Search Constraints

You searched for: Topical Subjects Railroads--Engines and Cars. Remove constraint Topical Subjects: Railroads--Engines and Cars. Topical Subjects Railroads--West Virginia--Hinton. Remove constraint Topical Subjects: Railroads--West Virginia--Hinton.
Number of results to display per page

Search Results

Engine No. 7 sitting beside stall No. 1 of the roundhouse. A group of unidentified workers stand on along the tracks and sit on the train.
View overlooking train cars in the railroad yard beside a river.
The train car is pictured in the pit. Two unidentified men are pictured observing the scene.
A train car reads, "Chesapeake & Ohio".
The C. & O. train idles in the engine terminal ready to embark.
Photo description reads, "2-8-8-2 H-7 Mallet used on coal train between Hinton (Summers County, W. Va.) and Handley (Kanawha County, W. Va.), and between Hinton and Clifton Forge (Alleghany County, Va.) from 1924  until replace by the 2-66-6 H 8's during 1940."
Stoddard family pictured beside the turntable, which was 900 feet in circumference.
Mr. Harris pictured on the right, directly next to the engine.
Looking at the engine sitting on the tracks, following by train cars reading, "Chesapeake & Ohio".
Two unidentified railroad employees stand beside Engine No. 201 on the C. & O. Railway.
Pictured from left to right is J. E. Burdette (brakeman), O. C. "Battle Ax" Allen (conductor), Hobart Akers (brakeman), and Jack Sweeney (brakeman) with N. B. Allen (engineer) on the steps and C. L. Keaton (fireman) in the cab.
Engine No. 307 pictured pulling "Chesapeake & Ohio" cars.
An engine pulling a single train car sits on the tracks outside the station. Hinton Power Plant pictured in the background.
Wm. Arrington pictured on the engine.
Photo of the first coal-burning, steam, turbine, electric engine--the largest single unit locomotive in the world. As long as 154 feet and 9 3/4 inches, including the water tender. The top speed was 100 miles per hour. The engine weight 411.5 tons.
A crowd observes an early diesel engine at the station.
Passengers stand beside the track looking at engine no. 500.
Engineer L. J. Brown, left, and fireman Lloyd Bryant, right, are pictured next to the locomotive.
A. B. Adams and Wm. Henry Arrington pictured beside the engine.
The locomotives sit on the tracks below the pit.