Cincinnati, Hamilton and Dayton Railroad

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This article covers the 1846-1917 Cincinnati, Hamilton and Dayton Railroad. The 1926-1930 Cincinnati, Hamilton and Dayton Railway, an electrified interurban streetcar line, became part of the Cincinnati and Lake Erie Railroad and is dealt with elsewhere.
Cincinnati, Hamilton and Dayton Railroad
Locale Ohio
Dates of operation 1846–1917
Successor line Baltimore and Ohio Railroad
Track gauge ft 8½ in (1435 mm) (standard gauge)

The Cincinnati, Hamilton and Dayton Railroad (CH&DRR) was a United States railroad that existed between its incorporation on March 2, 1846, and its acquisition by the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad in December 1917. It was originally chartered to build from Cincinnati to Hamilton, Ohio, and then to Dayton, a distance of 59 miles (95 km); further construction and acquisition extended the railroad, and by 1902 it owned or controlled 640 miles (1030 km) of railroad.

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[edit] Acquisitions

On May 1, 1863, the CH&DRR leased the Dayton and Michigan Railroad in perpetuity. In 1891, it acquired the Cincinnati, Dayton and Chicago Railroad, while in March of that year it added the Cincinnati, Dayton and Ironton Railroad.

[edit] Notable History

Orville and Wilbur Wright would travel by this interurban streetcar from Dayton to Springfield, Ohio, to help prepare the patent on the airplane with their patent lawyer, Harry Aubrey Toulmin, Sr.

[edit] References

[edit] External links