1943 in rail transport
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Script error: No such module "Sidebar". This article lists events related to rail transport that occurred in 1943.
Events
January events
- January 1 – First Hunslet Austerity 0-6-0ST steamed, earliest of 377 built for war service to British Ministry of Supply order.[1]
- January 16 – First WD Austerity 2-8-0 handed over to British Ministry of Supply, earliest of 935 built for war service.[1]
April events
- April 2 – Yaga Station in 5-chōme, Yaga, Higashi-ku, Hiroshima, Hiroshima Prefecture, Japan, reopens.
May events
- May 5 – Pullman, retooled from passenger car construction to work for World War II, launches its first ship built for the Navy, a PCE (patrol craft).
- After a year of revenue service, Union Pacific Railroad's M-10002 streamliner trainset is removed from service; its power car is separated from its unpowered cars and the components are reused elsewhere.
June events
- June 4 – Hyde railway accident, New Zealand: Train derails at speed in a curved cutting, 21 killed, 47 injured.
- June 21 – British saboteurs blow up the strategically significant railway viaduct at Asopos in Greece.
July events
- July 14 – Canadian National Railway opens Central Station in Montreal.[2]
August events
- August 25 – Denver, South Park and Pacific Railroad operates its last regular narrow gauge train on the section between Leadville and Climax.[3]
- August 30 – The Lackawanna Limited wreck at Wayland, New York causes 29 deaths and injures 114 others.
September events
- September 6 – Frankford Junction train wreck, Seventy-nine people are killed when the Pennsylvania Railroad's Congressional Limited derails due to a burned out journal at Frankford Junction, Pennsylvania.
October events
- October 4 - The last Maine narrow gauge (the Monson Railroad) discontinues service.[4]
- October 17
- Chicago's first rapid transit subway route, State Street subway (4.9 miles/7.9 km), opens for passenger service.[5] with stations at North/Clybourn, Clark/Division, Chicago, Grand, Washington, Monroe, Jackson, Harrison, and Roosevelt. It contains one of the world's longest underground station platform – Script error: No such module "convert". long.
- Completion of the Burma Railway between Bangkok, Thailand and Rangoon, Burma (now Myanmar) (Script error: No such module "convert".) by the Empire of Japan to support its forces in the Burma campaign using the forced labour of Asian civilians and Allied Prisoners of war.
November events
- November 11 – Shin-Koyasu Station on what is now JR East's Keihin-Tōhoku Line in Kanagawa-ku, Yokohama, Japan, is opened.
December events
- December 16 – Two Atlantic Coast Line passenger trains collide after a broken rail derails the first one, putting it in the path of the second. Seventy-one people are killed, most of them U.S. troops.
- The first troop sleepers enter service on U.S. railroads.
Unknown date events
- The Anton Anderson Memorial Tunnel, the longest combined rail/highway tunnel in North America, opens for railroad service.
- After a few years of only producing diesel engines for the United States Navy during World War II, General Motors Electro-Motive Division returns to manufacturing railroad locomotives.
- The last PRR GG1 to be built is completed.
- Electrification between Limoges and Montauban on the SNCF in Vichy France completes an electrified rail route from Paris to the Mediterranean.
Accidents
Template:1943 railway accidents
Births
September births
- September 7 – Chris Green, British railway manager.
Deaths
February deaths
- February 9 – Walter Kidde, president of New York, Susquehanna and Western Railway 1937–1943 (born 1877).[6]
- February 11 – Stuart R. Knott, president of Kansas City Southern Railway 1900–1905 (born 1859).
June deaths
- June 2 – John Frank Stevens, chief engineer and general manager of Great Northern Railway, vice president Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad (born 1853).
References
- Kansas City Southern Historical Society, The Kansas City Southern Lines Template:Webarchive. Retrieved August 15, 2005.