| Years in rail transport | 
| Timeline of railway history | 
This article lists events related to rail transport that occurred in 1890.
Events
January events
- January 28 – Pittsburgh & Lake Erie Railroad acquires a section of the McKeesport and Belle Vernon Railroad around Belle Vernon, Pennsylvania.[1]
 
February events
- February 22 – Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago & St Louis Railway (the "Big Four Railroad") gains control of the Peoria & Eastern Railway in southern Illinois.[2]
 
March events
- March – Émile Zola's psychological novel with a railway setting, La Bête Humaine, is published in book form.
 - March 4 – The Forth Bridge across the Firth of Forth in Scotland is officially opened and its contractor, William Arrol, is knighted.[3]
 
May events
- May 9 – Boston & Maine Railroad ends its lease of the Eastern Railroad of Massachusetts by purchasing it.
 - May 20 – Wutach Valley Railway opened to provide a strategic route inside Germany without crossing the Swiss border.
 
July events
- July 23 – Narrow gauge Kennebec Central Railroad opens to Togus, Maine.[4]
 
August events
- August 18 – The Kansas City Suburban Belt Railroad, a predecessor of Kansas City Southern Railway, begins operations between Kansas City and Argentine.[5]
 - August 19 – Pennsylvania Railroad subsidiary Ohio Valley Railway reorganized as the Pittsburg, Ohio Valley and Cincinnati Railroad.
 - August 19 – In Quincy, Massachusetts, a jack used to level rails was left on the tracks. A passenger train then collided with it causing a derailment. Twenty-four people were killed due to the impact of the collision and through scalding.[6]
 
November events

City & South London Railway train, from Illustrated London News, 1890
- November 4 – Official opening of the City & South London Railway, earliest constituent of the Northern line of the London Underground and the first real deep-level electrified "tube" railway in the world.[7]
 - November 9 – First section of metre gauge Chemin de fer du Vivarais in southern France opens, using Mallet locomotives.[8]
 - November 10 – Compagnie Internationale des Wagons-Lits begins to operate the Rome Express train from Calais Maritime station via Paris and the Fréjus Rail Tunnel.
 - November 26 – The Mito Line in Japan operates its first freight trains.
 
Unknown date events
- First Class О 0-8-0 steam locomotive built for service in Russia. 9129 locomotives of this type will be built up to 1928, making it the country's most numerous.[9]
 - Klien-Lindner axle patented.
 - Hugh J. Chisholm forms the Portland and Rumford Falls Railway to link Androscoggin River papermills to the Maine Central Railroad.
 - Leland Stanford begins his term as Chairman of the Executive Committee for Southern Pacific.
 - Charles Francis Adams, Jr. steps down from the presidency of the Union Pacific.
 
Births
August births
- August 16 – CP Couch, president of Kansas City Southern Railway 1939–1941 (d. 1955).
 
Deaths
July deaths
- July 15 – Silas Seymour, chief engineer and/or consulting engineer for several railroads in New York in the mid- to late 19th century (b. 1817).
 
September deaths
- September 30 – Frederick Billings, president of Northern Pacific Railway 1879–1881 (b. 1823).
 
References
- ↑ Pittsburgh & Lake Erie Railroad Historical Society (December 7, 2004). "History of the P&LE". Archived from the original on May 2, 2010. Retrieved January 28, 2010.
 - ↑ (August 31, 2005), History of Champaign-Urbana Transportation Inc.- Part 3: Railroads. Retrieved February 22, 2006.
 - ↑ Thomas, John (1975). The North British Railway, vol. 2. Newton Abbot: David & Charles. ISBN 0-7153-6699-8.
 - ↑ Jones, Robert C. (1999). Two Feet to Togus. Evergreen Press. p. 18. ISBN 0-9667264-1-3.
 - ↑ Kansas City Southern Historical Society. "The Kansas City Southern Lines". Archived from the original on 28 August 2005. Retrieved 2005-08-15.
 - ↑ "Quincy's Two Great Railroad Disasters" (PDF). Quincy History. Quincy, MA. 1994. Retrieved June 14, 2017.
 - ↑ Gillham, J. C. (1988). The Age of the Electric Train: Electric Trains in Britain since 1883. London: Ian Allan Publishing. ISBN 0-7110-1392-6.
 - ↑ Joy, David (2012). Engines that Bend: narrow gauge articulated locomotives. Southend: Atlantic Publishers. p. 28. ISBN 978-1-902827-23-0.
 - ↑ Леонид МАКАРОВ (March 2005). ОВЕЧКА. Историческая серия "Техники Молодежи" (in Russian). ФОТОМАГИСТРАЛЬ. Retrieved 2009-03-31.
 
- Morris, J. C., compiler (December 31, 1902), Annual report of the Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs; Part II, History of the Railroads of Ohio. Retrieved August 16, 2005.
 
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