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・ St. Louis WCT
・ St. Louis Woman
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・ St. Louis Wrestling Hall of Fame
・ St. Louis YPT-15
・ St. Louis' Catholic Church (North Star, Ohio)
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・ St. Louis, Michigan
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St. Louis, Peoria and North Western Railway
・ St. Louis, Peoria and Northern Railroad Depot
・ St. Louis, Prince Edward Island
・ St. Louis, San Francisco and Texas Railway
・ St. Louis, Saskatchewan
・ St. Louis-class cruiser (1905)
・ St. Louis-class cruiser (1938)
・ St. Louis-San Francisco Overpass
・ St. Louis-San Francisco Railway 1630
・ St. Louis-style barbecue
・ St. Louis-style pizza
・ St. Louisville, Ohio
・ St. Louis–San Francisco 4500
・ St. Louis–San Francisco Railway
・ St. Lucas, Iowa


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St. Louis, Peoria and North Western Railway : ウィキペディア英語版
St. Louis, Peoria and North Western Railway
The St. Louis, Peoria and North Western Railway was a short-lived and nominally independent railroad of 114.6 miles in length. It extended from near Benld, Illinois, its southern end, to Peoria, Illinois at its northern end. It was constructed in 1911-1913 with $10.0 million in capital raised by the Chicago and North Western Railway (C & NW) to haul coal from Macoupin County mines operated by the ''Superior Coal Company'', a wholly owned subsidiary of the Chicago and Northwestern.
==History==
Apparently for legal purposes, the Benld-Peoria railroad project was incorporated in 1911 as an independent railroad—but it was always an adjunct of the Chicago and North Western, and in December 1913, when the St. Louis, Peoria, and North Western was completed, the branch line was consolidated into the C & NW. The new branch line entered service in 1914.〔 After the consolidation of the former St. Louis, Peoria and North Western into the C & NW, the branch line was further extended southward to Worden, Illinois.
The St. Louis, Peoria and North Western was not built as a passenger line and deliberately avoided population centers located on or close to its right-of-way. For example, the railroad's right-of-way never approached closer than 3.5 miles to the city center of Springfield, Illinois, and did not provide passenger service to Springfield.〔
The six Macoupin coal mines served by the St. Louis, Peoria and North Western yielded an estimated 2.0 million tons of coal annually, almost all of which was burned by the Chicago and North Western in its steam railway operations. The C & NW's grain-belt trunk lines did not serve any coal fields, and until 1914 the Chicago-based railroad had to purchase much of its coal from outside suppliers.〔
The dieselization of the Chicago and North Western reduced the Chicago-based railroad's need for an in-house coal supply. Passage, starting in 1963, of the Clean Air Acts made Macoupin County coal redundant. Coal haulage declined on the Girard-Peoria line, and the branch line went out of use in the 1990s.

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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