1935 in rail transport
Events
January events
- January 2 â Chicago & North Western Railway begins 400 passenger train service between Chicago, Illinois, and Saint Paul, Minnesota; it was so named because the 400 mile trip was intended to take 400 minutes, though that pace wasn't quite reached until a few months later. Still, it was believed to be the fastest train in the world over a distance greater than .
- January 28 â To mark completion of the electric line from Washington DC to New York City, the Pennsylvania Railroad runs a special train hauled by Pennsylvania Railroad 4800, the electric locomotive making a round trip from Washington to Philadelphia setting a speed record on the return run of 1 hour 50 minutes. The line, with the GG1 locomotives, begins regular revenue service on February 10.
- January 31 â Union Pacific's M-10000 enters service as the City of Salina between Salina, Kansas, and Kansas City. The 116 seat train carries an average 280 passengers per round trip.
February events
March events
- March 20 – Kotoku Line, Takamatsu to Tokushima route officially completed with regular operation service to start in Shikoku Island, Japan.
- March 23 â The North Manchuria Railway, the former Chinese Eastern Railway within the Japanese puppet state of Manchukuo, is sold by the Soviet Union to the Manchukuo Government; it is then merged into the Manchukuo National Railway and converted from Russian to standard gauge on August 31 between 05:00 and 08:00 hours.
- March 24 â Pennsylvania Station in Newark, New Jersey, opens.
- March 27 â Electro-Motive Corporation breaks ground in McCook, Illinois, for their new locomotive factory.
- March 30 â The first section of the ItÃ
 Line, connecting Atami and Ajiro in Japan, is opened.
- March 31 â The Glasgow Subway in Scotland is converted from a cable car system to a third-rail electric system (inner circle; outer circle completed December 5).
April events
May events
June events
July events
August events
September events
October
December events
Unknown date events
Accidents
Births
February births
Deaths
September deaths
December deaths
References