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West entrance of the Moonville tunnel Location of Moonville, Ohio. Moonville is a ghost town in southeastern Brown Township, Vinton County, Ohio, United States.Little remains of this former mining community except a few foundations, a cemetery, and an abandoned railroad tunnel which is the subject of numerous ghost stories.
King Switch Tunnel. The Moonville Rail-Trail is a ten-mile (16 kilometer) rail-trail in southeast Ohio, located in Vinton and Athens Counties. It is largely embedded in the Zaleski State Forest and passes close to Lake Hope State Park. The trail is named after the Moonville Tunnel through which it passes.
Another attempt was made by the Mineral Belt Railroad in 1906, [59] which began work in 1917 and abandoned it in 1924. [60] Memphis Branch Railroad - began a narrow gauge line from Rome, Georgia, to Gadsden in 1873, but abandoned 1877 without having run a revenue service. Not to be confused with a progenitor of the Rome Railroad. [61] [62]
Engineers contracted by Eddy determined that a tunnel of 3,100 feet (945m) length and 16 feet (4.88m) width through this Rim would allow laden trains to access the top of the Plateau. So in 1881, Eddy formed the Arizona Mineral Belt Railway Company, and began seeking investors.
Cleveland, Columbus and Cincinnati Railroad; Cleveland, Columbus, Cincinnati and Indianapolis Railway; Cleveland, Painesville and Ashtabula Railroad (1879–86) Cleveland Short Line Railway; Cleveland and State Line Railroad; Cleveland and Toledo Railroad; Cleveland, Toledo and Lakeside Railway; Cleveland, Akron and Columbus Railroad; Cleveland ...
Interior of the Cleveland Arcade. This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Cleveland, Ohio. This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Cleveland, Ohio, United States. Latitude and longitude coordinates are provided for many National Register ...
The Conrail system in Cleveland featured a number of routes and secondary lines. The former New York Central Chicago Line was the primary east–west route through Cleveland, with the addition of the former Pennsylvania Railroad's Cleveland line, allowing traffic to and from the Pittsburgh region to pass through to points near Buffalo or Chicago and Detroit.
Pittsburgh, Fort Wayne and Chicago Railroad: Ohio and Pennsylvania Belt Line Railroad: Ohio and Toledo Railroad: W&LE: 1872 1878 Youngstown and Connotton Valley Railroad: Ohio River Railway: N&W: 1877 1890 Scioto Valley Railway: Ohio River and Columbus Railway: Ohio River and Lake Erie Railroad: NYC: 1897 1901 Lake Erie, Alliance and Wheeling ...