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Name: LIRR - Long Island Rail Road
Herkunftsland: USA
Bemerkung: The LIRR was established in 1834 as part of a ferry-rail-ferry-rail route linking New York City with Boston. Within a few
years, an all-rail route (later becoming the New Haven) was completed and LIRR’s through traffic evaporated. In the 1880s,
the LIRR absorbed all of the other railroads on the island and settled in to a life of dependable local service. This
included what may have been the first WOFC (wagon on flat car) service.

In 1900, Pennsylvania Railroad bought control of the LIRR and began incorporating it into their plans for Penn Station in
Manhattan. This included electrifying certain routes on the west end of the LIRR with 600 volt DC third rail. The steam
locomotive fleet began to take on a distinctly Pennsy look. Over the next 20 years, Long Island began to develop into a
bedroom community for New York City and the LIRR stepped in to become the transport of choice for tens of thousands of
daily commuters.

However, running commuter trains is an inherently dodgy business. It requires large investments in equipment and
facilities that are used for two brief windows of time during the day, then sit idle for the rest of the time. The problem
was made worse by the state of New York who froze ticket prices at the end of the First World War and left them there
until after the Second World War. The LIRR slipped into bankruptcy. Parent PRR and the state came to an agreement. New
York’s onerous property taxes were relaxed, ticket fares were allowed to rise and PRR began modernizing the LIRR. Steam
was replaced with diesels primarily from Alco and Fairbanks-Morse. EMD’s joined the party in 1976.

In 1966, a state agency (later called the Metropolitan Transportation Authority) bought control of the LIRR from the
Pennsylvania Railroad. Under state control, the LIRR gradually lost interest in their freight service and in 1997 freight
operations were turned over to the New York & Atlantic Railway. The LIRR remains today America’s largest passenger hauler,
moving over a third of a million passengers on a typical weekday.
Mögliche Abkürzungen: LIRR