^ Stone, Sue (April 12, 1974). "Beltway Railroad Bridge To Go Down; But Will It Go Back Up?". Northern Virginia Sun. Retrieved September 7, 2023.
  85. ^ Multiple sources:
    • Ezell, Raymond (Virginia Department of Transportation Fredericksburg District) (February 29, 2012). "Archaeological Survey: Proposed Sycolin Road Overpass of Route 7/15 Bypass Leesburg, Loudoun County, Virginia: Management Summary" (PDF). Virginia Department of Transportation. p. 2. (PDF) from the original on September 27, 2012. Retrieved January 26, 2020.
    • Dutton + Associates, LLC., Midlothian, Virginia (October 2016). "VDHR #053-0276: Washington & Old Dominion Railroad Historic District (Eligible)" (PDF). Pre-Application Analysis for Cultural Resources of the Idylwood Substation at Shreve Road Project. Virginia State Corporation Commission. p. 5-1. (PDF) from the original on January 26, 2020. Retrieved January 26, 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
    • Schlupp, Catherine; Staton, Heather Dollins (Dovetail Cultural Resource Group, Fredericksburg, Virginia) (October 2016). "Phase IB Architectural Survey of the Proposed Soapstone Connector, Fairfax County Virginia" (PDF). Fairfax County, Virginia government. p. 5. (PDF) from the original on August 26, 2018.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) * "Transform I-66 Inside the Beltway: Eastbound Widening Environmental Assessment: Architectural Phase I Survey Report" (PDF). United States Department of Transportation: Federal Highway Administration and Virginia Department of Transportation. November 2016. p. 7. (PDF) from the original on January 26, 2020. Retrieved January 26, 2020.
  86. ^ "Real Estate Transfers in Northern Virginia". Northern Virginia Sun. October 29, 1968.
  87. ^ a b Harwood, pp. 106–107.
  88. ^ Harwood, pp. 108–109.
  89. ^ Harwood, p. 109.
  90. ^ Harwood, p. 112.
  91. ^ "Image of railroad tracks near W&OD Trail crossing of Ruritan Circle in Sterling". October 2016. Retrieved January 2, 2024 – via Google Street View.
  92. ^ "PEPCO (ALEXANDRIA, VA) POWER PLANT TO CLOSE". Retrieved March 8, 2024.
  93. ^ "Sale of Robinson Terminal warehouses to bring development to Alexandria waterfront". The Washington Post. September 25, 2013. Retrieved March 8, 2024.
  94. ^ "CDD Staff Report" (PDF). Retrieved March 8, 2024.
  95. ^ Multiple sources:
    • "Vienna Railroad". Northern Virginia Sun. January 22, 1975. Retrieved August 24, 2023.
    • "NVRPA "Vienna Station" marker near the Vienna Station of the W&OD Railroad". "Washington and Old Dominion Railroad Markers" series. HMdb: The Historical Marker Database. from the original on December 26, 2015. Retrieved February 4, 2024.
    • Wood, Rebekah K. (May 3, 2002). "Vienna Depot: Description and Historical Significance: Vienna, Virginia. Prepared for the nomination of the Vienna Depot to the National Register of Historic Places". Washington & Old Dominion Railroad, 1847 to 1968: A Photographic History, by Paul McCray. from the original on January 22, 2016. Retrieved February 4, 2024.
    • "Northern Virginia Model Railroaders, Inc". Vienna, Virginia: Northern Virginia Model Railroaders, Inc. from the original on August 9, 2018. Retrieved February 4, 2024.
  96. ^ "NVRPA "Sunset Hills Station" marker". HMdb: The Historical Marker Database. from the original on December 26, 2015. Retrieved February 4, 2014.
    Part of "Washington and Old Dominion Railroad Markers" series". HMdb: The Historical Marker Database. from the original on July 18, 2011. Retrieved February 4, 2024.
  97. ^ Multiple sources:
    • "NVRPA "Herndon Station" marker". HMdb: The Historical Marker Database. from the original on December 27, 2015. Retrieved February 4, 2024. In "Washington and Old Dominion Railroad Markers" series". HMdb: The Historical Marker Database. from the original on July 18, 2011. Retrieved February 4, 2024.
    • David, Elizabeth S., Historic Preservation Planner, Fairfax County Office of Comprehensive Planning (April 1979). "Herndon Depot" (PDF). United States Department of the Interior: National Park Service: National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form. Richmond, Virginia: Virginia Department of Historic Resources. (PDF) from the original on January 28, 2020. Retrieved February 4, 2024.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
    • "Herndon Depot: National Register Information System ID: 79003039". NPGallery Digital Asset Management System. United States Department of the Interior: National Park Service. Retrieved February 4, 2024.
    • Greenberg, Ronald M. (Acting Chief, National Register of Historic Places). "Virginia: Herndon. Herndon Depot, Elden St." (PDF). Federal Register: March 18, 1980: Part II: Department of the Interior: Heritage Conservation and Recreation Service: National Register of Historic Places; Annual Listing of Historic Properties. 45 (54): 17484. Retrieved February 4, 2024.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
    • "Herndon Depot". National Register of Historic Places: Virginia – Fairfax County. National Register of Historic Places.com. from the original on September 6, 2015. Retrieved February 4, 2024.
  98. ^ Muliple sources:
    • Graham, Karen (April 1, 2016). "History provided the path for Tuscarora Mill and Market Station's success". Loudoun Times-Mirror. Leesburg, Virginia. from the original on February 4, 2024. Retrieved February 4, 2024. Market Station, now a thriving business community anchored by Tuscarora Mill restaurant, includes seven restored historic buildings that were brought to the site or reconstructed on site. These buildings included a freight station, a stationmaster's house, log house, two barns and two mills. .... There were always adjustments that needed to be made along the way, Dickerson said, including the building which is now Fireworks Pizza. The building was constructed 180 degrees the wrong way. Builders had to create new windows to "make it work," he said.
    • . Fire Works Pizza. Leesburg, Virginia. 2012. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved February 4, 2024.
    • Swain, Craig (photographer) (January 26, 2008). "The Relocated Freight Depot" (photograph). Photograph number 3 in "Leesburg Freight Station" marker. HMdb.org: The Historical Marker Database. from the original on October 23, 2020. Retrieved February 4, 2024.
    • ""The Depot" marker". HMdb.org: The Historical Marker Database. from the original on March 12, 2012. Retrieved February 4, 2024. It was moved two blocks to Market Station in 1984.
    • Leesburg Freight Station. In "Washington and Old Dominion Railroad Markers" series". HMdb: The Historical Marker Database. from the original on July 18, 2011. Retrieved February 4, 2024.
  99. ^ Multiple sources:
    • McCray, Paul. "Paeonian Springs Station". Washington & Old Dominion Railroad 1847 to 1968: A Photographic History. Paul McCray. from the original on October 3, 2013. Retrieved February 4, 2024. The Paeonian Springs Station was located approximately where the small passenger shelter now sits next to the trail in the community of Paeonian Springs. The shelter was originally located at Clarks Gap and was built from pieces of the larger, demolished Clarks Gap station.
    • Swain, Craig (August 25, 2007). "Marker in front of the Shelter Along the Trail" (photograph). HMdb: The Historical Marker Database. from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved February 4, 2024. showing passenger shelter and "Additional comment" dated January 29, 2008. In Swain, Craig. "Paeonian Springs Station marker". HMdb: The Historical Marker Database. from the original on July 18, 2011. Retrieved February 4, 2024. In 2006, the shelter along the trail at the site of the former Paeonian Springs station contained on its rear wall a sheet of paper within a plastic cover. The sheet described the history of the shelter. The sheet stated that the Washington & Old Dominion Railroad constructed the shelter at the site of the Clarkes Gap station on Dry Mill Road after the Clarkes Gap station burned down. According to the sheet, a railroad employee who lived in Paeonian Springs preserved the shelter. The sheet further stated that the employee's family had donated the shelter to the Northern Virginia Regional Park Authority. In "Washington and Old Dominion Railroad Markers" series". HMdb: The Historical Marker Database. from the original on December 27, 2015. Retrieved February 4, 2024.
    • . Exploring the W&OD Rail Trail. MidAtlanticDayTrips.com. August 2, 2017. Archived from the original (photograph) on December 29, 2019. Retrieved December 29, 2019.
  100. ^ "NVRPA "Hamilton Station" marker". HMdb: The Historical Marker Database. from the original on July 18, 2011. Retrieved February 4, 2024. In "Washington and Old Dominion Railroad Markers" series". HMdb: The Historical Marker Database. from the original on July 18, 2011. Retrieved February 4, 2024.
  101. ^ Multiple sources:
    • . Purcellville, Virginia: Purcelleville Preservation Society. Archived from the original on October 20, 2013.
    • "Purcelleville Train Station". Purcellville, Virginia: Town of Purcellville, Virginia. from the original on September 28, 2023. Retrieved February 4, 2024.
  102. ^ Multiple sources:
    • Kalbian, Maral S; Peters, Margaret T. (November 20, 2009). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form (United States Department of the Interior: National Park Service): Purcellville Train Station" (PDF). Richmond, Virginia: Virginia Department of Historic Resources. (PDF) from the original on October 27, 2018. Retrieved February 4, 2024. and
    • Director, National Park Service (June 4, 2010). "Weekly list of actions taken on properties for the National Register of Historic Places: 5/24/10 through 5/28/10" (PDF). National Register of Historic Places 2010 Weekly Lists. United States Department of the Interior: National Park Service. (PDF) from the original on December 28, 2019. Retrieved February 4, 2024.
    • "Purcellville Train Station: National Register Information System ID: 10000307". NPGallery Digital Asset Management System. United States Department of the Interior: National Park Service. Retrieved February 4, 2024.
    • "Purcellville Train Station". National Register of Historic Places: Virginia – Loudoun County. National Register of Historic Places.com. from the original on February 18, 2017. Retrieved February 4, 2024.
  103. ^ Multiple sources:
  104. ^ a b Kalbian, Maral S.; Peters, Margaret T. (July 31, 2008). "Round Hill Historic District" (PDF). United States Department of the Interior: National Park Service: National Register of Historic Places Registration Form. Richmond, Virginia: Virginia Department of Historic Resources. p. Section 7, p. 15. Retrieved February 3, 2024.
  105. ^ "IN PHOTOS: Transformed train depot on the market in Loudoun County". InsideNoVa. Woodbridge, Virginia: InsideNoVa.com. from the original on December 15, 2023. Retrieved February 3, 2024.
  106. ^ Stewart, Kevin (July 15, 2014). "Washington and Old Dominion Railroad Depot- Round Hill VA" (photograph). from the original on October 9, 2021. Retrieved February 4, 2024 – via Flickr.
  107. ^ Multiple sources:
    • "Bluemont Mill & Railway Museum (train operated 1900-1938)". Bluemont Heritage Tour. Bluemont, Virginia: Bluemont Heritage. 2024. from the original on January 16, 2021. Retrieved February 4, 2024. This early 1900s mill has been built taller to function as a cell phone tower. A replica of the Bluemont train station sits at the foot. Bluemont was long the terminus of the Washington and Old Dominion Railway (W&OD).
    • "Train Station". Bluemont, Virginia: The Bluemont Fair. 2024. from the original on February 4, 2024. Retrieved February 4, 2024. Bluemont was the end of the line for the W&OD railroad, and our train station was located at the end of Railroad Street until it burned down in 1920. But the grain elevator was left standing, and a scaled-down replica of the old train station has been reproduced at the foot of that elevator.
  108. ^ a b c Harwood p. 112.
  109. ^ Multiple sources:
    • Sullivan, Patricia (September 29, 2012). "GenOn power plant in Alexandria is set to close". Local. The Washington Post. from the original on June 15, 2018. Retrieved June 15, 2018.
    • Sullivan, Patricia (September 25, 2013). "Sale of Robinson Terminal warehouses to bring development to Alexandria waterfront". Local. The Washington Post. from the original on June 15, 2018. Retrieved June 15, 2018.
  110. ^ Stone, Jim. . Alexandria, VA: Del Ray Citizens Association. Archived from the original on March 29, 2008. Retrieved January 17, 2010.
  111. ^ Harwood, pp. 108–109, 112.
  112. ^ "Vanished Doors to History". Facebook. Retrieved January 18, 2024.
  113. ^
  114. ^ Multiple sources:
    • Harwood, pp. 101, 106.
    • Williams, pp. 107, 131.
  115. ^ Multiple sources:
  116. ^ Copy of Southern Railway records in album inside Bluemont Junction caboose.
  117. ^ a b c d e . Utah State Railroad Museum: Spencer S. & Dolores Doré Eccles Rail Center. Ogden, Utah: Ogden Union Station. 2018. Archived from the original (photograph) on September 3, 2018. Retrieved October 31, 2018. This locomotive began life as Baltimore & Ohio 213, and later became B&O 8413. It was sold to Arco Petroleum in Carson, California, and renumbered 8417, then later Arco 6971. Sold to General American Tank Car (GATX) in Colton, California, keeping the same number. Cargill purchased the unit from Western Railway Supply, a used equipment dealer, and moved it to Ogden in August 1993 for use at the company's Globe Mill. In 2010 it was replaced by a Trackmobile, and Cargill donated it to the museum. It was delivered on May 21, 2011, free of charge thanks to Utah Central and Union Pacific. It is one of the first SW1s to be built, and when sold to the B&O was classified as an NS1.
    While out of service at the elevator, vandals stripped the wiring from the traction motors, as well as from inside the cab which remained unlocked. Cargill funded the complete repainting and restoration of the locomotive to operation. Painting was completed in November 2011. Located on Track 1.
  118. ^ a b c d e Harwood, p. 137.
  119. ^ Van Cleve, Jeff (July 4, 1996). . RR Picture Archives.net. Ogden, Utah. Archived from the original (photograph) on October 29, 2018. Retrieved December 20, 2013..
  120. ^ a b c . RR Picture Archives.net. November 27, 2020. Archived from the original (photographs) on November 27, 2020. Retrieved November 27, 2020..
  121. ^ Multiple sources:
    • . Utah State Railroad Museum Locomotives. Archived from the original (photograph) on June 7, 2019. Retrieved June 7, 2019.
    • . rgusmrail.com. March 1, 2019. Archived from the original (photograph) on June 7, 2019. Retrieved June 7, 2019. This SW1 unit was built by EMD in 1940 as #213 for the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad. The unit was subsequently renumbered BO #8413. It was sold to Arco Petroleum at Carson, CA, where it was renumbered #6971. It next went to the locomotive leasing company General American Transportation Corporation at Colton, CA. After the lease expired, the unit was stored at the GATX facility until it was sold through the dealer, Western Railway Supply, to Cargill. It moved to the Horizon Milling Company in Ogden in mid August 1993 and was repainted, lettered and renumbered #6751. It was replaced by a Trackmobile in 2010. Donated to the Utah State Railroad Museum in April 2011, it was moved to Union Station on 21st May 2011.
    • Daniels, Roger (June 27, 2020). . RR Picture Archives.net. Ogden, Utah. Archived from the original (photograph) on November 27, 2020. Retrieved November 27, 2020..
  122. ^ Multiple sources:
    • Kerr, James (November 20, 2009). "Columbia & Reading ALCO S2 CORY 2-26". RailPictures.Net. Frank Sahd Salvage Center, Columbia, Pennsylvania. Archived from the original (photograph) on January 28, 2014. Retrieved January 28, 2014.
    • k41361 (February 24, 2010). . YouTube. Archived from the original (video) on June 29, 2016. Retrieved June 29, 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) Video of CORY 2-26 crossing Route 262 in Columbia, Pennsylvania.
    • . Green Initiatives. Columbia, Pennsylvania: Sahd Metal Recycling. Archived from the original (photograph) on September 27, 2013. Retrieved December 20, 2013.
    • Walker, Craig (September 27, 2013). "Columbia & Reading ALCO S2 CORY 2-26". RailPictures.Net. Columbia, Pennsylvania. Archived from the original (photograph) on January 28, 2014. Retrieved January 28, 2014. Tucked away in a scrap yard in Columbia, Pennsylvania, is Columbia & Reading S2 2-26. This 1946-built Alco has put in the miles for a number of railroads, starting with the Chesapeake & Ohio (#5015, then #9165) followed by stints as GEX 106, FCIN 106, PVRR 27, CCCR 27 and JCNX 27.
    • . Columbia, Pennsylvania: RR Pictures Archive.Net. Archived from the original (photographs) on December 23, 2017. Retrieved December 23, 2017.
    • Central PA Locos (April 26, 2014). . Pictures of CORY 2-26. Columbia, Pennsylvania: RR Pictures Archive.Net. Archived from the original (photographs) on May 25, 2015. Retrieved May 25, 2015.
    • Darnell, Tim (July 28, 2016). . Pictures of CORY 2-26. Columbia, Pennsylvania: RR Pictures Archive.Net. Archived from the original (photograph) on January 27, 2017. Retrieved January 27, 2017.
    • Painter, Kevin (October 27, 2017). . Pictures of CORY 2-26. Columbia, Pennsylvania: RR Pictures Archive.Net. Archived from the original (photograph) on December 23, 2017. Retrieved December 23, 2017.
    • Painter, Kevin (February 13, 2019). . Pictures of CORY 2-26. Columbia, Pennsylvania: RR Pictures Archive.Net. Archived from the original (photograph) on June 7, 2019. Retrieved June 7, 2019.
    • "HD Columbia and Reading ALCO S2 2 26 around Columbia,PA" (video). Alex Gillespie Rail Productions. February 14, 2019. Archived from the original on December 21, 2021. Retrieved November 27, 2020 – via YouTube. (9:38 minutes)
    • Painter, Kevin (January 21, 2020). . Pictures of CORY 2-26. Columbia, Pennsylvania: RR Pictures Archive.Net. Archived from the original (photograph) on November 27, 2020. Retrieved November 27, 2020.
  123. ^ Multiple sources:
    • Harwood, pp. 131, 137.
    • 1941 and 1946 photographs of W&OD 47: Harwood, pp. 83, 88.
  124. ^ a b c . Number 30. The Fonda Johnstown & Gloversville Railroad. Archived from the original (photographs) on August 8, 2016. Retrieved June 29, 2016.Photographs of the former W&OD 47 as FJGRR 30, on the Great Western Railway of Colorado and as BJRY 44.
  125. ^ Zygmunt, Chris (June 8, 2012). "BJRY 44" (photograph). LocoPhotos: Comprehensive Locomotive Archiving. Burlington, Iowa: Jack Hilton. from the original on September 18, 2014. Retrieved September 17, 2014. Lineage: ex GWR 44, ex Cargill, ex FJG 30, ex WOD 47
  126. ^ a b Multiple sources:
    • Zygmunt, Chris (June 8, 2012). . RailPictures.Net. Burlington, Iowa. Archived from the original (photograph) on December 21, 2013. Retrieved December 20, 2013.
    • Zygmunt, Chris (June 8, 2012). "BJRY 44" (photograph). LocoPhotos: Comprehensive Locomotive Archiving. Burlington, Iowa: Jack Hilton. from the original on September 18, 2014. Retrieved September 17, 2014. Lineage: ex GWR 44, ex Cargill, ex FJG 30, ex WOD 47
    • . Rail System Plan: Appendix A. Ames, Iowa: Iowa Department of Transportation. Archived from the original on February 5, 2012. Retrieved September 17, 2014.
  127. ^ Multiple sources:
    • Lewis, Edward A. (1996). "Burlington Junction Railway". American Shoreline Railway Guide (5th ed.). Waukesha, Wisconsin: Kalmbach Publishing Company. p. 53. ISBN 0890242909. LCCN 96215170. OCLC 35286187. Retrieved December 23, 2017 – via Google Books.
    • Miller, Gerry; Sink, Tom; Zygmunt, Chris (June 8, 2012). . RailPictures.Net. Burlington and West Burlington, Iowa. Archived from the original (photograph) on October 30, 2013. Retrieved December 17, 2014.
    • Rumbut, Kris (September 11, 2014). . Pictures of BJRY 44. Burlington, Iowa: RR Pictures Archive.Net. Archived from the original (photograph) on May 25, 2015. Retrieved May 25, 2015.
    • Mackey, Dan (August 5, 2018). "BRJY 44" (photograph). Burlington, Iowa: Flickr. from the original on June 7, 2019. Retrieved June 7, 2019.
    • Zygmunt, Chris (June 8, 2012). "BJRY 44" (photograph). LocoPhotos: Comprehensive Locomotive Archiving. Burlington, Iowa: Jack Hilton. from the original on September 18, 2014. Retrieved September 17, 2014. Lineage: ex GWR 44, ex Cargill, ex FJG 30, ex WOD 47
  128. ^ Multiple sources:
    • Harwood, pp. 68, 135.
    • Blake, Henry W.; Bozell, Harold V., eds. (June 25, 1921). "Manufacturers and the Markets: Rolling Stock". Electric Railway Journal. 57 (28). New York: McGraw-Hill Company, Inc.: 917. ISSN 0095-9715. OCLC 2021289. Retrieved September 28, 2017 – via Google Books. Description of 50-ton Baldwin-Westinghouse electric locomotive purchased by the Mononghahela Valley Traction Company, Fairmont, West Virginia, circa 1921 and similar to W&OD 50.
    • 1922 and 1940 photographs of W&OD 50: Harwood, p. 71.
    • Rice, Leonard. . Archived from the original (photograph) on December 24, 2013. Retrieved December 21, 2013.. In McCray, Paul. . Archived from the original on December 10, 2015. Retrieved December 2, 2015.
    • Guillaudeu, 2013, p. 114. "This photograph from March 25, 1944, is one of the last images of Locomotive No. 50 in use on the W&OD Railroad. ... (Photograph by Leonard W. Rice.)"
  129. ^ a b Harwood, p. 135.
  130. ^ Multiple sources:
    • Harper, James P. (April 7, 1947). . Don's Rail Photos. Don Ross Group. Archived from the original (photograph) on October 23, 2012. Retrieved September 18, 2014.
    • Ross, Don (September 25, 1954). . Don's Rail Photos. Don Ross Group. Archived from the original (photograph) on October 23, 2012. Retrieved September 18, 2014.
  131. ^ Multiple sources:
    • , p. 135.
    • Ross, Don (March 1960). . Don's Rail Photos. Don Ross Group. Archived from the original (photograph) on October 23, 2012. Retrieved September 18, 2014.
    • McDowell, Mark (May 1, 1960). . Pictures of KVW 507. Bonner Springs, Kansas: RR Pictures Archives.net. Archived from the original (photograph) on November 2, 2020. Retrieved November 2, 2020..
  132. ^ Multiple sources:
    • the_trainman407 (July 14, 2012). . RailPictures.Net. AGP Ethanol Plant, Mason City, Iowa. Archived from the original (photograph) on December 23, 2017. Retrieved December 23, 2017. Iowa traction number 50 is a 50-ton steeplecab, built by Baldwin-Westinghouse in 1920 as Washington & Old Dominion Number 50. It was acquired by the Cedar Rapids & Iowa City in 1947, was rebuilt and renumbered number 58. In 1955 it was sold to the Kansas City-Kaw Valley Railroad and became their number 507. Finally, in 1962 it was sold to the Iowa Terminal and renumbered 53, later becoming IATR 50. The unit is seen here switching out Mason City's AGP plant{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
    • . Iowa Traction Railway. American-Rails.com. 2020. Archived from the original on September 20, 2020. Retrieved November 2, 2020. Builder: Baldwin-Westinghouse; Model Type: Steeple Cab; Road Number: 50; Notes: Built as Washington & Old Dominion #50 in October 1920. Acquired by the Cedar Rapids & Iowa City (Crandic) in 1947 as #58 and sold again to the Kansas City Kaw Valley Railroad (KCKV) in 1955 as #507. Finally, it was purchased by the Iowa Terminal in 1962, and renumbered #50 a year later.
    • Ross, Don (October 22, 1962). . Don's Rail Photos. Don Ross Group. Archived from the original (photograph) on October 22, 2012. Retrieved September 18, 2014.
    • Schneider, Lynn (June 28, 1980). . Don's Rail Photos. Don Ross Group. Archived from the original (photograph) on October 23, 2012. Retrieved September 18, 2014.
    • Rueber, James (May 24, 1986). . Don's Rail Photos. Don Ross Group. Archived from the original (photograph) on October 23, 2012. Retrieved September 18, 2014.
    • Menge, George (September 3, 1992). . Don's Rail Photos. Don Ross Group. Archived from the original (photograph) on October 22, 2012. Retrieved September 18, 2014.
    • Richards, John (December 2001). . Don's Rail Photos. Don Ross Group. Archived from the original (photograph) on October 23, 2012. Retrieved September 18, 2014.
    • Blaszczyk, Andrew (September 24, 2008). . RailPictures.Net. Mason City, Iowa. Archived from the original (photograph) on September 18, 2014. Retrieved September 18, 2014.
    • R., Ryan; R., Jim (March 15, 2010). . RailPictures.Net. Mason City, Iowa. Archived from the original (photograph) on December 21, 2017. Retrieved December 21, 2017.
    • . RR Pictures Archive.net. Archived from the original (photograph) on May 25, 2015. Retrieved May 25, 2015.
    • . RR Pictures Archive.Net. Archived from the original (photographs) on September 24, 2015. Retrieved May 25, 2015.
    • Guillaudeu, 2013, p. 115 Photograph legend: "A railfan pretends to operate the Class B Baldwin-Westinghouse Locomotive No. 50 on September 20, 2009, where it is still in use on the Iowa Traction Railroad, almost 90 years after it was finished, in February 1921."
  133. ^ Videos of IATR 50 in operation:
    • jfreelan1964 (September 16, 2010). "Iowa Traction Empty Gondola Movement" (video). Archived from the original on December 21, 2021. Retrieved December 21, 2017 – via YouTube.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) (14:39 minutes)
    • jfreelan1964 (September 16, 2010). "Iowa Traction Scrap Metal Arrives at the UP Interchange" (video). Archived from the original on December 21, 2021. Retrieved December 21, 2017 – via YouTube.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) (12:04 minutes
    • Chicagojoe28 (July 31, 2015). "Iowa Traction RR: The Last Electrified freight in the US" (video). Archived from the original on December 21, 2021. Retrieved December 21, 2017 – via YouTube.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) (10:40 minutes)
    • airailimages (August 1, 2015). "Iowa Traction Action - 27 July 2015" (video). Archived from the original on December 21, 2021. Retrieved December 21, 2017 – via YouTube. (4:42 minutes)
    • jfreelan1964 (February 3, 2017). "Iowa Traction Railway Winter 2016" (video). Archived from the original on December 21, 2021. Retrieved December 21, 2017 – via YouTube.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) (23:49 minutes)
  134. ^ Multiple sources:
    • (PDF). ProgressiveRailroading.com. October 16, 2012. Archived from the original on December 22, 2013. Retrieved November 13, 2012.
    • "Freight Tariff IATR 9001" (PDF). Iowa Traction Railway Company. October 4, 2012. (PDF) from the original on December 22, 2013. Retrieved December 20, 2013.
    • Nelson, Jacob (June 3, 2013). . RR Pictures Archives.net. Mason City, Iowa. Archived from the original (photograph) on February 6, 2016. Retrieved February 6, 2016.
    • Terry, Jeff (January 29, 2014). . RailPictures.Net. CP Interchange, Mason City, Iowa. Archived from the original (photograph) on September 18, 2014. Retrieved September 18, 2014. Iowa Traction 50 shoves four hoppers back to the CP interchange track near Clear Lake Junction.
    • Schumann, John (December 6, 2015). . RR Pictures Archives.net. Clear Lake, Iowa. Archived from the original (photograph) on March 30, 2016. Retrieved March 30, 2016.
    • Smith, Nick (June 21, 2016). . RailPictures.Net. IATR AGP Elevator Lead, Mason City, Iowa. Archived from the original (photograph) on January 27, 2017. Retrieved January 27, 2017. Iowa Traction RR IATR 50 is tied down at Mason City on the main outside the UP interlocking. IATR built for the Washington & Old Dominion in 1920 and spent time on the Cedar Rapids & Iowa City and the Kansas City Kaw Valley & Western RR before coming to Mason City.
    • Guillaudeu and McCray, 2016, pp. 85, 90-93.
    • Ebright, Dick (June 24, 2017). . RailPictures.Net. AGProcessing spur, Mason City, Iowa. Archived from the original (photograph) on September 27, 2017. Retrieved September 27, 2017. IATR #50, seen here on the spur to the AGP soybean facility, was built by Baldwin in 1920; 97 years old and still in revenue service.
    • mtnclimberjoe (August 18, 2017). . RailPictures.Net. AGP Facility, Mason City, Iowa. Archived from the original (photograph) on December 23, 2017. Retrieved December 23, 2017. The Iowa Traction railroad uses BLW steeple cab electric number 50 to shove a large cut of covered hoppers into the AGP corn processing facility in Mason City, Iowa.
    • mtnclimberjoe (August 18, 2017). "IATR 50" (photograph). RailPictures.Net. Mason City, Iowa. from the original on February 14, 2019. Retrieved February 14, 2018. The Iowa Traction has just finished switching out the Renewable Energy Group ethanol facility and heads east with a big cut of tank cars.
    • Leach, Paul (April 12, 2018). . RR Picture Archives.net. Mason City, Iowa. Archived from the original (photograph) on June 14, 2018. Retrieved June 13, 2018. Preparing to move grain cars
    • Junges, Olaf (August 29, 2018). . RR Picture Archives.net. Mason City, Iowa. Archived from the original on February 14, 2019. Retrieved June 14, 2018. Heavy action day with 3 (!) Steeple Caps on duty.
    • Williams, Craig (March 11, 2019). "IATR 50" (photograph). RailPictures.Net. Mason City, Iowa. from the original on June 6, 2019. Retrieved June 6, 2019.
    • Leach, Paul (March 15, 2019). "IATR 50 (Steeple Cab)" (photograph). RR Picture Archives.net. Mason City, Iowa. from the original on June 6, 2019. Retrieved June 6, 2019. Working at the interchange
    • POTB 101 (October 17, 2020). "Iowa Traction 50" (photograph). Mason City, Iowa: Railroadforums.com. from the original on November 2, 2020. Retrieved November 2, 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
    • T. rex Roadtrip (October 22, 2020). Iowa Traction Autumn Day One. Retrieved October 8, 2021. (16:53 minutes) on YouTube. 2020 video showing IATR 50 in operation.
    • Leach, Paul (December 21, 2020). "IATR 50 (Steeple Cab)" (photograph). RR Picture Archives.net. Mason City, Iowa. from the original on January 22, 2021. Retrieved January 22, 2021. Tied down for the day
  135. ^ Jaw Tooth (August 19, 2021). RARE Last Electric America Freight Railway, Swapping Cars W/ Union Pacific Railroad At Interchange!: Mason City. Retrieved October 8, 2021. (13:00 minutes) on YouTube. 2021 video showing IATR 50 in operation.
  136. ^ "Washington and Old Dominion". Retrieved April 13, 2023.
  137. ^ "Evans AutoRailer at Clark's Trading Post". Retrieved May 22, 2023.

References edit

In Appendix K of Northern Virginia Regional Park Authority - Pre-filed Direct Testimony of Mr. Hafner, Mr. Mcray and Mr. Simmons, November 30, 2005 (Parts 4 and 5), Case No. PUE-2005-00018, Virginia State Corporation Commission. Obtained in "Case Docket Search". Virginia State Corporation Commission. Retrieved September 28, 2017. Archived September 28, 2017.
  • Interstate Commerce Commission. "W&OD Railway 1916 ICC Valuation Maps". Washington & Old Dominion Regional Park: History. NOVA Parks. from the original on December 26, 2018. Retrieved December 26, 2018.
  • King, W.E. (1934-07-19). Index map showing Washington & Old Dominion Railway's line abandoned in relation to other railroads and common carriers in lower left corner of "GF&OD Railroad 1916 ICC Valuation Map No. 3" (PDF). Washington & Old Dominion Regional Park: W&OD Railroad Maps. Northern Virginia Regional Park Authority: Washington & Old Dominion Railroad Regional Park. July 1, 1916. (PDF) from the original on October 8, 2013. Retrieved January 7, 2015.
  • . The Friends of the Washington & Old Dominion Trail. Archived from the original on November 24, 2010. Retrieved September 29, 2010.
  • Vetter, Peggy D (2000). . The Observer. Herndon, VA: The Herndon Publishing Company, Inc. Archived from the original on August 7, 2008. Retrieved January 17, 2010. (A detailed history of the Washington and Old Dominion Railroad.)
  • Washington and Old Dominion Railway (1911). . Washington & Old Dominion Railroad Regional Park: History: W&OD Railroad Maps. NOVA Parks. Archived from the original on November 10, 2018. Retrieved November 10, 2018.
  • Williams, Ames W. (1989). The Washington and Old Dominion Railroad. Arlington, Virginia: Arlington Historical Society. ISBN 0926984004. OCLC 20461397.

Further reading edit

  • Glakas, Barbara. "The Rail Comes to Herndon: The Evolution of the WO&D Railroad" (PDF). Herndon, Virginia: Herndon Historical Society. (PDF) from the original on June 24, 2019. Retrieved June 24, 2019.
  • Mauro, Chuck. "How the Railroad Came to Herndon" (PDF). Herndon, Virginia: Herndon Historical Society. (PDF) from the original on June 24, 2019. Retrieved June 24, 2019.
  • Tennyson, E.L. (1984). "The History of Arlington's Electric Railways" (PDF). The Arlington Historical Magazine. 7 (4). Arlington County, Virginia: Arlington Historical Society. Retrieved April 10, 2021.
  • Williams, Ames W. (1966). "The Washington and Old Dominion Railroad". Records of the Columbia Historical Society. 66. Washington, D.C.: Columbia Historical Society: 231–276. JSTOR 40067258. Retrieved June 11, 2021 – via JSTOR.

External links edit

KML is from Wikidata
  • "Historical Background: Old Dominion Drive Notable Facts (Formerly the Great Falls and Old Dominion Railroad)". greenwayheightshistory.com. Eloise Lorenze. from the original on December 30, 2019. Retrieved September 26, 2021. Photographs of stations, tickets and promotional materials about the Great Falls and Old Dominion Railroad and the Great Falls Division of the Washington & Old Dominion Railway.
  • McCray, Paul. "Washington & Old Dominion Railroad, 1847 to 1968: A Photographic History". from the original on March 13, 2016. Retrieved June 28, 2010. Website describing the history of the W&OD Railroad.
  • "Washington and Old Dominion Railroad Markers series". HMdb.org: The Historical Marker Database. Retrieved August 18, 2010.

washington, dominion, railroad, colloquially, referred, sometimes, virginia, creeper, intrastate, short, line, railroad, located, northern, virginia, united, states, railroad, successor, bankrupt, washington, dominion, railway, several, earlier, railroads, fir. The Washington and Old Dominion Railroad colloquially referred to as the W amp OD and sometimes the Virginia Creeper was an intrastate short line railroad located in Northern Virginia United States The railroad was a successor to the bankrupt Washington and Old Dominion Railway and to several earlier railroads the first of which began operating in 1859 The railroad closed in 1968 Washington and Old Dominion Railway RailroadThe former W amp OD 57 a General Electric 70 ton diesel electric switcher locomotive built in 1956 at the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad s Riverside Yard in Baltimore in January 1969 1 OverviewHeadquartersWashington D C Arlington VirginiaReporting markWODLocaleVirginiaDates of operation1912 1968TechnicalTrack gauge4 ft 8 1 2 in 1 435 mm standard gaugeLength72 miles 116 kilometres The Railroad s oldest line extended from Alexandria on the Potomac River northwest to Bluemont at the base of the Blue Ridge Mountains near Snickers Gap not far from the boundary line between Virginia and West Virginia The railroad s route largely paralleled the routes of the Potomac River and the present Virginia State Route 7 The single tracked line followed the winding course of Four Mile Run upstream from Alexandria through Arlington to Falls Church At that point the railroad was above the Fall Line and was able to follow a more direct northwesterly course in Virginia through Dunn Loring Vienna Sunset Hills now in Reston Herndon Sterling Ashburn and Leesburg The line turned sharply to the west after passing through Clarke s Gap in Catoctin Mountain west of Leesburg Its tracks then continued westward through Paeonian Springs Hamilton Purcellville and Round Hill to reach its terminus at Bluemont A branch connected the line to Rosslyn The W amp OD was one of the major commercial and transportation corridors of the northern Virginia area from the mid nineteenth century through the mid twentieth century Though it never reached the Shenandoah Valley or the West Virginia coal country or allowed Alexandria to compete with Baltimore for western trade as envisioned it did play a significant role in the development of northern Virginia It served as a local carrier that was extensively used and fought over during the Civil War served Washington vacationers headed to the Blue Ridge mountains hauled agricultural products into Washington aided the development of Falls Church and Dunn Loring and at the end of its operational life hauled materials used in the construction of Dulles Airport and the Capital Beltway It is one of the few steam railroads in America to have transitioned to both electric and diesel operations 2 After the closure of the railroad the track was removed The Washington and Old Dominion Railroad Trail W amp OD Trail the Bluemont Junction Trail the Mount Jefferson Park and Greenway Trail several other trails Interstate 66 I 66 and Old Dominion Drive VA Route 309 have replaced much of the railroad s route Contents 1 History 1 1 Predecessors of the W amp OD 1855 1911 1 1 1 Maps 1 2 Washington and Old Dominion Railway 1911 1936 1 3 Washington and Old Dominion Railroad 1936 1965 1 3 1 Chesapeake and Ohio ownership 1 4 Abandonment 1965 1968 1 5 Removal 2 Legacy 2 1 Park 2 2 Right of way 2 2 1 Bridges 2 2 2 Culverts 2 3 Tracks 2 4 Stations 3 Bluemont Division Alexandria Bluemont line 4 Great Falls Division 5 Thrifton Bluemont Junction connecting line 6 Surviving Locomotives 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksHistory editPredecessors of the W amp OD 1855 1911 edit nbsp Library of CongressLewis McKenzie between 1860 and 1875 nbsp A Union Army train running on the line was the focus of a Confederate States Army attack in the 1861 Battle of Vienna VirginiaThe Washington and Old Dominion Railroad was originally incorporated as the Alexandria and Harper s Ferry A amp HF Railroad in 1847 The goal of the A amp HF was to connect to the Winchester and Potomac River Railroad in Harper s Ferry and thus redirect trade from the Shenandoah that had started going to Baltimore via the Baltimore and Ohio B amp O Railroad But in 1848 the Winchester and Potomac became part of the B amp O putting an end to that plan In 1853 the charter of the A amp HF was amended to change the name to the Alexandria Loudoun and Hampshire AL amp H Railroad and change the route to pass as close as possible to Leesburg then through Clarke s Gap and into the Blue Ridge Mountains through the Bloomery Gap of Cacapon to Paddytown in what is now West Virginia and there connect with a railroad serving the coal fields Construction on the line began in 1855 under the presidency of Lewis McKenzie 3 Still intending to cross the Blue Ridge Mountains and the Shenandoah River to reach the coal fields that are now within Mineral County West Virginia the AL amp H began operating to Vienna in 1859 from a terminal near Princess and Fairfax Streets in Alexandria s present Old Town neighborhood 4 2 In early 1860 service was extended to Ashburn and in May to Leesburg in Loudoun County and the right of way had been graded all the way to Clarke s Gap One of the early passengers was President James Buchanen when visiting his summer White House the Sterling Hotel in Sterling 2 Because of its proximity to Washington D C the line saw much use and disruption during the Civil War 5 In May 1861 it was seized by Union forces and incorporated into the U S Military Railroad A month later under General Lee s orders retreating Confederate troops destroyed much of the line west of Vienna The Union primarily used the railroad to bring wood into Washington and to supply Union troops at camps south of the city On June 17 1861 it was the site of a small battle when troops from South Carolina ambushed the train near Vienna The line also benefited from the war because the Union built connections from it to the Alexandria amp Washington railroad and the Orange and Alexandria as well as a new railroad bridge across the Potomac with the AL amp H was able to access At the end of the war the railroad helped transport the Army of the Potomac back to Washington and on August 8 1865 it was returned to its original owners Because of the damage and neglect service was not restored to Herndon until 9 January 1866 and to Leesburg until 1867 2 After the war the line was extended along the grade built before the war reaching Clarke s Gap in 1868 and the planned western terminus was changed from Paddy Town via Vestal s gap to Piedmont WV via Snicker s Gap 6 In 1870 the western terminus was changed again this time to Point Pleasant WV which required a charter with the new state of West Virginia In compliance with the new charter the name of the line was changed to the Washington and Ohio Railroad At the same time the line was extended to Hamilton then called Irene Station and passenger service was doubled 7 In 1874 the line was extended to Purcelleville and then Round Hill grading began on the Winchester extension which included a cup through rocks at Scotland Gap between Round Hill and Snickersville and a new 131 foot Howe truss bridge was erected over Broad Run 6 The expense of expansion the Panic of 1873 and the burden of debt took their toll and in 1878 the Washington and Ohio went into receivership 8 It was acquired by new owners in 1882 and they changed the name to the Washington and Western Railroad but it only lasted a year before defaulting on their debt It was sold again in 1883 and the name changed to the Washington Ohio and Western WO amp W Railroad 9 During this time owners purchased new rolling stock and upgraded the rail and several bridges 2 In 1886 through a series of consolidations purchases and leases the Richmond and Danville Railroad took control of the WO amp W through a lease agreement 10 8 The Richmond and Danville also acquired a branch that paralleled the WO amp W while traveling between Manassas and Strasburg Virginia where it connected to railroads in the Shenandoah Valley west of the Blue Ridge that the WO amp W did not reach see Manassas Gap Railroad 10 8 In 1888 the Richmond and Danville began to operate the WO amp W s trains between Washington D C and Round Hill 10 8 During this time President Grover Cleveland frequently rode the train to Leesburg to fish and the town of Dunn Loring was platted along the tracks 2 In 1894 the newly formed Southern Railway absorbed the Richmond and Danville Railroad and acquired the WO amp W 11 12 13 In 1900 the Southern Railway extended the line westward for four miles from Round Hill to Snickersville which was then renamed Bluemont but abandoned all plans to go to West Virginia 14 The extension was done to service tourist and day trippers from Washington The Southern Railway designated the line as its Bluemont Branch 11 12 nbsp John Roll McLean 1904 nbsp Library of CongressStephen Benton ElkinsWhen the Spanish American War broke out the War Department built Camp Alger near Dunn Loring and the WO amp W found new business ferry soldiers back and forth to the base It even carried President William McKinley to Camp Alger to see the troops 2 By 1908 steam locomotives were hauling Southern Railway passenger trains from the new Union Station in Washington D C to Alexandria Junction north of old town Alexandria where they switched to travel westward on the Bluemont Branch 11 Connecting trains shuttled passengers between Alexandria Junction and the former AL amp H terminal in old town Alexandria 11 On weekends express trains carried vacationers from Washington to Bluemont and other towns in western Loudoun County in which resorts had developed 11 12 15 Meanwhile in 1906 electric trolleys began to run on the Great Falls and Old Dominion Railroad GF amp OD northwest to Great Falls from Georgetown in Washington D C 16 17 The line which John Roll McLean and Stephen Benton Elkins owned at the time crossed the Potomac River on the old Aqueduct Bridge and passed through Rosslyn The trolleys then traveled northwest on a double tracked line through Arlington and Fairfax County to reach an amusement park trolley park that the railroad company constructed and operated near the falls 16 The GF amp OD had been such a success that they began to look for opportunities to expand and the Bluemont Branch made a desirable target 2 Maps edit nbsp Confederate States Army map of Maryland and northern Virginia showing the route of the Alexandria Loudoun and Hampshire Railroad 1864 nbsp United States military map of Washington D C and northeastern Virginia showing the route of the Alexandria Loudoun and Hampshire Railroad 1865 nbsp G M Hopkins map of Alexandria County Virginia showing the route of the Washington and Ohio Railroad 1878 nbsp Richmond amp Danville Railroad system map showing branch to Round Hill 1891 nbsp Richmond amp Danville Railroad system map showing branch to Round Hill 1893 nbsp Southern Railway system map showing branch to Round Hill 1895Washington and Old Dominion Railway 1911 1936 edit nbsp Diagram of Washington area trolley lines c 1920 1925 enlargeable image showing the Great Falls Division of the W amp OD Railway in dark green and the Bluemont Division in light green In 1911 McLean and Elkins formed a new corporation the Washington and Old Dominion Railway 18 In that year they concluded negotiations with the Southern Railway to lease the Southern s Bluemont Branch and to take over all service on the branch on July 1 1912 19 The lease excluded the portion of the Southern s route that connected Potomac Yard with the former AL amp H terminal in old town Alexandria 19 In 1912 the GF amp OD became the Great Falls Division of the W amp OD Railway while the Southern s Bluemont Branch became a part of the W amp OD Railway s Bluemont Division 20 The W amp OD electrified all of its operations over the next four years becoming an interurban electric trolley system that carried passengers mail milk and freight 21 From that time onward W amp OD trains crossed over Potomac Yard which opened in 1906 on a 1300 foot long trestle constructed around the same time for the Southern Railway 22 In contrast to the Southern Railway s earlier Bluemont Branch service the W amp OD Railway s Bluemont Division did not serve Washington s Union Station 23 In the first few months they invested in several upgrades to the system To join its two lines the W amp OD Railway constructed a double tracked Bluemont Division connecting line that traveled between two new junctions in Arlington Bluemont Junction on the Alexandria Bluemont line and Thrifton Junction on the Georgetown Great Falls line 19 24 They also constructed a turning wye at Bluemont Junction which ended between 7th and 8th street N The connecting line passed through Lacey near the west end of Ballston crossing on a through girder bridge over a competing interurban electric trolley line the Fairfax line of the Washington Virginia Railway see Northern Virginia trolleys 25 26 By October 1912 they had electrified the Bluemont Division from Bluemont Junction to Leesburg and by December all the way to Bluemont 2 Most of the Bluemont Division s passenger cars or trains ran on the W amp OD Railway s Great Falls Division s line from Georgetown over the Aqueduct Bridge through Rosslyn to Thrifton Junction From Thrifton Junction the trains ran on the Bluemont Division s connecting line to Bluemont Junction where they met other Bluemont Division passenger cars or trains that ran from Alexandria following Four Mile Run in Arlington Some of the Bluemont Division cars or trains then continued their trips through Falls Church Vienna Herndon Sterling Ashburn Leesburg Clarke s Gap and Purcellville to terminate in Bluemont Virginia at the base of the Blue Ridge Mountains following a route that was similar to that of Virginia State Route 7 27 The railway s electrification system distributed 650 volts direct current DC to its Bluemont Division cars and trains through overhead catenary lines even though by 1912 this system was becoming obsolete by 1200 V systems 28 Single overhead lines carried the Great Falls Division s electricity over its tracks 29 Stationary and movable electrical substations containing Westinghouse alternating current AC to DC converters were located at Round Hill Leesburg Herndon and Bluemont Junction 28 30 The W amp OD s main passenger line ran from Georgetown and Rosslyn through Thrifton Junction Bluemont Junction and westward to Bluemont 31 However after crossing the Potomac River from Georgetown many W amp OD passengers transferred in Rosslyn to the trolleys of the competing Washington Virginia Railway 32 Most of the W amp OD s freight trains ran between Potomac Yard Bluemont Junction and either Rosslyn or various locations along the Bluemont Division 31 In 1917 John McLean died from cancer and the railroad ownership passed to his heirs and those of Elkins The heirs had little interest in running the railroad and in 1918 and 1922 the Virginia Corporation Commission ordered the railroad to make improvements which the absentee owners never did 2 In 1923 the W amp OD Railway ceased operating from Georgetown when the federal government replaced the aging Aqueduct Bridge with the new Francis Scott Key Bridge 33 At the same time the railroad constructed a new passenger station in Rosslyn which became its Washington terminal 33 The W amp OD Railway lost money every year after 1912 and fell upon particularly hard times during the Great Depression 34 In 1932 the railway went into bankruptcy and was again placed in receivership 35 The receivers chose new management that cut employees service and rolling stock in an effort to reduce costs To further cut costs the railway abandoned operations on the Great Falls Division between Thrifton Junction and Great Falls in stages with the process completed in June 1934 with the last train run on June 8 Several of the cars that ran on the Great Falls line were dismantled later that year and the tracks were pulled up in mid 1935 The abandoned railway route then became Old Dominion Drive Virginia State Route 309 33 36 37 In 1979 the Great Falls Divisions old rail trestle over Difficult Run the last physical piece of rail infrastructure still in use from that line was demolished after years of carrying automobile traffic on Old Dominion Drive 38 In addition the receivers also ended passenger service between Bluemont Junction and Alexandria in 1934 With the reduced service they were able to cut their rolling stock by more than half that year 33 Washington and Old Dominion Railroad 1936 1965 edit nbsp Library of CongressDavis ElkinsIn 1936 the Washington and Old Dominion Railroad a new corporation that Davis Elkins the son of Stephen Benton Elkins had created assumed operation of the remnants of the W amp OD Railway which consisted only of the Railway s Bluemont Division and the portion of the former Great Falls Division that had remained between Rosslyn and Thrifton which was no longer a junction 39 40 They negotiated a new cheaper lease with Southern Railway Shortly thereafter in 1939 the railroad began to scale back It abandoned the western end of its line which had connected the towns of Purcellville and Bluemont This section had seen steep declines from passengers and from the closing of the flour mill in Round Hill and the railroad couldn t afford to repair the Round Hill trestle when it needed it 39 41 Service ended in February and the rails and electrical equipment were delivered to Southern as salvage In the same year the signature station in Rosslyn was torn down to make way for a better entrance to the Key Bridge 42 On April 23 1941 it ended all passenger service although freight and mail service continued 43 The 1940s were a time of continued change for the W amp OD In 1941 not only did the railroad end passenger service temporarily as it would turn out but it began to convert its operations from electric to diesel or gasoline power a process that it completed in 1944 The retrenchment and diesels coupled with growth in Arlington and an accompanying increased demand for building supplies led to starting in 1940 the first profits in 28 years 40 44 Mail service by trolley railway was unusual and in 1941 it was believed to be the only trolley railway postal service east of the Mississippi 45 After some of the trolley wire had been removed in 1942 and sold as scrap to support the United States World War II effort 46 the W amp OD was forced in March 1943 to resume passenger service between Rosslyn and Leesburg to reduce the need for tires due to shortages caused by the war 47 48 After finding few riders the railroad asked to discontinue passenger service in June noting that it was using gasoline which was also being curtailed for the war 49 In late 1943 the railroad leased a used Budd two car streamlined gas electric passenger train and in February 1944 expanded passenger service to Leesburg and Purcellville using gas electric motor cars and cars pulled by diesel electric locomotives 50 51 At first passenger demand was great enough to justify three round trips a day but after the war ridership dropped and in 1950 it was scaled back When the post office department canceled its mail service contract in 1951 the railroad stopped carrying both passengers and mail The last passenger car ran on May 31 1951 thereafter the railroad carried only freight 52 53 In 1945 the W amp OD Railroad acquired ownership of the section of line between Potomac Yard and Purcellville that they had leased from the Southern Railway 54 The Southern Railway retained ownership of the easternmost section of the railroad s route which still connected Potomac Yard to the Southern s freight and passenger stations in old town Alexandria Chesapeake and Ohio ownership edit In 1956 believing that the Potomac Electric Power Company PEPCO would select a site near the W amp OD s route in Sterling for a new coal fired power plant the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway C amp O purchased the W amp OD from Elkins but did not change the railroad s name 55 However PEPCO instead chose a site in Maryland for its power plant after the C amp O had concluded the purchase 56 In 1957 the W amp OD s prospects improved with the construction of Dulles Airport for which it had the nearest railhead Between 1958 and 1960 thirteen bridges between Sterling and Potomac Yards including the one at Difficult Run that dated back to 1884 were replaced with larger ones and worn out rails and ties were replaced In 1959 hauling traffic for both the construction of Dulles and the Capital Beltway the railroad had its most profitable year ever 57 The 1960s were a decade of decline and closure for the W amp OD as the Virginia highway department saw the right of way as potential highways and trucking continued to take away business 58 The highway department began negotiations to purchase the Rosslyn spur in 1960 and was trying to buy the mainline as early as 1962 for the construction of a road that was to become Interstate 66 I 66 59 In July 1962 the highway department bought the Rosslyn spur for 900 000 and in September 1963 the railroad stopped operating to Rosslyn The railroad then removed its tracks between Lacey south of Washington Boulevard and Rosslyn by November 1964 60 61 Abandonment 1965 1968 edit In February 1965 the Commonwealth of Virginia contracted to buy 30 5 miles 49 1 km of the mainline between Herndon and Alexandria for 3 5 million The C amp O Railway then petitioned the Interstate Commerce Commission ICC for permission to abandon the railroad s remnant The purchase would eliminate the need to build a grade separation where the railroad crossed the Henry G Shirley Memorial Highway now part of Interstate 395 I 395 at grade and at another grade separation for I 66 The purchase would also provide 1 5 miles 2 4 km of right of way for I 66 saving the state 5 million 62 Business interests in Loudoun County the Arlington County Chamber of Commerce various state county and local officials railway labor organizations and 21 of the 133 shippers who still used the railroad s freight service opposed the purchase The Northern Virginia Transportation Commission NVTC which was interested in converting the line to a commuter rail service also opposed the purchase 62 The Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority WMATA which at the time was planning to construct a rapid transit system for the Washington area tried to postpone the abandonment in the hopes of using part of the right of way for transit 63 The highway department simultaneously made plans to secretly sell all but 4 miles 6 4 km of the route to the Virginia Electric and Power Company VEPCO now Dominion Virginia Power whose transmission lines were running along the railroad s right of way 64 In addition the W amp OD agreed to sell to VEPCO the remaining 17 5 miles 28 2 km of right of way not purchased by the highway department This included the 12 miles 19 3 km north of Herndon a 4 mile section at Vienna one mile at the Alexandria end and two 1000 foot long sections at Sunset Hills and Falls Church The sale would thus prevent the NVTC from buying the land for mass transit 65 In August 1967 transit advocates led by Del Clive L DuVal II Fairfax Falls Church and WMATA secured a 60 day postponement of the abandonment while they put together a plan to use the right of way for transit 66 However according to WMATA general manager Jackson Graham the estimated cost of using the full right of way for commuter rail was 70 million Because WMATA did not expect the proposed transit line to be able to generate enough ridership to be cost effective WMATA rejected that option 67 nbsp The former W amp OD 55 a Whitcomb 75 ton diesel electric switcher locomotive built in 1950 at the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad s Riverside Yard in Baltimore in January 1969 1 On November 10 1967 WMATA announced that it had come to an agreement with the highway department that would give WMATA a two year option to buy a 5 miles 8 0 km stretch of the right of way from Glebe Road Virginia Route 120 to the Capital Beltway now Interstate 495 I 495 where I 66 was to be built WMATA would operate mass transit in the highway s median strip WMATA would have a 2 year option to buy the 10 miles 16 1 km of right of way from the Beltway to Herndon for the use of commuter trains an option that WMATA did not exercise 68 A last minute offer to buy the railroad at its salvage cost and keep it running that the railroad s customers made was rejected in 1967 69 In January 1968 the ICC decided to permit the C amp O to abandon and sell its line and the railroad planned to run their last train on January 30 1968 But a temporary restraining order kept the line open until the U S District Court in Alexandria sustained the decision in July setting the last for August 27 1968 70 71 On the last day B amp O switcher 9155 pulled two empty lumber cars to Potomac Yard from the Murphy and Ames Lumber Company siding in Falls Church 72 On August 30 the railroad shipped its three diesel locomotives to the B amp O s Baltimore engine terminal from which a salvage dealer purchased them 72 In October 1968 the Virginia State Highway Department started condemnation proceedings to acquire the right of way which was eventually donated to the state where it crossed Shirley Highway The section where it crossed the future Interstate 66 was also donated 73 The Northern Virginia Transportation Commission asked the ICC to reconsider its decision but in November 1968 it rejected that request 71 Removal edit By 1969 the C amp O had removed all of its tracks and ties the ties were sold in bundles of 25 for 75 74 except for some tracks that were crossing paved roads and the County started covering those in late 1968 75 In late 1969 bulldozers started tearing up the right of way for construction of I 66 and the Metrorail line 76 In August 1970 the 80 year old East Falls Church station located south of the tracks on the west side of Washington Street Langston Boulevard was torn down also to make room for I 66 and the Metrorail line 77 2 78 The station was torn down piece by piece and given to Arthur Brown who moved it to Amissville VA for use as a trading post As of 1973 he had not reconstructed it because of uncertainty about widening US 211 79 Two older buildings that had served as the East Falls Church station had been removed from the site reused and then eventually destroyed 80 The bridge over U S Route 29 Lee Highway at the time and Langston Boulevard later had been partially removed by early 1970 and the remainder removed by 1979 81 After the W amp OD stopped running passenger trains in 1951 the Dunn Loring station served as the town s post office but was then torn down in 1963 82 83 The bridge over the Capital Beltway built along with the beltway around 1963 was torn down in 1974 to accommodate Beltway widening 84 Legacy editIn 1999 Virginia Department of Historic Resources staff determined that the Washington and Old Dominion Railroad Historic District was eligible for listing on the National Register of Historic Places NRHP 85 A 2000 NRHP registration form states that the Historic District is eligible for the listing because the District is associated with events that have made a significant contribution to the broad patterns of our history The form contains an in depth description of the District s historical resources and of the railroad s history as well as maps that show the locations of the Districts s major historical features 82 Park edit Great Falls Park was eventually purchased by the Fairfax Park Authority in 1953 and in 1966 transferred to the National Park Service wherein it became a National Park Right of way edit 45 miles of the railroad s original 54 mile long 100 foot wide Bluemont Divition right of way remain today as the Washington and Old Dominion Railroad Regional Park which features the W amp OD Trail Sections used to build I 66 and near Shirley Highway not I 495 were transferred to Virginia Department of Highways and then later that year the land that lay west of the Alexandria Arlington boundary was sold for 4 91 million to Virginia Electric and Power Company VEPCO part of which was incorporated into Dominion Virginia Power in 2000 for power line right of way 86 In 1977 VEPCO agreed to sell their land to the Northern Virginia Regional Park Authority NVRPA now NOVA Parks for 3 6 million retaining an easement for the power lines 87 88 The NVRPA completed the trail to Purcellville in 1988 89 The Virginia highway department retained the section of the railroad s route that crossed the Henry G Shirley Memorial Highway along the Arlington Alexandria boundary and the portion of the route in Arlington immediately east of Falls Church on which it built I 66 87 WMATA then constructed a part of Washington Metro s Orange Line within the median strip of I 66 on that portion of the railroad s former route 90 The western 11 miles of the 15 mile right of way of the Great Falls and Old Dominion Division became Old Dominion Drive The easternmost 1 25 miles became part of I 66 and the 1 25 miles in between became part of Langston Drive The easternmost 1 25 miles of the Bluemont Thrifton Division also was used to create I 66 the westernmost 1 4 miles was used to build the Bluemont Junction Trail and on the 1000 feet in between the Ballston Wetland was built Scotland Heights Road west of Round Hill passes through the cut in rock at Scotland Gap made for the W amp OD Bridges edit The railroad traveled along Four Mile Run on the east side and perpendicular to the flow of water on the west which resulted in numerous bridges The bridge spans have all been removed and in most cases replaced but the bridge abutments and piers and stone arches remain Abutments and piers exist at the numerous Four Mile Run crossings Piney Branch Difficult Run Broad Run Goose Creek Sycolin Creek Tuscarora Creek and Leesburg Town Branch and almost all cases a trail deck now extends across them At Tuscarora the trail runs alongside the piers and abutments crossing the creek on a low water crossing The longest and highest bridge is the one at Goose Creek The stone abutments and piers date from the original pre Civil War period of construction but other components have been replaced several times most recently in 1981 when the current bridge span was built 2 Six stone arch bridges remain They can be found at Clark s Gap Sugarland Run Piney Branch Hamilton Paeonian Springs and Four Mile Run The oldest of these is the one at Sugarland Run that dates back to the original construction 2 Additionally abutments carrying an old road over the tracks can be found in Loudoun County between Crosstrail Boulevard and the access trail to Rhonda Place SE 2 Culverts edit Numerous stone and cast iron culverts remain from the railroad along the right of way These carry the trail over smaller streams and drainages On the eastern side the culverts are more likely to have been replaced by modern culverts as part of modern storm water management efforts 2 Tracks edit Little if any of the track or ballast remain When the railroad ceased operation most of the track was removed Some may survive at intersections where the rails would be found under the road pavement Portions of track were visible near the W amp OD Trail s crossing of Ruritan Circle VA Route 859 in Sterling during 2016 91 One exception is the spur from the CSX mainline at the Slater s Lane Interlocking in Northeast Alexandria to the old Potomac River Generating Station site along the Alexandria Waterfront The track was used by the plant until late 2013 when the plant s switcher was hauled away because the power plant was closed and being redeveloped 92 The tracks continued to be used for a short time after that by the Robinson Terminal but that too was closed after it was sold for redevelopment in late 2013 93 The last train ran sometime in late 2013 or early 2014 For now the tracks remain all the way to N Union Street but as part of the power plant redevelopment plan the tracks between Abingdon Drive and 3rd Street will be removed to create a linear park A siding track to the power plant was removed in 2021 2022 94 Stations edit Nine stations or depots and one grain elevator remain today Vienna has the easternmost surviving station which dates back until before the Civil War Located at the center of Ayr Hill and Dominion Roads the Vienna Train Depot has served as the home of the Northern Virginia Model Railroaders Club since 1975 82 95 The Sunset Hills or Wiehle Station survives just east of Reston Parkway It served for some time after the railroad ended operations as a ranger station for the nearby park but is currently unused 82 96 The Herndon depot survives as a museum It was built prior to 1857 but did not reach its current form until around 1881 On June 18 1979 the Heritage Conservation and Recreation Service of the United States Department of the Interior added it to the NRHP 82 97 The Leesburg Freight House was moved two blocks north to Market Station in 1984 The building housed a pizza restaurant in 2016 98 The Paeonian Springs Shelter originally stood at the site of railroad s earlier Clark s Gap station After the railroad closed the NVRPA installed the shelter at the site of the Paeonian Springs station which had burned in 1941 82 99 The Hamilton Station was built in 1870 and has an old grain mill next to it 82 100 The Purcellville train station was built around 1903 1904 It was purchased by the Purcellville Preservation Association PPA in June 1993 and subsequently restored in 1998 2002 82 101 It serves trail users as a rest stop and community members as meeting space It was added to the NRHP On May 28 2010 by the National Park Service to the NRHP 102 The Virginia Department of Historic Resources has added both it and the Herndon Station to the Virginia Landmarks Register 103 The Round Hill freight depot at 34 Main Street in Round Hill built in 1890 was recently restored and turned into a 3 bedroom cottage but has served for a home for several decades 104 105 Across the street is the restored Round Hill Passenger Station which is also a personal residence 104 106 The Bluemont station burned down in 1920 but the grain elevator was left standing and later built taller to serve as cell phone tower A scaled down replica of the old station was built at the foot of the grain elevator 107 nbsp Herndon Depot August 2012 nbsp Purcellville Station August 2008Bluemont Division Alexandria Bluemont line edit nbsp Stone arch at Clarke s Gap August 2008After the W amp OD Railroad closed the Southern Railway and its successor the Norfolk Southern Railway operated a spur between the Alexandria waterfront and a north south route that traveled through Potomac Yard before the Yard closed in 1989 108 The spur formerly served trains traveling from the eastern end of the Bluemont Division to the Southern Railway s freight and passenger stations in old town Alexandria 108 As the Southern Railway owned and operated the spur and the stations this section of track remained in operation after the W amp OD closed 108 Railroad operations ended on the spur in 2012 2013 when GenOn Energy s Potomac River Generating Station and the Robinson Terminal s Oronoco Street warehouse closed 109 A paved trail in Alexandria s linear Mt Jefferson Park has replaced part of the Bluemont Division s course through that city 110 NOVA Parks 44 6 miles 71 8 km long W amp OD Trail travels in the Washington and Old Dominion Railroad Regional Park within the Bluemont Division s former right of way from the Alexandria Arlington boundary through Bluemont Junction to Purcellville 111 The section of the Bluemont Division between Purcellville and Bluemont has not become a part of any trail as the W amp OD Railroad abandoned this section in 1938 thirty years before the remainder of its line closed Until 2023 some of the warehouses along the old W amp OD in Alexandria between Calvert and Swann that were built to be serviced by it with doors that opened toward the railroad remained but they were torn down to make room for the Del Ray Corner development 112 Great Falls Division editFurther information Great Falls and Old Dominion Railroad In 1906 the 15 mile electrified Great Falls and Old Dominion Railroad GF amp OD began operating from Georgetown in Washington D C to the present site of Great Falls Park in Virginia From Georgetown the railroad crossed the Potomac River on the old Aqueduct Bridge to Rosslyn in Arlington From Rosslyn the railroad traveled northwest along the later routes of Lee Highway U S Route 29 and Old Dominion Drive Virginia State Route 309 until it reached Great Falls In 1912 the GF amp OD became the Great Falls Division of the W amp OD sharing trackage with the W amp OD s Bluemont Division between Rosslyn and Thrifton Junction 113 Thrifton Bluemont Junction connecting line editThe Thrifton Bluemont Junction connecting line a component of the W amp OD s Bluemont Division opened in 1912 The line connected the W amp OD s Great Falls Division formerly the Great Falls and Old Dominion Railroad with the Bluemont Division s Alexandria Bluemont line The line closed in sections in 1963 and 1968 114 I 66 and the adjacent Custis Trail replaced the line between Thrifton and Washington Boulevard in Ballston Arlington County s Bluemont Junction Trail replaced the line between Washington Boulevard and Bluemont Junction Bluemont Junction where the Bluemont Junction Trail now meets the W amp OD Trail presently contains an Arlington County railroad display that features a Southern Railway bay window caboose at Bluemont Park ceb 115 The caboose was built in 1971 three years after the W amp OD Railroad closed 116 Surviving Locomotives editAt least four locomotives that the W amp OD had owned or leased still survived in 2017 B amp O 8413 a General Motors GM Electro Motive Corporation later part of GM s Electro Motive Division EMD SW1 diesel electric switcher locomotive assembled in 1940 with construction number 1111 was one of the first SW1s that Electro Motive built 117 After acquisition the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad B amp O initially numbered the locomotive as 213 but subsequently changed the number to 8413 117 Leased by the W amp OD in 1968 B amp O 8413 was one of the last locomotives to operate on the W amp OD before the railroad closed during the same year 118 After four transfers of ownership Cargill purchased the locomotive which became Cargill 6751 117 119 120 Cargill moved the locomotive to Ogden Utah in 1993 for use in the company s Globe Mill 117 120 Following Cargill s donation of the locomotive in 2010 the Utah Central Railway and the Union Pacific Railroad delivered it to the Utah State Railroad Museum at Ogden s Union Station on May 21 2011 where it was photographed in 2020 117 120 121 C amp O 5015 is an American Locomotive Company ALCO S 2 diesel electric switcher locomotive that the W amp OD leased from the C amp O 118 Built in 1946 with a 1000 horsepower engine the locomotive was used during the W amp OD s final decade of operations 118 After serving five more railroads the locomotive became Columbia amp Reading Railway 2 26 in 2009 It was operating in Columbia Pennsylvania on that line as CORY 2 26 in 2020 122 W amp OD 47 a General Electric GE 44 ton centercab switcher built and delivered to the W amp OD in December 1941 with construction number 15041 and a 380 horsepower engine was the railroad s first diesel electric locomotive 123 It was joined by the similar 48 and 49 both built in August 1942 118 Sold to the Fonda Johnstown amp Gloversville Railroad in 1950 and renumbered to 30 the former W amp OD 47 went to Cargill in Houston Texas in 1967 118 124 Cargill subsequently reassigned it to Denver Colorado 125 After serving on the Great Western Railway of Colorado as 44 the locomotive retained its number when it became the Burlington Junction Railway s BJRY s first when the BJRY opened in 1985 124 126 BJRY44 subsequently operated in Mount Pleasant West Burlington and Burlington Iowa The locomotive was photographed in Burlington during 2018 124 126 127 nbsp IATR 50 former W amp OD 50 and IATR 54 in Mason City Iowa in 2009W amp OD 50 is a 50 ton steeplecab Baldwin Westinghouse electric locomotive built in October 1920 with four Westinghouse type 562 D 5 100 horsepower motors as Baldwin Locomotive Works BLW serial number 53784 and brought to the W amp OD Railway during the same year 128 After retiring the locomotive in 1945 the W amp OD Railroad sold it in 1947 to the Cedar Rapids amp Iowa City Railway which renumbered it to 58 129 130 In 1955 it was sold to the Kansas City Kaw Valley amp Western Railway as 507 131 It was sold in 1962 to the Iowa Terminal Railroad and renumbered to 53 later becoming 50 of the Iowa Traction Railroad in 1987 129 132 133 Upon purchase in October 2012 the line was renamed to the Iowa Traction Railway 134 The Iowa Traction Railway was operating the locomotive in Mason City Iowa in 2021 the locomotive s 101st year 135 In addition at least one of the old auto railers may still exist The W amp OD purchased several auto railer cars from the defunct Arlington amp Fairfax Auto Railway 109 was acquired by the Chicago South Shore amp South Bend RR in 1955 and equipped with a platform on the roof for working on the overhead wires in East Chicago IN 136 Sometime in the 1950s it was sold to the Grasse River Railroad in New York Sometime after the GRR went under in 1959 it passed into private ownership and as of 2021 was stored at Clark s Trading Post in Lincoln New Hampshire It is the last known remaining piece of rolling stock from the Washington Virginia streetcars but it has not been maintained and has been stored outside for 60 years 137 See also editGreat Falls and Old Dominion Railroad Northern Virginia trolleysNotes edit a b Multiple sources Locomotive described in Harwood p 137 Coordinates of Riverside Yard in Baltimore 39 16 05 N 76 36 22 W 39 268118 N 76 606029 W 39 268118 76 606029 Riverside Yard in Baltimore a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Washington amp Old Dominion Railroad Historic District Registration Form PDF Retrieved August 18 2023 Williams p 3 Harwood pp 12 15 Multiple sources Williams pp 8 10 Photograph of United States Military Railroad locomotive Clarke formerly of the Alexandria Loudoun amp Hampshire Railroad at roundhouse in Alexandria during the Civil War Archived from the original on November 7 2005 a b Multiple sources Williams p 27 Harwood p 20 22 Multiple sources Harwood p 20 21 The Washington and Ohio Rail Road Company 1873 The Washington and Ohio Railroad A Glance at the country through which it passes between Washington D C and the Ohio River a distance of 325 miles Philadelphia Collins Printer Retrieved July 24 2019 via Internet Archive a b c d Multiple sources Harwood p 24 Williams p 28 Williams pp 27 28 a b c Multiple sources 1882 system map of Richmond and Danville Railroad Archived May 31 2014 at the Wayback Machine 1893 system map of Richmond and Danville Railroad a b c d e Williams pp 42 43 a b c Harwood p 26 1895 system map of Southern Railway Archived from the original on November 11 2009 Falknor Susan Freis March 11 2008 History of Bluemont Railroad days Welcome to Bluemont Articles Bluemont Virginia Bluemont Citizens Association Archived from the original on June 24 2019 Retrieved January 19 2020 Complete Schedule Between Washington and Bluemont Southern Railway Company May 28 1911 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty url help at Harwood p 29 a b Harwood pp 33 41 Williams pp 44 71 Harwood p 45 a b c Harwood p 46 Harwood pp 46 49 Williams pp 45 72 Multiple sources Harwood pp 32 46 47 W amp OD bridge over Potomac Yard north of the Yard s St Asaph station photograph Archived from the original on October 22 2018 Retrieved October 22 2018 via Pinterest Williams pp 43 44 Williams p 72 Williams pp 107 144 156 Lacey Car Barn marker HMdb org The Historical Marker Database Archived from the original on October 14 2017 Retrieved October 14 2017 In 1896 the Washington Arlington amp Falls Church Railway began running electric trolleys from Rosslyn to Falls Church on the present routes of Fairfax Drive and I 66 By 1907 the line linked downtown Washington to Ballston Vienna and the Town of Fairfax In 1910 the railway built at this location a car barn rail yard workshop electrical substation and general office In 1912 the rival Washington amp Old Dominion Railway began crossing the tracks on a bridge 200 yards west of here traveling the present route of I 66 from Rosslyn The line to Fairfax closed in 1939 but Metrorail s Orange Line follows its route through Arlington Multiple sources Williams p 43 Washington and Old Dominion Railway timetables Bluemont Division Williams pp 40 68 Great Falls Division Williams p 67 a b Harwood pp 48 49 Harwood pp 39 48 49 Williams pp 70 71 a b Harwood p 47 Harwood p 38 a b c d Multiple sources Williams p 74 Harwood pp 68 69 Multiple sources Williams pp 74 93 Harwood pp 73 79 Multiple sources Williams p 93 Harwood p 73 Harwood pp 77 78 King 1934 map Hanson Christoper April 9 1979 A Rusted Old Trestle Falls A Relic of the Car Era The Evening Star a b Harwood pp 79 80 a b Williams p 91 Round Hill Trestle Retrieved March 14 2024 Old Station Being Removed The Washington Post April 15 1939 Old Dominion Rail Passenger Service Ends The Washington Post April 13 1941 Harwood pp 83 84 W amp OD Offers Most Unusual mail service writer declares Loudoun News October 16 1941 Retrieved July 12 2023 Power Lines Salvaged for War Purposes Blue Ridge Herald December 17 1942 Retrieved June 7 2023 Scarcity of Tires May Bring New Life to Local Railroad Loudoun News January 1 1942 Retrieved July 13 2023 W amp O D Re Opens Passenger Service Blue Ridge Herald March 18 1943 Retrieved July 14 2023 Fight over W amp OD Still Goes on Loudoun News June 10 1943 Retrieved July 11 2023 Multiple sources Harwood pp 81 83 88 137 138 Williams pp 93 94 W amp O D Service is increased Fairfax Herald February 4 1944 Retrieved July 14 2023 Multiple sources Harwood pp 90 91 Williams p 95 Troxell Margaret June 1951 Gay Crowd and TV Cameras Bid Farewell to Passenger Train The Arlington Sun Retrieved July 17 2023 Multiple sources Harwood p 90 Williams p 94 Multiple sources Harwood p 97 Williams p 96 Harwood pp 97 99 Harwood pp 99 101 McCray Paul The W amp OD s Odyssey from Rail to Trail Loudoun Now Retrieved November 13 2023 Multiple sources Senate Enacts W amp O D Bill The Washington Post March 9 1960 Dewar Helen January 21 1962 Virginia Drops Plan To Buy W amp OD Line The Washington Post Rail Spur Quiet for While But the Old W amp OD Route Soon Will Hum With Autos The Washington Post November 16 1964 W amp OD Rail Spur Bought by State The Washington Post July 10 1962 a b Multiple sources ICC Examiner Favors Death of W amp OD Line The Washington Post March 8 1966 Want W amp OD to Stay The Washington Post March 17 1965 Douglas Walter B February 9 1965 Railroad Agrees to Sell Right of Way to Virginia The Washington Post Flor Lee August 30 1967 Delay of Transit Talk May Bear on W amp OD Multiple sources Harwood pp 106 107 Williams p 109 Secret Deal Disclosed on W amp OD Line The Washington Post March 10 1966 Multiple sources DuVal Asks Salvaging Of W amp OD The Washington Post June 21 1967 Jay Peter A August 2 1967 Transit Unit Wins Delay In Rail Case The Washington Post Multiple sources Law to Save W amp OD Rails To Be Sought The Washington Post September 13 1967 Two Steps Advance Accord on Transit The Washington Post September 9 1967 Multiple sources Corrigen Richard November 2 1967 WMATA Agrees On Rail Bed Route The Washington Post Ailing Va Railroad Allowed to Quit in 68 The Washington Post January 25 1968 Plant Owners Along W amp OD Again Try to Keep Line Going The Washington Post November 20 1967 Multiple sources McLaughlin Maureen January 30 1968 Judge s Order Delays Closing of W amp OD The Washington Post W amp OD Limping to Extinction The Washington Post August 3 1968 a b W amp OD Decision Review Denied The Evening Star November 6 1968 a b Harwood p 106 Green Stephen October 5 1968 Virginia Road Unit Buys Hot Shoppes at Twin Bridges The Evening Star Yarbrough Charles November 4 1969 Dulles Seen As Our Savior Evening Star Action Line The Evening Star December 7 1968 Hits loss of W amp OD Northern Virginia Sun December 5 1969 Retrieved February 2 2024 Coming Down to Go Up Northern Virginia Sun August 22 1970 Retrieved February 22 2024 Multiple sources Yarbrough Charles November 4 1969 Dulles Seen as Our Savior The Washington Evening Star Braaten David April 7 1974 Bridge Taking a Hike The Washington Evening Star Beckham Nancy June 12 1970 Old Station at End of Line Washington Evening Star Then and Now Falls Church Station February 27 1973 Retrieved February 22 2024 EAST FALLS CHURCH HISTORY Train Stations PDF Retrieved February 26 2024 Action Line The Evening Star January 25 1970 a b c d e f g h Neville Ashley M Gray amp Pape Inc Richmond Virginia July 25 2000 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Washington amp Old Dominion Railroad Historic District Virginia Department of Historic Resources DHR No 053 0276 PDF Archived PDF from the original on January 26 2020 Retrieved January 26 2020 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link In Appendix J of Northern Virginia Regional Park Authority Pre filed Direct Testimony of Mr Hafner Mr Mcray and Mr Simmons November 30 2005 Part 4 Case No PUE 2005 00018 Virginia State Corporation Commission Obtained in Case Docket Search Virginia State Corporation Commission Retrieved September 28 2017 Dunn Loring Station Archived from the original on September 28 2023 Retrieved February 3 2023 In Historical marker s in Washington and Old Dominion Railroad Markers series HMdb org The Historical Marker Database Archived from the original on October 6 2023 Retrieved February 3 2023 Stone Sue April 12 1974 Beltway Railroad Bridge To Go Down But Will It Go Back Up Northern Virginia Sun Retrieved September 7 2023 Multiple sources Ezell Raymond Virginia Department of Transportation Fredericksburg District February 29 2012 Archaeological Survey Proposed Sycolin Road Overpass of Route 7 15 Bypass Leesburg Loudoun County Virginia Management Summary PDF Virginia Department of Transportation p 2 Archived PDF from the original on September 27 2012 Retrieved January 26 2020 Dutton Associates LLC Midlothian Virginia October 2016 VDHR 053 0276 Washington amp Old Dominion Railroad Historic District Eligible PDF Pre Application Analysis for Cultural Resources of the Idylwood Substation at Shreve Road Project Virginia State Corporation Commission p 5 1 Archived PDF from the original on January 26 2020 Retrieved January 26 2020 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Schlupp Catherine Staton Heather Dollins Dovetail Cultural Resource Group Fredericksburg Virginia October 2016 Phase IB Architectural Survey of the Proposed Soapstone Connector Fairfax County Virginia PDF Fairfax County Virginia government p 5 Archived PDF from the original on August 26 2018 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Transform I 66 Inside the Beltway Eastbound Widening Environmental Assessment Architectural Phase I Survey Report PDF United States Department of Transportation Federal Highway Administration and Virginia Department of Transportation November 2016 p 7 Archived PDF from the original on January 26 2020 Retrieved January 26 2020 Real Estate Transfers in Northern Virginia Northern Virginia Sun October 29 1968 a b Harwood pp 106 107 Harwood pp 108 109 Harwood p 109 Harwood p 112 Image of railroad tracks near W amp OD Trail crossing of Ruritan Circle in Sterling October 2016 Retrieved January 2 2024 via Google Street View PEPCO ALEXANDRIA VA POWER PLANT TO CLOSE Retrieved March 8 2024 Sale of Robinson Terminal warehouses to bring development to Alexandria waterfront The Washington Post September 25 2013 Retrieved March 8 2024 CDD Staff Report PDF Retrieved March 8 2024 Multiple sources Vienna Railroad Northern Virginia Sun January 22 1975 Retrieved August 24 2023 NVRPA Vienna Station marker near the Vienna Station of the W amp OD Railroad Washington and Old Dominion Railroad Markers series HMdb The Historical Marker Database Archived from the original on December 26 2015 Retrieved February 4 2024 Wood Rebekah K May 3 2002 Vienna Depot Description and Historical Significance Vienna Virginia Prepared for the nomination of the Vienna Depot to the National Register of Historic Places Washington amp Old Dominion Railroad 1847 to 1968 A Photographic History by Paul McCray Archived from the original on January 22 2016 Retrieved February 4 2024 Northern Virginia Model Railroaders Inc Vienna Virginia Northern Virginia Model Railroaders Inc Archived from the original on August 9 2018 Retrieved February 4 2024 NVRPA Sunset Hills Station marker HMdb The Historical Marker Database Archived from the original on December 26 2015 Retrieved February 4 2014 Part of Washington and Old Dominion Railroad Markers series HMdb The Historical Marker Database Archived from the original on July 18 2011 Retrieved February 4 2024 Multiple sources NVRPA Herndon Station marker HMdb The Historical Marker Database Archived from the original on December 27 2015 Retrieved February 4 2024 In Washington and Old Dominion Railroad Markers series HMdb The Historical Marker Database Archived from the original on July 18 2011 Retrieved February 4 2024 David Elizabeth S Historic Preservation Planner Fairfax County Office of Comprehensive Planning April 1979 Herndon Depot PDF United States Department of the Interior National Park Service National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form Richmond Virginia Virginia Department of Historic Resources Archived PDF from the original on January 28 2020 Retrieved February 4 2024 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Herndon Depot National Register Information System ID 79003039 NPGallery Digital Asset Management System United States Department of the Interior National Park Service Retrieved February 4 2024 Greenberg Ronald M Acting Chief National Register of Historic Places Virginia Herndon Herndon Depot Elden St PDF Federal Register March 18 1980 Part II Department of the Interior Heritage Conservation and Recreation Service National Register of Historic Places Annual Listing of Historic Properties 45 54 17484 Retrieved February 4 2024 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Herndon Depot National Register of Historic Places Virginia Fairfax County National Register of Historic Places com Archived from the original on September 6 2015 Retrieved February 4 2024 Muliple sources Graham Karen April 1 2016 History provided the path for Tuscarora Mill and Market Station s success Loudoun Times Mirror Leesburg Virginia Archived from the original on February 4 2024 Retrieved February 4 2024 Market Station now a thriving business community anchored by Tuscarora Mill restaurant includes seven restored historic buildings that were brought to the site or reconstructed on site These buildings included a freight station a stationmaster s house log house two barns and two mills There were always adjustments that needed to be made along the way Dickerson said including the building which is now Fireworks Pizza The building was constructed 180 degrees the wrong way Builders had to create new windows to make it work he said A Few Words About Us Fire Works Pizza Leesburg Virginia 2012 Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved February 4 2024 Swain Craig photographer January 26 2008 The Relocated Freight Depot photograph Photograph number 3 in Leesburg Freight Station marker HMdb org The Historical Marker Database Archived from the original on October 23 2020 Retrieved February 4 2024 The Depot marker HMdb org The Historical Marker Database Archived from the original on March 12 2012 Retrieved February 4 2024 It was moved two blocks to Market Station in 1984 Leesburg Freight Station In Washington and Old Dominion Railroad Markers series HMdb The Historical Marker Database Archived from the original on July 18 2011 Retrieved February 4 2024 Multiple sources McCray Paul Paeonian Springs Station Washington amp Old Dominion Railroad 1847 to 1968 A Photographic History Paul McCray Archived from the original on October 3 2013 Retrieved February 4 2024 The Paeonian Springs Station was located approximately where the small passenger shelter now sits next to the trail in the community of Paeonian Springs The shelter was originally located at Clarks Gap and was built from pieces of the larger demolished Clarks Gap station Swain Craig August 25 2007 Marker in front of the Shelter Along the Trail photograph HMdb The Historical Marker Database Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved February 4 2024 showing passenger shelter and Additional comment dated January 29 2008 In Swain Craig Paeonian Springs Station marker HMdb The Historical Marker Database Archived from the original on July 18 2011 Retrieved February 4 2024 In 2006 the shelter along the trail at the site of the former Paeonian Springs station contained on its rear wall a sheet of paper within a plastic cover The sheet described the history of the shelter The sheet stated that the Washington amp Old Dominion Railroad constructed the shelter at the site of the Clarkes Gap station on Dry Mill Road after the Clarkes Gap station burned down According to the sheet a railroad employee who lived in Paeonian Springs preserved the shelter The sheet further stated that the employee s family had donated the shelter to the Northern Virginia Regional Park Authority In Washington and Old Dominion Railroad Markers series HMdb The Historical Marker Database Archived from the original on December 27 2015 Retrieved February 4 2024 A relocated passenger shelter formerly at Clarks Gap now at Paeonian Springs Exploring the W amp OD Rail Trail MidAtlanticDayTrips com August 2 2017 Archived from the original photograph on December 29 2019 Retrieved December 29 2019 NVRPA Hamilton Station marker HMdb The Historical Marker Database Archived from the original on July 18 2011 Retrieved February 4 2024 In Washington and Old Dominion Railroad Markers series HMdb The Historical Marker Database Archived from the original on July 18 2011 Retrieved February 4 2024 Multiple sources History of the Purcelleville Preservation Society Purcellville Virginia Purcelleville Preservation Society Archived from the original on October 20 2013 Purcelleville Train Station Purcellville Virginia Town of Purcellville Virginia Archived from the original on September 28 2023 Retrieved February 4 2024 Multiple sources Kalbian Maral S Peters Margaret T November 20 2009 National Register of Historic Places Registration Form United States Department of the Interior National Park Service Purcellville Train Station PDF Richmond Virginia Virginia Department of Historic Resources Archived PDF from the original on October 27 2018 Retrieved February 4 2024 and accompanying five photos Director National Park Service June 4 2010 Weekly list of actions taken on properties for the National Register of Historic Places 5 24 10 through 5 28 10 PDF National Register of Historic Places 2010 Weekly Lists United States Department of the Interior National Park Service Archived PDF from the original on December 28 2019 Retrieved February 4 2024 Purcellville Train Station National Register Information System ID 10000307 NPGallery Digital Asset Management System United States Department of the Interior National Park Service Retrieved February 4 2024 Purcellville Train Station National Register of Historic Places Virginia Loudoun County National Register of Historic Places com Archived from the original on February 18 2017 Retrieved February 4 2024 Multiple sources 235 0001 Herndon Depot Richmond Virginia Virginia Department of Historic Resources August 29 2018 Archived from the original on January 16 2021 Retrieved February 4 2024 286 5001 0233 Purcellville Train Station Richmond Virginia Virginia Department of Historic Resources January 22 2020 Archived from the original on September 27 2020 Retrieved February 4 2024 a b Kalbian Maral S Peters Margaret T July 31 2008 Round Hill Historic District PDF United States Department of the Interior National Park Service National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Richmond Virginia Virginia Department of Historic Resources p Section 7 p 15 Retrieved February 3 2024 IN PHOTOS Transformed train depot on the market in Loudoun County InsideNoVa Woodbridge Virginia InsideNoVa com Archived from the original on December 15 2023 Retrieved February 3 2024 Stewart Kevin July 15 2014 Washington and Old Dominion Railroad Depot Round Hill VA photograph Archived from the original on October 9 2021 Retrieved February 4 2024 via Flickr Multiple sources Bluemont Mill amp Railway Museum train operated 1900 1938 Bluemont Heritage Tour Bluemont Virginia Bluemont Heritage 2024 Archived from the original on January 16 2021 Retrieved February 4 2024 This early 1900s mill has been built taller to function as a cell phone tower A replica of the Bluemont train station sits at the foot Bluemont was long the terminus of the Washington and Old Dominion Railway W amp OD Train Station Bluemont Virginia The Bluemont Fair 2024 Archived from the original on February 4 2024 Retrieved February 4 2024 Bluemont was the end of the line for the W amp OD railroad and our train station was located at the end of Railroad Street until it burned down in 1920 But the grain elevator was left standing and a scaled down replica of the old train station has been reproduced at the foot of that elevator a b c Harwood p 112 Multiple sources Sullivan Patricia September 29 2012 GenOn power plant in Alexandria is set to close Local The Washington Post Archived from the original on June 15 2018 Retrieved June 15 2018 Sullivan Patricia September 25 2013 Sale of Robinson Terminal warehouses to bring development to Alexandria waterfront Local The Washington Post Archived from the original on June 15 2018 Retrieved June 15 2018 Stone Jim The Washington amp Old Dominion Railroad in Del Ray Alexandria VA Del Ray Citizens Association Archived from the original on March 29 2008 Retrieved January 17 2010 Harwood pp 108 109 112 Vanished Doors to History Facebook Retrieved January 18 2024 Harwood pp 39 46 Multiple sources Harwood pp 101 106 Williams pp 107 131 Multiple sources Bluemont Junction Caboose Arlington County Virginia Arlington County Department of Parks and Recreation Archived from the original on March 4 2021 Retrieved March 13 2021 Bluemont Junction Park Arlington County Virginia Arlington County Department of Parks and Recreation Archived from the original on March 4 2021 Retrieved March 13 2021 Events Set for Third Annual Arlington Neighborhood Day News Release Arlington County Virginia government October 16 1999 Archived from the original on September 28 2013 Retrieved March 4 2013 Several park events have been planned as well including dedication of the Bluemont Junction Caboose and Railroad Display at Bluemont Park Coordinates of caboose at Bluemont Junction 38 52 23 N 77 07 57 W 38 87306 N 77 132564 W 38 87306 77 132564 Bluemont Junction caboose Coordinates of intersection of Bluemont Junction Trail and Washington and Old Dominion Railroad Trail 38 52 19 N 77 07 56 W 38 8718317 N 77 1321047 W 38 8718317 77 1321047 intersection of Bluemont Junction Trail and Washington and Old Dominion Railroad Trail Copy of Southern Railway records in album inside Bluemont Junction caboose a b c d e Rolling Stock of the Utah State Railroad Museum Cargill 6751 SW1 Utah State Railroad Museum Spencer S amp Dolores Dore Eccles Rail Center Ogden Utah Ogden Union Station 2018 Archived from the original photograph on September 3 2018 Retrieved October 31 2018 This locomotive began life as Baltimore amp Ohio 213 and later became B amp O 8413 It was sold to Arco Petroleum in Carson California and renumbered 8417 then later Arco 6971 Sold to General American Tank Car GATX in Colton California keeping the same number Cargill purchased the unit from Western Railway Supply a used equipment dealer and moved it to Ogden in August 1993 for use at the company s Globe Mill In 2010 it was replaced by a Trackmobile and Cargill donated it to the museum It was delivered on May 21 2011 free of charge thanks to Utah Central and Union Pacific It is one of the first SW1s to be built and when sold to the B amp O was classified as an NS1 While out of service at the elevator vandals stripped the wiring from the traction motors as well as from inside the cab which remained unlocked Cargill funded the complete repainting and restoration of the locomotive to operation Painting was completed in November 2011 Located on Track 1 a b c d e Harwood p 137 Van Cleve Jeff July 4 1996 Cargill 6751 RR Picture Archives net Ogden Utah Archived from the original photograph on October 29 2018 Retrieved December 20 2013 a b c Pictures of CRGX 6751 RR Picture Archives net November 27 2020 Archived from the original photographs on November 27 2020 Retrieved November 27 2020 Multiple sources Cargill EMD SW1 6751 Utah State Railroad Museum Locomotives Archived from the original photograph on June 7 2019 Retrieved June 7 2019 Cargill EMD SW1 6751 rgusmrail com March 1 2019 Archived from the original photograph on June 7 2019 Retrieved June 7 2019 This SW1 unit was built by EMD in 1940 as 213 for the Baltimore amp Ohio Railroad The unit was subsequently renumbered BO 8413 It was sold to Arco Petroleum at Carson CA where it was renumbered 6971 It next went to the locomotive leasing company General American Transportation Corporation at Colton CA After the lease expired the unit was stored at the GATX facility until it was sold through the dealer Western Railway Supply to Cargill It moved to the Horizon Milling Company in Ogden in mid August 1993 and was repainted lettered and renumbered 6751 It was replaced by a Trackmobile in 2010 Donated to the Utah State Railroad Museum in April 2011 it was moved to Union Station on 21st May 2011 Daniels Roger June 27 2020 CRGX 6751 SW1 RR Picture Archives net Ogden Utah Archived from the original photograph on November 27 2020 Retrieved November 27 2020 Multiple sources Kerr James November 20 2009 Columbia amp Reading ALCO S2 CORY 2 26 RailPictures Net Frank Sahd Salvage Center Columbia Pennsylvania Archived from the original photograph on January 28 2014 Retrieved January 28 2014 k41361 February 24 2010 Columbia amp Reading S2 AVI YouTube Archived from the original video on June 29 2016 Retrieved June 29 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Video of CORY 2 26 crossing Route 262 in Columbia Pennsylvania Columbia amp Reading Railway No 2 26 Green Initiatives Columbia Pennsylvania Sahd Metal Recycling Archived from the original photograph on September 27 2013 Retrieved December 20 2013 Walker Craig September 27 2013 Columbia amp Reading ALCO S2 CORY 2 26 RailPictures Net Columbia Pennsylvania Archived from the original photograph on January 28 2014 Retrieved January 28 2014 Tucked away in a scrap yard in Columbia Pennsylvania is Columbia amp Reading S2 2 26 This 1946 built Alco has put in the miles for a number of railroads starting with the Chesapeake amp Ohio 5015 then 9165 followed by stints as GEX 106 FCIN 106 PVRR 27 CCCR 27 and JCNX 27 Pictures of CORY 2 26 Columbia Pennsylvania RR Pictures Archive Net Archived from the original photographs on December 23 2017 Retrieved December 23 2017 Central PA Locos April 26 2014 CORY 2 26 Pictures of CORY 2 26 Columbia Pennsylvania RR Pictures Archive Net Archived from the original photographs on May 25 2015 Retrieved May 25 2015 Darnell Tim July 28 2016 CORY 2 26 Pictures of CORY 2 26 Columbia Pennsylvania RR Pictures Archive Net Archived from the original photograph on January 27 2017 Retrieved January 27 2017 Painter Kevin October 27 2017 CORY 2 26 S2 Pictures of CORY 2 26 Columbia Pennsylvania RR Pictures Archive Net Archived from the original photograph on December 23 2017 Retrieved December 23 2017 Painter Kevin February 13 2019 CORY 2 26 S2 Pictures of CORY 2 26 Columbia Pennsylvania RR Pictures Archive Net Archived from the original photograph on June 7 2019 Retrieved June 7 2019 HD Columbia and Reading ALCO S2 2 26 around Columbia PA video Alex Gillespie Rail Productions February 14 2019 Archived from the original on December 21 2021 Retrieved November 27 2020 via YouTube 9 38 minutes Painter Kevin January 21 2020 CORY 2 26 S2 Pictures of CORY 2 26 Columbia Pennsylvania RR Pictures Archive Net Archived from the original photograph on November 27 2020 Retrieved November 27 2020 Multiple sources Harwood pp 131 137 1941 and 1946 photographs of W amp OD 47 Harwood pp 83 88 a b c GE 44 Ton Number 30 Number 30 The Fonda Johnstown amp Gloversville Railroad Archived from the original photographs on August 8 2016 Retrieved June 29 2016 Photographs of the former W amp OD 47 as FJGRR 30 on the Great Western Railway of Colorado and as BJRY 44 Zygmunt Chris June 8 2012 BJRY 44 photograph LocoPhotos Comprehensive Locomotive Archiving Burlington Iowa Jack Hilton Archived from the original on September 18 2014 Retrieved September 17 2014 Lineage ex GWR 44 ex Cargill ex FJG 30 ex WOD 47 a b Multiple sources Zygmunt Chris June 8 2012 Burlington Junction Railway No 44 with 2013 02 24 comment by Jack M Jakeman This was the locomotive that the railroad was started with RailPictures Net Burlington Iowa Archived from the original photograph on December 21 2013 Retrieved December 20 2013 Zygmunt Chris June 8 2012 BJRY 44 photograph LocoPhotos Comprehensive Locomotive Archiving Burlington Iowa Jack Hilton Archived from the original on September 18 2014 Retrieved September 17 2014 Lineage ex GWR 44 ex Cargill ex FJG 30 ex WOD 47 Profiles of Railroads Operating in Iowa Rail System Plan Appendix A Ames Iowa Iowa Department of Transportation Archived from the original on February 5 2012 Retrieved September 17 2014 Multiple sources Lewis Edward A 1996 Burlington Junction Railway American Shoreline Railway Guide 5th ed Waukesha Wisconsin Kalmbach Publishing Company p 53 ISBN 0890242909 LCCN 96215170 OCLC 35286187 Retrieved December 23 2017 via Google Books Miller Gerry Sink Tom Zygmunt Chris June 8 2012 Photographs of BJRY 44 RailPictures Net Burlington and West Burlington Iowa Archived from the original photograph on October 30 2013 Retrieved December 17 2014 Rumbut Kris September 11 2014 BJRY 44 Pictures of BJRY 44 Burlington Iowa RR Pictures Archive Net Archived from the original photograph on May 25 2015 Retrieved May 25 2015 Mackey Dan August 5 2018 BRJY 44 photograph Burlington Iowa Flickr Archived from the original on June 7 2019 Retrieved June 7 2019 Zygmunt Chris June 8 2012 BJRY 44 photograph LocoPhotos Comprehensive Locomotive Archiving Burlington Iowa Jack Hilton Archived from the original on September 18 2014 Retrieved September 17 2014 Lineage ex GWR 44 ex Cargill ex FJG 30 ex WOD 47 Multiple sources Harwood pp 68 135 Blake Henry W Bozell Harold V eds June 25 1921 Manufacturers and the Markets Rolling Stock Electric Railway Journal 57 28 New York McGraw Hill Company Inc 917 ISSN 0095 9715 OCLC 2021289 Retrieved September 28 2017 via Google Books Description of 50 ton Baldwin Westinghouse electric locomotive purchased by the Mononghahela Valley Traction Company Fairmont West Virginia circa 1921 and similar to W amp OD 50 1922 and 1940 photographs of W amp OD 50 Harwood p 71 Rice Leonard W amp OD electric freight locomotive 50 in the Rosslyn shop yard Archived from the original photograph on December 24 2013 Retrieved December 21 2013 In McCray Paul Washington amp Old Dominion Railroad 1847 to 1968 A Photographic History Archived from the original on December 10 2015 Retrieved December 2 2015 Guillaudeu 2013 p 114 This photograph from March 25 1944 is one of the last images of Locomotive No 50 in use on the W amp OD Railroad Photograph by Leonard W Rice a b Harwood p 135 Multiple sources Harper James P April 7 1947 Washington amp Old Dominion 50 at Cedar Rapids IA Don s Rail Photos Don Ross Group Archived from the original photograph on October 23 2012 Retrieved September 18 2014 Ross Don September 25 1954 CR amp IC 58 at Cedar Rapids IA Don s Rail Photos Don Ross Group Archived from the original photograph on October 23 2012 Retrieved September 18 2014 Multiple sources Harwood p 135 Ross Don March 1960 Kansas City Kaw Valley 507 at Bonner Springs KS Don s Rail Photos Don Ross Group Archived from the original photograph on October 23 2012 Retrieved September 18 2014 McDowell Mark May 1 1960 Motor 507 switching Lone Star Cement 1960 Pictures of KVW 507 Bonner Springs Kansas RR Pictures Archives net Archived from the original photograph on November 2 2020 Retrieved November 2 2020 Multiple sources the trainman407 July 14 2012 IATR 50 RailPictures Net AGP Ethanol Plant Mason City Iowa Archived from the original photograph on December 23 2017 Retrieved December 23 2017 Iowa traction number 50 is a 50 ton steeplecab built by Baldwin Westinghouse in 1920 as Washington amp Old Dominion Number 50 It was acquired by the Cedar Rapids amp Iowa City in 1947 was rebuilt and renumbered number 58 In 1955 it was sold to the Kansas City Kaw Valley Railroad and became their number 507 Finally in 1962 it was sold to the Iowa Terminal and renumbered 53 later becoming IATR 50 The unit is seen here switching out Mason City s AGP plant a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Iowa Traction Railway Locomotive Roster Iowa Traction Railway American Rails com 2020 Archived from the original on September 20 2020 Retrieved November 2 2020 Builder Baldwin Westinghouse Model Type Steeple Cab Road Number 50 Notes Built as Washington amp Old Dominion 50 in October 1920 Acquired by the Cedar Rapids amp Iowa City Crandic in 1947 as 58 and sold again to the Kansas City Kaw Valley Railroad KCKV in 1955 as 507 Finally it was purchased by the Iowa Terminal in 1962 and renumbered 50 a year later Ross Don October 22 1962 Iowa Terminal RR 50 at Mason City IA Don s Rail Photos Don Ross Group Archived from the original photograph on October 22 2012 Retrieved September 18 2014 Schneider Lynn June 28 1980 Iowa Terminal RR 50 at Mason City IA Don s Rail Photos Don Ross Group Archived from the original photograph on October 23 2012 Retrieved September 18 2014 Rueber James May 24 1986 IAT 50 at Mason City IA Don s Rail Photos Don Ross Group Archived from the original photograph on October 23 2012 Retrieved September 18 2014 Menge George September 3 1992 IATR 50 at Emery IA Don s Rail Photos Don Ross Group Archived from the original photograph on October 22 2012 Retrieved September 18 2014 Richards John December 2001 Iowa Traction RR 50 at Mason City IA Don s Rail Photos Don Ross Group Archived from the original photograph on October 23 2012 Retrieved September 18 2014 Blaszczyk Andrew September 24 2008 IATR 50 RailPictures Net Mason City Iowa Archived from the original photograph on September 18 2014 Retrieved September 18 2014 R Ryan R Jim March 15 2010 IATR 50 RailPictures Net Mason City Iowa Archived from the original photograph on December 21 2017 Retrieved December 21 2017 Pictures of IATR 50 RR Pictures Archive net Archived from the original photograph on May 25 2015 Retrieved May 25 2015 Pictures with BLW Serial No 53784 in them Locomotive IATR 50 Steeple Cab RR Pictures Archive Net Archived from the original photographs on September 24 2015 Retrieved May 25 2015 Guillaudeu 2013 p 115 Photograph legend A railfan pretends to operate the Class B Baldwin Westinghouse Locomotive No 50 on September 20 2009 where it is still in use on the Iowa Traction Railroad almost 90 years after it was finished in February 1921 Videos of IATR 50 in operation jfreelan1964 September 16 2010 Iowa Traction Empty Gondola Movement video Archived from the original on December 21 2021 Retrieved December 21 2017 via YouTube a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link 14 39 minutes jfreelan1964 September 16 2010 Iowa Traction Scrap Metal Arrives at the UP Interchange video Archived from the original on December 21 2021 Retrieved December 21 2017 via YouTube a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link 12 04 minutes Chicagojoe28 July 31 2015 Iowa Traction RR The Last Electrified freight in the US video Archived from the original on December 21 2021 Retrieved December 21 2017 via YouTube a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link 10 40 minutes airailimages August 1 2015 Iowa Traction Action 27 July 2015 video Archived from the original on December 21 2021 Retrieved December 21 2017 via YouTube 4 42 minutes jfreelan1964 February 3 2017 Iowa Traction Railway Winter 2016 video Archived from the original on December 21 2021 Retrieved December 21 2017 via YouTube a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link 23 49 minutes Multiple sources Progressive Rail acquires Iowa Traction Railroad PDF ProgressiveRailroading com October 16 2012 Archived from the original on December 22 2013 Retrieved November 13 2012 Freight Tariff IATR 9001 PDF Iowa Traction Railway Company October 4 2012 Archived PDF from the original on December 22 2013 Retrieved December 20 2013 Nelson Jacob June 3 2013 IATR 50 RR Pictures Archives net Mason City Iowa Archived from the original photograph on February 6 2016 Retrieved February 6 2016 Terry Jeff January 29 2014 IATR 50 RailPictures Net CP Interchange Mason City Iowa Archived from the original photograph on September 18 2014 Retrieved September 18 2014 Iowa Traction 50 shoves four hoppers back to the CP interchange track near Clear Lake Junction Schumann John December 6 2015 IATR 50 RR Pictures Archives net Clear Lake Iowa Archived from the original photograph on March 30 2016 Retrieved March 30 2016 Smith Nick June 21 2016 IATR 50 RailPictures Net IATR AGP Elevator Lead Mason City Iowa Archived from the original photograph on January 27 2017 Retrieved January 27 2017 Iowa Traction RR IATR 50 is tied down at Mason City on the main outside the UP interlocking IATR built for the Washington amp Old Dominion in 1920 and spent time on the Cedar Rapids amp Iowa City and the Kansas City Kaw Valley amp Western RR before coming to Mason City Guillaudeu and McCray 2016 pp 85 90 93 Ebright Dick June 24 2017 IATR 50 RailPictures Net AGProcessing spur Mason City Iowa Archived from the original photograph on September 27 2017 Retrieved September 27 2017 IATR 50 seen here on the spur to the AGP soybean facility was built by Baldwin in 1920 97 years old and still in revenue service mtnclimberjoe August 18 2017 IATR 50 RailPictures Net AGP Facility Mason City Iowa Archived from the original photograph on December 23 2017 Retrieved December 23 2017 The Iowa Traction railroad uses BLW steeple cab electric number 50 to shove a large cut of covered hoppers into the AGP corn processing facility in Mason City Iowa mtnclimberjoe August 18 2017 IATR 50 photograph RailPictures Net Mason City Iowa Archived from the original on February 14 2019 Retrieved February 14 2018 The Iowa Traction has just finished switching out the Renewable Energy Group ethanol facility and heads east with a big cut of tank cars Leach Paul April 12 2018 IATR 50 Steeple Cab RR Picture Archives net Mason City Iowa Archived from the original photograph on June 14 2018 Retrieved June 13 2018 Preparing to move grain cars Junges Olaf August 29 2018 IATR 50 RR Picture Archives net Mason City Iowa Archived from the original on February 14 2019 Retrieved June 14 2018 Heavy action day with 3 Steeple Caps on duty Williams Craig March 11 2019 IATR 50 photograph RailPictures Net Mason City Iowa Archived from the original on June 6 2019 Retrieved June 6 2019 Leach Paul March 15 2019 IATR 50 Steeple Cab photograph RR Picture Archives net Mason City Iowa Archived from the original on June 6 2019 Retrieved June 6 2019 Working at the interchange POTB 101 October 17 2020 Iowa Traction 50 photograph Mason City Iowa Railroadforums com Archived from the original on November 2 2020 Retrieved November 2 2020 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link T rex Roadtrip October 22 2020 Iowa Traction Autumn Day One Retrieved October 8 2021 16 53 minutes on YouTube 2020 video showing IATR 50 in operation Leach Paul December 21 2020 IATR 50 Steeple Cab photograph RR Picture Archives net Mason City Iowa Archived from the original on January 22 2021 Retrieved January 22 2021 Tied down for the day Jaw Tooth August 19 2021 RARE Last Electric America Freight Railway Swapping Cars W Union Pacific Railroad At Interchange Mason City Retrieved October 8 2021 13 00 minutes on YouTube 2021 video showing IATR 50 in operation Washington and Old Dominion Retrieved April 13 2023 Evans AutoRailer at Clark s Trading Post Retrieved May 22 2023 References editGuillaudeu David A Foreword by McCray Paul E 2013 Washington amp Old Dominion Railroad Charleston South Carolina Arcadia Publishing ISBN 9780738597928 OCLC 811603181 Retrieved November 13 2016 via Google Books a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Guillaudeu David A McCray Paul E 2016 Washington amp Old Dominion Railroad Revisited Charleston South Carolina Arcadia Publishing ISBN 9781467116381 OCLC 944086523 Retrieved November 13 2016 via Google Books a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Harwood Herbert H Jr April 2000 Rails to the Blue Ridge The Washington and Old Dominion Railroad 1847 1968 3rd ed Fairfax Station Virginia Northern Virginia Parks Authority ISBN 0615114539 LCCN 77104382 OCLC 44685168 pp 1 18 pp 19 144 In Appendix K of Northern Virginia Regional Park Authority Pre filed Direct Testimony of Mr Hafner Mr Mcray and Mr Simmons November 30 2005 Parts 4 and 5 Case No PUE 2005 00018 Virginia State Corporation Commission Obtained in Case Docket Search Virginia State Corporation Commission Retrieved September 28 2017 Archived September 28 2017 Interstate Commerce Commission W amp OD Railway 1916 ICC Valuation Maps Washington amp Old Dominion Regional Park History NOVA Parks Archived from the original on December 26 2018 Retrieved December 26 2018 King W E 1934 07 19 Index map showing Washington amp Old Dominion Railway s line abandoned in relation to other railroads and common carriers in lower left corner of GF amp OD Railroad 1916 ICC Valuation Map No 3 PDF Washington amp Old Dominion Regional Park W amp OD Railroad Maps Northern Virginia Regional Park Authority Washington amp Old Dominion Railroad Regional Park July 1 1916 Archived PDF from the original on October 8 2013 Retrieved January 7 2015 Map of the W amp OD The Friends of the Washington amp Old Dominion Trail Archived from the original on November 24 2010 Retrieved September 29 2010 Vetter Peggy D 2000 The W amp OD Railroad is Heart of Herndon for 120 Years The Observer Herndon VA The Herndon Publishing Company Inc Archived from the original on August 7 2008 Retrieved January 17 2010 A detailed history of the Washington and Old Dominion Railroad Washington and Old Dominion Railway 1911 W amp OD Railway Track Plats Washington amp Old Dominion Railroad Regional Park History W amp OD Railroad Maps NOVA Parks Archived from the original on November 10 2018 Retrieved November 10 2018 Williams Ames W 1989 The Washington and Old Dominion Railroad Arlington Virginia Arlington Historical Society ISBN 0926984004 OCLC 20461397 Further reading editGlakas Barbara The Rail Comes to Herndon The Evolution of the WO amp D Railroad PDF Herndon Virginia Herndon Historical Society Archived PDF from the original on June 24 2019 Retrieved June 24 2019 Mauro Chuck How the Railroad Came to Herndon PDF Herndon Virginia Herndon Historical Society Archived PDF from the original on June 24 2019 Retrieved June 24 2019 Tennyson E L 1984 The History of Arlington s Electric Railways PDF The Arlington Historical Magazine 7 4 Arlington County Virginia Arlington Historical Society Retrieved April 10 2021 Williams Ames W 1966 The Washington and Old Dominion Railroad Records of the Columbia Historical Society 66 Washington D C Columbia Historical Society 231 276 JSTOR 40067258 Retrieved June 11 2021 via JSTOR External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Washington and Old Dominion Railroad KML file edit help Template Attached KML Washington and Old Dominion RailroadKML is from Wikidata Historical Background Old Dominion Drive Notable Facts Formerly the Great Falls and Old Dominion Railroad greenwayheightshistory com Eloise Lorenze Archived from the original on December 30 2019 Retrieved September 26 2021 Photographs of stations tickets and promotional materials about the Great Falls and Old Dominion Railroad and the Great Falls Division of the Washington amp Old Dominion Railway McCray Paul Washington amp Old Dominion Railroad 1847 to 1968 A Photographic History Archived from the original on March 13 2016 Retrieved June 28 2010 Website describing the history of the W amp OD Railroad Washington and Old Dominion Railroad Markers series HMdb org The Historical Marker Database Retrieved August 18 2010 Portals nbsp History nbsp Transport nbsp Trains nbsp Virginia nbsp United States Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Washington and Old Dominion Railroad amp oldid 1217078384, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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