Warwick Interlocking Tower throughout the years – circa 1900, circa 1909, and 1953.
The exterior of the Warwick Interlocking Tower along the east side of the CSX track.
Photo by: Kalej523/Wikimedia | CC-BY-SA-3.0
The Warwick Interlocking Tower was a crossing point between two rail lines responsible for much of the shipping across the state of Ohio—the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad and the Pennsylvania Railroad. The interlocking tower was responsible for directing traffic between all the rail lines and preventing crashes. It’s on the National Register of Historic Places, and it is one of the last remaining buildings that indicates Warwick was an important railroad town.
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