ALCO 2-6-0
Number 11

Steam locomotive number 11 was constructed in 1920 by the Cooke Works of the American Locomotive Company (Alco) in Paterson, New Jersey. It is a “2‑6‑0” or “Mogul” type and was one of 54 engines of four different wheel arrangements built between 1920 and 1925 intended for export to Cuba and use in that country’s sugar cane fields.

Building locomotives for stock was not common practice and fluctuations in world sugar markets post World War I unexpectedly reduced demand for these engines, leaving a number of them unsold on the factory floor. Alco turned to the domestic short line railroad market but it was not until 1923 that the tiny Narragansett Pier Railroad in Peace Dale, Rhode Island, purchased the engine, assigned it number “11”, and put it to work on their eight and a half mile railroad.

Number 11’s tenure in Rhode Island lasted fourteen years. It was replaced with a gas-mechanical locomotive in 1937 and sold to the Bath & Hammondsport Railroad in Hammondsport, New York.

The B&H, operating nine miles between its namesake communities, primarily served the regions noted wine producers which gave rise to the railroad’s nickname, “The Champagne Trail”.

Through its working career at both the NP Railroad and the B&H Railroad, engine 11 was a living symbol of the great American tradition of small independent railroads connecting local communities with the national rail network. Weighing a mere 55 ½ tons, its modest proportions were typical of light short line locomotives all across the country in the age of steam power.

The Bath & Hammondsport Railroad retired number 11 in 1949 in favor of diesel power and the engine, an object of some sentimental attachment, was carefully stored in the railroad’s enginehouse until sold in 1955 to Dr. Stanley A. Groman for his “Rail City” museum in Sandy Pond, NY.

Dr. Groman was a pioneer railroad preservationist and for many years the locomotive operated on his mile-long circle of track near the shore of Lake Ontario. But the eventual construction of interstate highways siphoned visitors away and Rail City, like many roadside attractions of the 1950s, withered and eventually closed.

Around 1977 engine 11 was sold to another collector, Dr. John P. Miller, who had earlier purchased the Narragansett Pier Railroad. Thus it was that the locomotive returned to the engine house at Peace Dale, Rhode Island.

Some disassembly and inspection work was done but Dr. Miller never completed the overhaul and number 11 was sold again, in 1981, to the Middletown & New Jersey Railroad of Middletown, NY.

Pierre Rasmussen, president of the M&NJ, was a fan of steam engines and thought number 11 would be an ideal addition to his short line. The locomotive was stored inside the M&NJ enginehouse, protected from the weather, but no further repairs were ever done.
With sale of the railroad pending following Pierre Rasmussen’s death in 2004, ownership of number 11 transferred to James Wright, a business partner in the M&NJ. Wright, in turn, sold the engine to Alan Maples, president of the Everett Railroad, in 2006.

Upon Alan Maples’ acquisition of Number 11, it was moved to the Western Maryland Scenic Railroad’s shops in Ridgeley, West Virginia for heavy repairs.
The bulk of these repairs were finished in March 2015, and the locomotive was trucked to the Everett Railroad’s shops in Claysburg, PA where her restoration was completed.

In fall of 2015, the locomotive returned to service for the first time since the early 1970s and will serve as the railroad’s primary excursion power going forward.

Baldwin 2-8-0 Number 38

Locomotive number 38 was built in April 1927 by the Baldwin Locomotive Works, the largest manufacturer of steam locomotives in the country.

It is a common “2‑8‑0” or “Consolidated” type and was the second of two identical locomotives built for the Huntingdon & Broad Top Mountain Railroad & Coal Company. Engine 38 and her sister, Number 37, were the last new locomotives bought by the H&BTM.

Engine 38 was acquired for freight service, but in the H&BT’s declining years the locomotive also pulled the railroad’s passenger train, which made one round trip daily between Huntingdon and Bedford, PA.

The engine was in regular service for 27 years until the H&BT abandoned operations in March 1954. It was the railroad’s last operable locomotive and was employed by the scrap contractor to dismantle the beloved 102-year-old line.

In April 1954, the new Everett Railroad Company purchased four miles of the old Huntingdon & Broad Top in and around the borough of Everett. Documents in the company’s archives indicate the Everett Railroad intended to buy engine 38, but reconsidered and opted for a more efficient diesel locomotive instead.

Dr. Stanley Groman, a railfan and resident of New York state, had begun collecting railroad equipment with an eye towards opening an operating railroad museum.
Through an acquaintance, he learned of the H&BT’s fate, and the ultimate availability of the railroad’s equipment. He visited Huntingdon in April 1954 to find the dismantling underway.

Working with Pittsburgh Rail and Machinery, the equipment broker, Dr. Groman negotiated the purchase of 38, along with a coach, RPO and a cabin car. 38 would be the only Huntingdon & Broad Top locomotive to survive.

Displaying a flair for showmanship, Dr. Groman arranged for engine 38 to pull two special excursions on the New York Central Railroad enroute to his Rail City Museum in Sandy Pond, NY. However, once the engine was moved to the new attraction, it was found to be too large to negotiate the loop of track that had been constructed at the site.

Engine 38 was placed on display until it was sold, in 1968, to the Livonia, Avon & Lakeville Railroad in Lakeville, NY. The LA&L scrapped the 38’s original tender which leaked badly. Following an overhaul with the aid of the Erie-Lackawanna Railroad’s Hornell, NY, shop, the 38 was thereafter employed on seasonal excursion trains until 1976.

The LA&L Railroad quit the tourist trade and in 1977 sold its passenger equipment including engine 38 to Sloan Cornell for use on his Gettysburg (PA) Railroad. The locomotive ran at Gettysburg for several years before Cornell moved it to his new Knox & Kane Railroad in northwestern Pennsylvania, where he operated an excursion train through the Allegheny National Forest and over the famed Kinzua Viaduct, a 300-foot high, 2,052-foot long bridge over the Kinzua Valley.

Engine 38 was eventually set aside in favor of a larger steam engine. Following the demise of the Kinzua Viaduct in a July 2003 tornado, the Knox & Kane Railroad closed and in the fall of 2008 the remaining rolling stock was sold at auction, where Alan Maples, president of the Everett Railroad, purchased locomotive 38.

At present, the boiler for engine 38 is stored on our railroad and will be undergoing repairs as time and resources permit. There is no deadline or schedule for completion of the work and the engine is not available for public inspection.

As restoration progresses, we will update the web page with additional information.

GE 80-Ton
Number 4

Built: November 1943
Acquired: 1971
Horsepower: 500

Number 4 is the last piece of equipment from the “original” Everett Railroad that is still on the roster. It is no longer in operation, but holds a special place in our heart.

EMD GP16
Number 1712

Built: 1950
Acquired: 2002
Horsepower: 1600

Number 1712 began life on the Clinchfield as GP7 911. In 1981, Seaboard Coast Line rebuilt 911 into a GP16. She went on to serve CSX and RJ Corman before coming to the Everett Railroad in 2002.

EMD GP16
Number 1828

Built: 1952
Acquired: 2001
Horsepower: 1600
 
Number 1828 began life on the Seaboard Air Line (SAL) as GP7 1978. In 1981, Seaboard Coast Line (the successor to SAL) rebuilt her into GP16 4782. She went on to serve CSX and RJ Corman before coming to the Everett Railroad in 2001.

EMD SW-900
Number 126

Built: May 1938
Acquired: 2021
Horsepower: 900
 
126 was originally built for the Lehigh Valley Railroad by EMD in May of 1938 as an NW1.  It was rebuilt by EMD in 1956 as an SW900M, it continued to work for Lehigh Valley until that railroad was absorbed into Conrail in 1976.  The 126 was renumbered by Conrail to 8653 and was rebuilt again around 1980.  Conrail sold 8653 in the 1980’s, it worked for several coal companies around central and western Pennsylvania, ending up at Rosebud Mining Company’s Kiski Junction Railroad in Schenley, PA., near Pittsburgh.   Kiski Junction restored the locomotive to its original Lehigh Valley number and paint scheme, it was used to haul tourists until that railroad shut down in 2017.  The Everett Railroad acquired number 126 in 2021, it entered service in early 2022.

EMD GP7R
Number 500

Built: March 1953
Acquired: 2020
Horsepower: 1500

When it was originally built by EMD for the Chicago and Northwestern Railway in March of 1953, locomotive 500 was originally numbered 1625.  It was rebuilt by CNW in 1981 into a GP7R, at which time it received the number 4283.  It was sold by CNW in the mid 1990’s to Omni Trax, who in turn sold it to Southern Pacific Construction Services where it received the number 500 and was used to lay fiber optic cable along railroad track around the country.  Around 2000, 500 was sold to the New Orleans Gulf Coast Railroad, for whom it worked until 2013 when it was sold to railroad equipment dealer National Railway Equipment.  The Everett Railroad purchased 500 in 2020, it entered service in 2022.

Coach 1183

Coach 1183 was built in 1927 by the Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corporation’s Harlan plant in Wilmington, DE, for the Central Railroad of New Jersey. As built, the car had a capacity for 72 people and was finished with a mahogany interior. In 1932 it was reconfigured with 54 reclining seats and a short parlor section, and assigned to CNJ’s long distance trains.  In 1967 the car was refitted with standard walk-over seats and used in commuter service until it was retired and sold in 1985 by New Jersey Transit.  Car 1183 was acquired by the Everett Railroad from the Belvidere & Delaware River Railroad in 2006.  Restoration was completed in 2023.

Coach 997

Coach 997 was built in 1923 by the American Car & Foundry Company. It was one of 267 standard clerestory roof coaches acquired by the Central Railroad of New Jersey (CNJ) between the years 1922 and 1927. The Everett Railroad acquired the 997 in 2009.  Restoration began in 2019 and required over 4,000 man-hours and two years to complete.



CoACH 1194

The Everett Railroad owns six former-Central Railroad of New Jersey (CNJ) 78-seat commuter coaches.  Car 1194, built in 1927 by Bethlehem Shipbuilding, is one of those six.   Acquired from the Ohio Central Railroad in 2008, it underwent a complete restoration and returned to service in Fall 2018.

Coach 2537

The backbone of our fleet are two former-Delaware Lackawanna & Western (DL&W) Multiple-Unit (MU) cars.  Built by Pullman in 1929 and 1930, the 84-seat cars served the DL&W and its successors in commuter service until the 1980s. 

Upon retirement, our cars were purchased by the Horseshoe Curve Chapter of the National Railway Historical Society (NRHS), demotorized, and refurbished for use on tourist trains.  Renumbered 103, 104, and 105 respectively, the cars served the NRHS for over thirty years before being acquired by the Everett Railroad in early 2018.   Following Everett Railroad tradition, these cars will be returned to their original DL&W numbers as time allows.

Combine 23

Our Combine, Number 23, was built in 1925 by the Pressed Steel Car Company of Pittsburgh, PA for the Bessemer & Lake Erie Railroad. Utilized in passenger service by the Bessemer until the 1950s, it was converted into a diner for business train service and renumbered A-200. Donated to in 1964 and acquired from the Pennsylvania Trolley Museum in 2012, the car was returned to service in 2015. 

Coach 104

The backbone of our fleet are three former-Delaware Lackawanna & Western (DL&W) Multiple-Unit (MU) cars.  Built by Pullman in 1929 and 1930, the 84-seat cars served the DL&W and its successors in commuter service until the 1980s. 

Upon retirement, our cars were purchased by the Horseshoe Curve Chapter of the National Railway Historical Society (NRHS), demotorized, and refurbished for use on tourist trains.  Renumbered 103, 104, and 105 respectively, the cars served the NRHS for over thirty years before being acquired by the Everett Railroad in early 2018.   Following Everett Railroad tradition, these cars will be returned to their original DL&W numbers as time allows.