1884 in rail transport
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| 1883, 1884, 1885 |
| Years in rail transport 1883 in rail transport 1884 in rail transport 1885 in rail transport |
This article lists events related to rail transport that occurred in 1884.
Contents |
Events
February events
- February 22 - Brooks Locomotive Works completes its 1,000th new steam locomotive.
March events
- March 17 - The Southern Pacific Railroad is incorporated in Kentucky.
June events
- June 11 - The Pine Bluff and Swan Lake Railway, in Arkansas (later to become part of the Cotton Belt Railroad), is incorporated. [1]
July events
- July 23 - The Iron Railroad in Ohio is reincorporated as the Iron Railway.
October events
- October - John King succeeds Hugh J. Jewett as president of the Erie Railroad.
Unknown date events
- Summer - The Atlantic and Pacific Railroad, later to become part of the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway, completes its connection between Needles and Mojave, California.
- The Smithsonian Institution acquires the John Bull from the Pennsylvania Railroad as the museum's first example of railroad technology.
- Charles Francis Adams, Jr. becomes president of the Union Pacific Railroad.
Births
July births
- July 6 - Harold Stirling Vanderbilt, heir to Cornelius Vanderbilt and president of the New York Central railroad system (d. 1970).
December births
- December 9 - Ernest Lemon, Chief Mechanical Engineer (1931–1932) and later Vice President for the London, Midland and Scottish Railway (d. 1954).
Deaths
May deaths
- May 17 - George Muirson Totten, chief construction engineer for the Panama Railway (b. 1808).
September deaths
- September 26 - John W. Garrett, president of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad 1858– (b. 1820).
References
- Beck, Wayne, (August 21, 1998), The History of the Cotton Belt Railroad. Retrieved June 10, 2005.
- Biography of John Work Garrett. Retrieved March 2 2005.
- Erie Railroad presidents. Retrieved March 15 2005.
- George Muirson Totten. Retrieved February 9 2005
- Morris, J. C. (1902), Ohio Railway Report. Retrieved July 19 2005.
- Santa Fe Railroad (1945), Along Your Way, Rand McNally, Chicago, Illinois.
- Soylent Communications (2005), Charles Francis Adams, Jr.. Retrieved February 21 2005.
- White, John H, Jr. (Spring 1986), America's Most Noteworthy Railroaders, Railroad History, 154, p. 9-15.



