- Conrail - Wikipedia
Conrail Conrail (reporting mark CR), formally the Consolidated Rail Corporation, was the primary Class I railroad in the Northeastern United States between 1976 and 1999 The trade name Conrail is a portmanteau based on the company's legal name
- Conrail
Conrail offers a tuition assistance program for employees who want to further their education by taking courses in a business-related area
- The Conrail Historical Society
The Conrail Historical Society is a 501 (c) (3) non-profit organization that preserves the history of the Consolidated Rail Corporation through education and publication, recognizing the creation of Conrail as one of the most significant developments in the American railroad industry
- Conrail (Railroad): Map, Logo, Roster, History
Conrail, short for the Consolidated Rail Corporation, was a government creation to save the Northeastern rail network in the 1970s
- Conrail history remembered - Trains
Conrail started out with $2 1 billion from the U S government, which purchased Conrail debentures and preferred stock The new railroad operated 5,000 locomotives on 17,000 route-miles of railroad; it had 162,000 freight cars, 95,000 employees, and 278 different labor agreements
- Conrail Cyclopedia | Photos, rosters, history of Conrail locomotives . . .
Conrail (Consolidated Rail Corporation) locomotive and freight car rolling stock photos, rosters, history, information, and more from 1976 until 1999 prior CSX and NS
- Conrail at 40: An experiment that worked - Railway Age
On that day, Consolidated Rail Corp , better known as Conrail, began operating under the auspices of the U S government a new railroad cobbled together from six bankrupt Northeastern carriers: Penn Central, Erie-Lackawanna, Jersey Central, Lehigh Valley, Reading, and Lehigh Hudson River
- Conrail Company History | Conrail Photo Archive
Conrail began operations in April 1976, although its origins go back to the earliest days of railroading in North America The oldest segment of what became Conrail was the Granite Railway Co , built in 1826 to carry granite blocks for the Bunker Hill Monument in West Quincy, Massachusetts
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