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List of Milwaukee Road locomotives - Wikipedia
These are locomotives of the Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad, often referred to as the "Milwaukee Road". The Milwaukee was acquired by the Soo Line in 1985 and the Soo subsequently became part of the Canadian Pacific Railway. Milwaukee Road steam locomotives were organized into classes by wheel arrangement.
Milwaukee Road class F7 - Wikipedia
The Milwaukee Road's class "F7" comprised six (#100–#105) high-speed, streamlined 4-6-4 "Baltic" (Hudson) type steam locomotives built by the American Locomotive Company (ALCO) in 1937–38 to haul the Milwaukee's Hiawatha express passenger trains.
Milwaukee Road class A - Wikipedia
The Milwaukee Road Class "A" was a class of high-speed, streamlined 4-4-2 "Atlantic" type steam locomotives built by the American Locomotive Company (ALCO) from 1935 to 1937 to haul the Milwaukee Road's Hiawatha express passenger trains. Numbered from No. 1 to No. 4, they were among the last Atlantic type locomotives built in the United States ...
Remembering Milwaukee Road locomotives - Trains
Nov 22, 2021 · The Milwaukee Road operated with steam, electric, and diesel motive power in its Midwest-to-Northwest service area. There are examples in each type of particular note. The railroad rostered high-stepping streamlined passenger locomotives on its famed Hiawatha passenger fleet and brawny 4-8-4s on fast freights, one of which, No. 261, is ...
List of Milwaukee Road locomotives - Wikiwand
These are locomotives of the Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad, often referred to as the "Milwaukee Road". The Milwaukee was acquired by the Soo Line in 1985 and the Soo subsequently became part of the Canadian Pacific Railway. More information Steam, Diesel ...
Milwaukee Road’s A-class: ultimate 4-4-2 Atlantic-type
Jan 12, 2025 · Story from birth to retirement of the Milwaukee Road’s four streamlined 4-4-2 Atlantic-type steam locomotives
Milwaukee Road history - Trains
Nov 2, 2021 · Milwaukee Road history in a nutshell: A Milwaukee Road F7-class 4-6-4 steam locomotive leads an eastbound Hiawatha over the C&NW diamonds at Mayfair in northern Chicago in 1941. E. T. Harley photo. Milwaukee Road history begins with the Milwaukee & Waukesha Rail Road, which was chartered in 1847.
Milwaukee Road Class F7 | Locomotive Wiki | Fandom
The Milwaukee Road F7s were a class of 6 streamlined Baltics. Built by Alco from August to September 1938. They are among some of the fastest steam locomotives in the world.
Milwaukee Road Class F6 | Locomotive Wiki | Fandom
The Milwaukee Road classes F6 and F6-a comprised twenty-two steam locomotives of the 4-6-4 configuration, commonly nicknamed "Hudson" but known as "Baltic" on the Milwaukee Road. The fourteen class F6 locomotives were not delivered from their builder, the …
Milwaukee Road Locomotives | Locomotive Wiki | Fandom
This is a list of locomotives that were operated or owned by the Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railway (better known as the Milwaukee Road). All examples were rebuilt simple in 1921–1922 as class A1-a. Eleven examples were superheated in 1925–1929 as class A1-as. 3 examples were rebuilt to class G6-gs, 4 examples were rebuilt to G6-n.