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Ohio Valley Railroad: IC: 1880 1886 Ohio Valley Railway: Ohio Valley Railway: IC: 1886 1897 Chicago, St. Louis and New Orleans Railroad: Ohio Valley Coal and Mining Company: IC: 1886 1888 Ohio Valley Railway: Ohio Valley Railroad and Mining Company: IC: 1882 1886 Ohio Valley Coal and Mining Company: Olympia and Owingsville Railway: 1916 1918 N/A
By the fall of 1900, new track connected the West Virginia and Kentucky segments of the line, and the combined properties became known as the Camden Interstate Railway Company. In 1908, the company changed its name back to the Ohio Valley Electric Railway. Street railway operations ceased in 1937.
Pittsburgh, Ohio Valley and Cincinnati Railroad: Ohio Southern Railroad: DT&I: 1881 1898 Detroit Southern Railroad: Ohio Valley Railway: PRR: 1871 1890 Pittsburgh, Ohio Valley and Cincinnati Railroad: Ohio Valley and Junction Railway: PRR: 1897 1902 Cleveland and Mahoning Railway: Ohio and West Virginia Railway: C&O: 1878 1881 Columbus, Hocking ...
Elijah Anderson, a free man of color, was one of the most active Underground Railroad Conductors in the Ohio River Valley throughout the 1840s and 1850s. While on a mission to Kentucky, Anderson ...
This company was incorporated as South Kentucky Railroad Company March 15, 1871, by special act of the Legislature of the State of Kentucky. By amendments to the articles of incorporation, its name was changed to the Ohio Valley Railroad Company on March 16, 1886, and to the Ohio Valley Railway Company on April 6, 1886.
The Filson produces two quarterly publications: Ohio Valley History and The Filson news magazine. A collaboration of the Filson Historical Society, Cincinnati Museum Center, and the University of Cincinnati, Ohio Valley History is a quarterly journal of the history and culture of the Ohio Valley and the Upper South.
Lexington and Ohio Railroad (1996–2003) Lexington and Danville Railroad; Lexington and Ohio Railroad; Lexington and Southern Kentucky Railroad; Louisville and Southwestern Railway; Louisville and Frankfort Railroad; Louisville and Interurban Railroad; Louisville and Jeffersonville Bridge Company; Louisville and Jeffersonville Bridge and ...
The museum owns and maintains a collection of 80 historic railroad equipment located on a 4-acre (16,000 m 2) site. [1]The museum was founded in 1975 when a club of local railroad enthusiasts decided to run passenger cars on Amtrak trains.