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・ Laurel Regional Hospital
・ Laurel Ridge
・ Laurel Ridge State Park
・ Laurel River
・ Laurel River Lake
・ Laurel Rose Willson
・ Laurel Run
・ Laurel Run (Bennett Branch Sinnemahoning Creek)
・ Laurel Run (Georges Creek)
・ Laurel Run (Huntington Creek)
・ Laurel Run (Lackawanna River)
・ Laurel Run (Mill Creek)
・ Laurel Run (West Branch Fishing Creek)
・ Laurel Run Dam
・ Laurel Fork North Wilderness
Laurel Fork Railway
・ Laurel Fork South Wilderness
・ Laurel Fork Wilderness
・ Laurel Fork, Virginia
・ Laurel Foundation
・ Laurel Futurity Stakes
・ Laurel Futurity Stakes top three finishers
・ Laurel G. Bellows
・ Laurel Gand
・ Laurel Goodwin
・ Laurel Grace Barker McAlister
・ Laurel Grove
・ Laurel Grove Cemetery
・ Laurel Grove Memorial Park
・ Laurel Grove, Oregon


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Laurel Fork Railway : ウィキペディア英語版
Laurel Fork Railway
The Laurel Fork Railway was a small, standard-gauge logging railroad that operated entirely in Carter County, Tennessee from 1912 to 1927. Built by the Pittsburgh Lumber Company to serve a double-band sawmill at Braemar, in present day Hampton, Tennessee.
The Laurel Fork Railroad at its peak totaled no more than of rail. Lines and spurs carried timber from 12,000 acres (48,000 km²) of the mountainous watershed of the Laurel Fork of the Doe River that was estimated to contain 150 million board feet (350,000 m³) of lumber.
A proposed interchange with the East Tennessee and Western North Carolina Railroad failed over inability to negotiate rates favorable to both companies. As a result, the Laurel Fork was incorporated as a common carrier and a six-mile (9.6 km) line into Elizabethton, Tennessee was built to carry finished lumber to an interchange with the Virginia and Southwestern Railway.
A June 13, 1924, flood on the Doe River washed away much track and roadbed along the floodplain. Coupled with diminished production from the mill, this led to a November 7 filing for abandonment that year with the Interstate Commerce Commission. Some operations continued after the flood, but all virtually all logging along the Laurel Fork ceased by 1927. Parts of the railroad grade are used by the Appalachian Trail in the Pond Mountain Wilderness Area through the Laurel Fork valley between Dennis Cove and Hampton.
==Laurel Fork Railway rolling stock==
The Laurel Fork Railroad locomotive roster included three 70-3 Shay geared steam locomotives, road numbers Nos. 1, 2, and 3 c/n 2390, 2391, and 2760, respectively. Two smaller Shays have been incorrectly identified by several authors as being owned by the Laurel Fork. Conversion work on c/n 187 was performed at their shops for another owner. The Laurel Fork has been mistakenly identiifed as owner of c/n 2195 due to a Lima clerical error. The equipment roster for the rail company also included two log loaders; a steam shovel; 40 flat cars; 12 service cars; and a Model T Ford on dump car wheels that was used for inspection trips. As a freight-only carrier, the Laurel Fork Railway owned no passenger equipment.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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