Metropolitan Special

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The Metropolitan Special was a passenger train of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad (B&O) that operated until 1971. For most of its career, it ran between St. Louis, Missouri, and Jersey City, New Jersey.

Service typeInter-city rail
StatusDiscontinued
First service1919
Quick facts Overview, Service type ...
Metropolitan Special
The Metropolitan in Gaithersburg, Maryland, in 1969
Overview
Service typeInter-city rail
StatusDiscontinued
LocaleMid-Atlantic United States; Midwestern United States
First service1919
Last serviceApril 30, 1971
Former operatorBaltimore and Ohio Railroad
Route
TerminiJersey City, New Jersey
St. Louis, Missouri
Service frequencyDaily
Train numbers11 (westbound)
12 (eastbound)
On-board services
Seating arrangementsReclining seat coaches [1958]
Sleeping arrangementsRoomettes and double bedrooms
Catering facilitiesParlor-Dining car (Washington - Cincinnati), lunch counter and lounge rooms (Cincinnati - St. Louis)
Technical
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm)
Route map
Jersey City
Elizabeth
Plainfield
New Jersey
Pennsylvania
Wayne Junction
Philadelphia
Chester
Pennsylvania
Delaware
Wilmington
Newark
Delaware
Maryland
Aberdeen
Baltimore–Mt. Royal
Baltimore
Maryland
District of Columbia
Washington
District of Columbia
Maryland
Silver Spring
Point of Rocks
Brunswick
Harper's Ferry
Shenandoah Junction
Martinsburg
North Mountain
Hancock
Paw Paw
Green Springs
Cumberland
Maryland
West Virginia
Keyser
Piedmont
Mountain Lake Park
Oakland
Terra Alta
M&K Junction
Tunneltonv
Newburg
Grafton
Flemington
Clarksburg
Salem
West Union
Pennsboro
Walker
Parkersburg
West Virginia
Ohio
Athens
Hamden
Chillicothe
Greenfield
Oakley
Winton Place
Cincinnati
Ohio
Indiana
Lawerenceburg
Aurora
North Vernon
Seymour
Mitchell
Washington
Vincennes
Indiana
Illinois
Lawrenceburg
Olney
Flora
Salem
Odin
Carlyle
East St. Louis
Illinois
Missouri
St. Louis
Close

History

The combined Metropolitan/Shenandoah at Cumberland, Maryland, in 1970

In earlier years only the east-bound #12 carried the name, while the Diplomat (as #11) carried the west-bound direction of the route. The train's eastern terminus was Washington, D.C.[1] Sleeping car passengers were able to ride trains continuously from St. Louis to Jersey City, New Jersey, where at Communipaw Terminal passengers transferred to buses and ferries to Manhattan in New York City. By 1940, the eastern terminus became Baltimore, and the west-bound trip joined in carrying the Metropolitan Special name.[2]

Major intermediate station stops included Washington, D.C., and Cincinnati, Ohio. The Metropolitan Special carried vast amounts of mail and express packages in many (often 10+) baggage cars and express cars Added revenue for the train came from Railway Post Office cars, which sorted and canceled mail en route, between terminals. Even with declining passenger revenue through the 1950s and 1960s, the B&O passenger department relied heavily on trains such as the Metropolitan Special because of the revenue generated by moving mail and express packages.

In 1964 it was listed as primarily a mail train, and the train served various smaller towns and villages that were bypassed by the more prestigious trains along the route, the National Limited and the Diplomat.[3] Special was dropped from its name.[4] The next year the B&O dropped the sleeping car from the train.[5] However, by the end of 1967, the United States Postal Service dealt a heavy blow to the B&O, canceling most of its lucrative post office contracts. With such a drop in revenue, the fate of the Metropolitan Special was sealed. By 1969, its route was shortened to Washington to Cincinnati.[6] The train was discontinued on the first day of Amtrak service, May 1, 1971.[7]

Stations

References

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