Preserved Manchester Locomotives
The following locomotives (listed in serial number order) built by Manchester before the ALCO merger have been preserved. All locations are in the United States unless otherwise noted.
| Serial number | Wheel arrangement |
Build date | Operational owner(s) | Disposition |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| unknown | 0-2-2-0 (cog) | 1875 | Mount Washington Cog Railway #2 | Mount Washington Cog Railway, Mount Washington, New Hampshire |
| unknown | 0-2-2-0 (cog) | 1878 | Mount Washington Cog Railway #6 | Mount Washington Cog Railway, Mount Washington, New Hampshire |
| unknown | 0-2-2-0 (cog) | 1883 | Mount Washington Cog Railway #1 | Mount Washington Cog Railway, Mount Washington, New Hampshire |
| unknown | 0-2-2-0 (cog) | 1883 | Mount Washington Cog Railway #3 | Mount Washington Cog Railway, Mount Washington, New Hampshire |
| unknown | 0-2-2-0 (cog) | 1883 | Mount Washington Cog Railway #4 | Mount Washington Cog Railway, Mount Washington, New Hampshire |
| unknown | 0-2-2-0 (cog) | 1892 | Mount Washington Cog Railway #8 | Mount Washington Cog Railway, Mount Washington, New Hampshire |
| 1546 | 4-4-0 | July 1892 | Boston and Maine Railroad #494 | Central Vermont station, White River Junction, Vermont |
Read more about this topic: Manchester Locomotive Works
Famous quotes containing the words preserved, manchester and/or locomotives:
“But at my back I always hear
Times winged chariot hurrying near;
And yonder all before us lie
Deserts of vast eternity.
Thy beauty shall no more be found,
Nor, in thy marble vault, shall sound
My echoing song: then worms shall try
That long preserved virginity:
And your quaint honor turn to dust,
And into ashes all my lust:
The graves a fine and private place,
But none, I think, do there embrace.”
—Andrew Marvell (16211678)
“The [nineteenth-century] young men who were Puritans in politics were anti-Puritans in literature. They were willing to die for the independence of Poland or the Manchester Fenians; and they relaxed their tension by voluptuous reading in Swinburne.”
—Rebecca West (18921983)
“The flower-fed buffaloes of the spring
In the days of long ago,
Ranged where the locomotives sing
And the prairie flowers lie low:”
—Vachel Lindsay (18791931)