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  1. Philip Evan Thomas (November 11, 1776 – September 1, 1861) was the first president of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad (B&O) from 1827 to 1836. He has been referred to as "The Father of American Railways".

  2. Jan 18, 2021 · In 1826, Baltimore businessmen Philip E. Thomas and George Brown travelled to England to examine the concept of a commercial railway. They brought their findings back to America and gathered a group of twenty-five investors from the city.

  3. Jul 1, 2008 · Before you stands the thomas Viaduct, named after Philip E. Thomas, the first president of the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad. This unique bridge has become an enduring symbol of the B&O Railroad and the Patapsco Valley, surviving several floods and outlasting many modern structures.

  4. Jan 8, 2022 · I concluded that blog post by looking particularly at the record of a 19th-century Quaker from Baltimore called Philip E. Thomas who was both a longtime clerk (head) of the BYM-IAC, 1838-61, and also the founding– and long-serving– president of a major piece of settler-supporting infrastructure, in the form of the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad ...

  5. Officially named for Philip E. Thomas, the first president of the railroad (1827–1836), the viaduct was nicknamed Latrobe’s Folly because of public doubts that it would even be able to support its own weight.

  6. This new invention would drastically reshape humanity’s concept of time, travel, transport, and communication. For in 1827, these men would become the founders of America’s first public commercial railroad – the Baltimore and Ohio (B&O) Railroad.

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  8. Construction of the viaduct began in August of 1833, and a ceremony marking its completion was conducted on July 4, 1835. The viaduct was constructed for the Baltimore and Ohio (B&O) Railroad and is named in honor Philip E. Thomas, who served from 1827 to 1836 as the first president of the B&O.

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