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Bahngesellschaften in der Spur-N-Datenbank

Angaben zur Bahngesellschaft

Name: WAB - Wabash Railroad
Herkunftsland: USA
Bemerkung: Wabash was the product of an 1889 restructuring (under the leadership of Jay Gould) of several railroads
centered around the Wabash St. Louis & Pacific. Wabash was unusual in that it evenly straddled the border
between ´eastern railroads” and railroads west of the Chicago-St.Louis-Memphis-New Orleans border. In the west,
Wabash connected Kansas City, Omaha and Des Moines. Heading east from those points, Wabash reached St. Louis,
Decatur, and Chicago. Then, clearly in the eastern territory, Wabash reached Fort Wayne, Detroit, Toledo and
finally Buffalo. Total length was about 2500 miles. The Detroit to Buffalo line cut though southern Ontario,
Canada on Canadian National trackage rights. That route also required a car float operation across the Detroit
River. As a result, Wabash’s Buffalo traffic was a fraction of that of competitors Nickel Plate and New York
Central. However, Wabash’s Detroit-Kansas City and Detroit-St. Louis service was a force to be reckoned with
and well patronized by Michigan’s automakers. The Wabash Cannonball was the name of the daytime passenger run
between Detroit and St. Louis. The song of the same name was a hit long before it was ever applied to the train
itself. Wabash bought control of the Ann Arbor in 1925 and soon after, Wabash and Delaware & Hudson jointly
bought control of the Lehigh Valley (Wabash’s principle connection in Buffalo.) This got the attention of the
Pennsylvania Railroad who bought control of Wabash under the auspices of their ´Pennsylvania Company”
subsidiary in 1928.

As PRR planned their merger with New York Central, it became obvious that they could not take Wabash with them.
The first step was to transfer control of Ann Arbor from Wabash to Detroit Toledo & Ironton (also in the
Pennsylvania Company family.) Up to that point, Ann Arbor was routinely included in the official Wabash system
map. Then PRR arranged for Wabash to be included in the Norfolk & Western-Nickel Plate-Pittsburgh & West
Virginia merger that was being planned. PRR didn’t overtly control the N&W but they did have considerable
influence over them. The deal was made and the new, larger Norfolk & Western leased the Wabash for 50 years in
October of 1964. At that point, Wabash became a paper railroad. They were finally merged out of existence by
N&W successor Norfolk Southern in the 1990s.
Mögliche Abkürzungen: WAB, WAB - Wabash, Wabash, Wabash, WAB - Wabash Railroad Co.