The
Royal Blue was the
Baltimore and Ohio Railroad 's flagship
passenger train between
New York City and
Washington, D.C., in the
United States, beginning in 1890. The Baltimore-based B&O also used the name between 1890 and 1917 for its improved passenger service between New York and Washington launched in the 1890s, collectively dubbed the
Royal Blue Line. Using variants such as the
Royal Limited and
Royal Special for individual
Royal Blue trains, the B&O operated the service in partnership with the
Reading Railroad and the
Central Railroad of New Jersey. Principal intermediate cities served were
Philadelphia,
Wilmington, and
Baltimore. Later, as
Europe reeled from the carnage of
World War I and connotations of European royalty fell into disfavor, the B&O discreetly omitted the sobriquet
Royal Blue Line from its New York passenger service and the
Royal Blue disappeared from B&O timetables. Beginning in 1917, former
Royal Blue Line trains were renamed: the
Royal Limited (inaugurated on May 15, 1898), for example, became the
National Limited, continuing west from Washington to
St. Louis via
Cincinnati. During the
Depression, the B&O hearkened back to the halcyon pre-World War I era when it launched a re-christened
Royal Blue train between New York and Washington in 1935. The B&O finally discontinued passenger service north of Baltimore on April 26, 1958, and the
Royal Blue faded into history.Railroad historian Herbert Harwood said, in his seminal...
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