February 28 –
Swampscott train wreck, a southbound Danvers–Boston commuter train crashed into the rear of a stopped Portsmouth–Boston local train just north of
Swampscott station during a snowstorm. The collision, blamed on the engineer operating at unsafe speeds for the conditions, killed 13 people and injured 283.: 317 [1]
February 28 – A collision in
Revere, Massachusetts injured 143 people – some of whom had already been in the Swampscott wreck.[2][3]
June 3 – Remaining
Second class accommodation on
British Railways trains (by now surviving only on
Southern Region boat trains) is abolished and Third class redesignated Second class.
June 30 - The
Rochester Subway (Rochester Industrial and Rapid Transit Railway) ceases operation after 29 years.[8]
July 27 – The last two
Chesapeake and Ohio Railway2-6-6-6 “Alleghenies” are taken off standby status. The last revenue run had been made about a month earlier.
^Hall, Stanley (2000). The History and Development of Railway Signalling in the British Isles, vol. 1: Broad Survey. York: Friends of the National Railway Museum.
ISBN978-1-872826-12-7.
^Simmons, Jack; Biddle, Gordon (1997). The Oxford Companion to British Railway History. Oxford University Press.
ISBN978-0-19-211697-0.
^Vanns, Michael A. (1997). An Illustrated History of Signalling. Shepperton: Ian Allan.
ISBN978-0-7110-2551-6.
^Bindi, A.; Lefeuvre, D. (1990). Le Métro de Paris: histoire d'hier à demain. Rennes: Ouest-France.
ISBN978-2-7373-0204-6.
^"QJ Class 2-10-2". Railography: Chinese Steam Profiles. 2010.
Archived from the original on July 21, 2009. Retrieved June 6, 2010.
^Balkwill, Richard;
Marshall, John (1993). The Guinness Book of Railway Facts and Feats (6th ed.). Enfield: Guinness Publishing.
ISBN978-0-85112-707-1.
^Simon, Elbert; Warner, David C. (2011). Holland, Kevin J. (ed.). Amtrak by the Numbers: A Comprehensive Passenger Car and Motive Power Roster – 1971–2011. Kansas City, Missouri: White River Productions.
ISBN978-1-932804-12-6.