Norfolk and Western #610 was a class J 4-8-4 Northern steam locomotive.
History[]
610 was built in 1943 by the Roanoke Shops in Roanoke, Virginia for the Norfolk and Western railroad. This was one of 5 engines built for the N&W in 1943.
No. 610 pulled the network's prominent passenger trains, such as the Powhatan Arrow from Cincinnati to Norfolk (Cincinnati to Portsmouth for No. 611), the Pocahontas, and the Cavalier, as well as ferrying Southern Railway's Tennessean, Birmingham Special and The Pelican between Lynchburg, Virginia and Bristol, Virginia.
No. 610 was loaned to the PRR for testing and during tests was able to hold a steady speed of 110 miles per hour.
In 1959, the locomotive was retired from service and sold for scrap.
Trivia[]
- In 1943, it was delivered without shrouding and lightweight side rods, due to the limitations on the use of certain materials during the war; they were classified J1.
- Whilst on loan, number 610 hauled a 15-car 1,050-short-ton (950 t; 940-long-ton) train at speeds in excess of 110 mph (180 km/h) over Pennsylvania Railroad's "racetrack", the Fort Wayne Division (a section of flat, straight track).
- In 1958 and 1959, it ran several "Farewell to Steam" excursions.
- The locomotive was originally built without the streamlining shrouds.