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・ St. Louis Union
・ St. Louis University High School
・ St. Louis Vesper Buick
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・ St. Louis Walk of Fame
・ St. Louis WCT
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St. Louis, El Reno and Western Railway
・ St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Co. v. Berry
・ St. Louis, Iron Mountain and Southern Railroad Depot
・ St. Louis, Iron Mountain and Southern Railway
・ St. Louis, Michigan
・ St. Louis, Oklahoma
・ 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


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St. Louis, El Reno and Western Railway : ウィキペディア英語版
St. Louis, El Reno and Western Railway

The St. Louis, El Reno and Western Railway was a small struggling railroad, started by local business interests in the Territorial Capital of Guthrie, Oklahoma. The railroad was built to move freight and passengers from eastern connections at Guthrie, West to the huge Rock Island Railroad hub and system cross roads at El Reno, Oklahoma. Working through the oil boom of the early-20th century with service to the South end of the large "Cashion Pool" and the boom towns of Piedmont, Richland and Navina.
== Reality ==
The line was merged into the Fort Smith and Western Railroad just a few years after it opened. History played a cruel trick on those who bet their fortunes on the Old West boomtown of Guthrie. As the boom slowed to a crawl, riders from Oklahoma City, a few miles to the south raided the Capitol building and stole the Territorial Charter, thus moving the Capital to Oklahoma City. With the State Capital stolen, the boom quiet after only a couple of years, and all of the projected railroads now building toward Oklahoma City and not Guthrie, the little line was doomed to close soon. By the last days of the railroad following a flood in 1920, its bridge over the Canadian River had only 2 to 3 pilings per bent, instead of the required 8; the State Railroad Inspectors were aghast and quickly condemned the bridge. Without access to its station in El Reno, service sputtered on intermittently until ending in 1923. Trains ran on the line again briefly in 1925, but never again.

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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