September 27 in rail transport

19th century

  • 1825 – The first steam-hauled passenger train service operates and carries up to 600 passengers, at the official opening of the Stockton and Darlington Railway in the north of England.
  • 1827 – Aaron Augustus Sargent, American journalist, lawyer and politician who authored the first Pacific Railroad Act, is born.

20th century

  • 1923 – Following soon after the washout of Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad's bridge over Coal Creek (near Glenrock, Wyoming), a passenger train falls through the washout, [...] 30 of the train's 66 passengers. The accident is the worst railroad accident in Wyoming's history. 1
  • 1972 – Commemorating the opening of Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART) two weeks earlier, United States President Richard Nixon rides a BART train.
  • 1993 – Amtrak's worst rail accident to date occurs in the Big Bayou Conot train disaster when the westbound Sunset Limited derails on a bridge in Alabama; the cause of the accident is found to be a collision between a river barge and one of the bridge's pilings knocking the rail out of alignment on the bridge.
  • 1993 – The California Northern Railroad begins operations.

Births

  • 1823 – Frederick H. Billings, president of Northern Pacific Railway 1879-1881, is born (d. 1890).

Deaths

  • 1835 – Phineas Davis, pioneering steam locomotive builder.
  • 1965 – William Stanier, Chief Mechanical Engineer of the London, Midland and Scottish Railway 1932-1944 (b. 1876).

References

  • Casper Star-Tribune (June 22 2005), BP Amoco Timeline. Retrieved June 22 2005.
  • Lustig, David (May 2005), "Renaissance in California", Trains Magazine, p. 72-76.

fr:27 septembre dans les chemins de fer