Baltimore & Ohio Railroad
Central Ohio Railroad (1853)
Columbus & Cincinnati Midland Railroad (1884)
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Map to enlarge
When I
started to learn about railroads in the mid 1950's I quickly realized
that there were two types of railfans - B&O railfans and everyone else.
Somehow they just seemed more passionate about "THEIR RAILROAD!". While
I have stayed a generalist I have learned enough to understand why the B&O
has such faithful followers. It was the first railroad, It had a
certain underdog appeal competing with the mighty Pennsy on the Washington-New York route. It had many fine passenger trains.
Then there were the
experimental steam locomotives and the P7 Presidential 4-6-2
Pacific locomotives. A true B&O fan would have no trouble adding to
this list.
Columbus was
served by the B&O, but was not on one of its main routes. Columbus was
on a Cincinnati - Pittsburgh secondary line that had, in 1955, one passenger
train each way and generally less than 10 mixed freights each day.
The B&O in Columbus had a freight house, a small yard, and a two stall
engine house with a turn table all located on the west side of Fourth Street
facing Naghten Street. There were generally three steam locomotives stationed at
Columbus; a helper engine, Q-4 2-8-2; an engine for the local, E-27ca 2-8-0; and a spare
also an E-27ca. The spare was stored just south of the turntable. In the
mid-1950's the B&O used EMD F units on their freights through Columbus.
Eastbound freights would stop at Glenmont and West Broad Streets.
The steam helper would attached and lead the freight through Columbus going around Union Station
and up the hill to Summit, located east of Columbus. At Summit it would leave the train to return to the
engine house. Donald Kaiser an early contributor to columbusrailroads.com
was photographing at Summit one day and watched as the helper was uncoupled on
the fly. The brakeman
or fireman on the diesel opened the front door on the F unit and
pulled the coupling pin. The helper speeded up to take a crossover
leaving the freight to continue on its way.
The passenger
train through Columbus was steam powered until it was discontinued in
1955. During the last few years of trains #233 and #238 the B&O mainline
passenger trains were being dieselized This allowed the usual class P6 Pacific 4-6-2
to be
replaced by a Presidential Class P7. That was a treat for the
local railfans as those were the finest B&O passenger steam locomotives.
The B&O was the first of the big five to totally eliminate passenger service
through Columbus.
In the late
1950's the City of Columbus needed some of the B&O property to connect the two parts of Third Street
that were blocked by the railroad tracks at the Columbus Union Station area. The new
Third Street went right through the B&O property eliminating the freight house.
This occasioned a new Port Columbus yard
across Fifth Avenue from the North American Aviation plant which opened October 1,
1959. The new
facility include a small run through diesel shop.