This article lists events related to rail transport that occurred in 1942.
December events
- December – Ian Allan publishes his first book, ABC of Southern Locomotives, the first in a popular series which encourages the hobby of trainspotting in Britain.[8]
- December – Rail transport in Libya: Western Desert Extension Railway reaches Tobruk.
- December – First deliveries of USATC S118 Class "MacArthur" 2-8-2 locomotives, to Nigeria. There will eventually be nearly 800 built to the same basic design, seeing service on every continent, on 3 ft 6 in (1,067 mm) or metre gauge.[3]
- December 6 – Schedules of fast trains around the United States are slightly lengthened to reduce wear and tear, following a wartime decision by the Office of Defense Transportation.[9]
- December 11 – USATC S160 Class 2-8-0 #1604 (built by Alco) is officially handed over on loan to the British government at London Paddington station, from the first batch of 2120 for service in the European theater.[3]
- December 27 – Almonte, Ontario, Canada: Thirty-six people are killed and over 200 injured when a passenger train running late is struck from behind by a troop train.[10]
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| This section is empty. You can help by adding to it. (January 2011) |
Tourret, R. (1977). United States Army Transportation Corps Locomotives. Allied Military Locomotives of the Second World War, Book 2. Abingdon: Tourret. ISBN 0-905878-01-9.
Waters, Laurence (comp.) (1991). A Collectors Guide to the Ian Allan ABC Locomotive Series 1942-1990. Oxford: author.