CLEVELAND, COLUMBUS, CINCINNATI AND INDIANAPOLIS RAILWAY

The 'Cleveland, Columbus, Cincinnati and Indianapolis Railway' was formed from the merger of the Cleveland Columbus and Cincinnati Railroad with the Bellefontaine Railroad in 1868. It eventually became a part of the New York Central Railroad.

Contents
History
See also
References

History


The CCC&I, after its formation in 1868, sought to make a connection to Cincinnati. This connection was never realized by its predecessor line the Cleveland Columbus and Cincinnati Railroad which only ran trains between Cleveland and Columbus. By 1872, the CCC&I made agreements to operate the Cincinnati and Springfield Railroad between Cincinnati and Dayton and the Cincinnati, Sandusky and Cleveland Railroad between Dayton and Springfield, finally providing a through route from Cleveland to Columbus to Cincinnati. In 1889, the CCC&I merged with lines in Indiana and Illinois to form the Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago and St. Louis Railroad, known as the 'Big Four Route'.

See also



Columbus Railroads history page

Columbus Union Station

New York Central Railroad

References



★ Steiner, Rowlee. "A Review of Columbus Railroads", 1952, unpublished 125 page manuscript available from the library of the Ohio Historical Society, 1982 Velma Drive, Columbus, Ohio 43211

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