Category:Rail transport timelines |
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This article lists anniversary events related to rail transport that occurred on March 18.
Events
edit19th century
edit- 1855 – The second Niagara Falls Suspension Bridge opens for rail traffic; the bridge had rails that allowed trains of three different gauges to operate over it.
20th century
edit- 1923 – Iragawa Station, on the what would eventually become JR East's Uetsu Main Line, opens in Tsuruoka, Yamagata Prefecture, Japan.
- 1950 – Wind blows smoke and freshly fallen snow to obscure the headlight on a Canadian Pacific Railway passenger train doing switching maneuvers at Ashton, Ontario; the apparently blinking light is misinterpreted as a clear signal by the engineer of an opposing train who throttles up and runs into passenger cars that were still standing on the mainline.[1]
- 1960 – Western Region of British Railways 2-10-0 standard class 9F 92220 Evening Star is named at Swindon Works to commemorate its completion as the last steam locomotive built for B.R.
- 1996 – SNCF begins a construction project to renew the track ballast on the Paris-Lyon TGV line; the project is expected to last through 2006.[2]
21st century
edit- 2005 – Joseph H. Boardman, head of the New York State Department of Transportation, is nominated to lead the United States Federal Railroad Administration.
Births
editDeaths
edit- 1911 – David Moffat, Colorado financier and head of nine railroads, dies (b. 1839).
- 2012 – Alan Pegler, British railway preservationist, dies (b. 1920).
References
edit- ^ "Railway Accidents in the Ottawa Area: 1950, March 18 - Canadian Pacific - Ashton". Colin Churcher's Railway Pages. February 2006. Retrieved March 18, 2006.
- ^ "18 mars dans les chemins de fer". French language Wikipedia (in French). Retrieved March 9, 2007.