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  1. Sep 21, 2017 · The sudden rise of rail-based commercial transportation corresponded with Chicago’s post-Great Fire building boom. As a result, “Chicago 2.0” was tailor-made with rail as a top priority.

  2. The first railroad in Chicago was the Galena & Chicago Union, which was chartered in 1836 to build tracks to the lead mines at Galena in northwestern Illinois. The first tracks were laid in 1848, and then not to Galena but to a point known as Oak Ridge (now Oak Park ).

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  4. Oct 9, 2023 · As the first locomotive to operate within the city, the Pioneer has long remained, in the words of one commentator, the “historic symbol of the coming of the railroads” to Chicago and the nation, transforming both in challenging and enduring ways.

  5. First significant railroad in the United States; built line to expand B&O’s eastern network into Chicago. Aurora Branch RR built initial 13-mile track from Aurora to West Chicago in 1850, a line extended westward to the Mississippi River by 1855 and renamed Chicago, Burlington & Quincy.

  6. Oct 29, 2023 · PUBLISHED: October 29, 2023 at 6:00 a.m. | UPDATED: March 12, 2024 at 11:53 a.m. On Oct. 25, 1848, the Galena and Chicago Union Railroad dispatched a train from a station on Kinzie Street just...

  7. At the end of the First World War the network of the state-owned Prussian railways had a total length of almost 37,500 kilometres. The history of the Prussian state railways ended in 1920 with the nationalization and absorption of the various German state railways into the Imperial Railways (Reichseisenbahn), later the Deutsche Reichsbahn.

  8. Over 15,000 Chicagoans worked for railroads in 1900, and almost 30,000 in 1930. Railroad workers ranged from unskilled freight handlers to locomotive engineers to those who built and repaired the rolling stock. In the early days of Chicago railroading, most engineers and conductors were native-born men.

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