This article lists events related to rail transport that occurred in 1922.
May 17 – The Arkansas Short Line Railroad, a predecessor of St. Louis Southwestern Railway, is incorporated.
July 1 – The Great Railroad Strike of 1922 begins in the United States, coinciding with a reduction in railroad shop wages by seven cents per day mandated by the Railroad Labor Board. Continues until September 1.
August 31 – H. L. Hamilton and Paul Turner form a company called Electro-Motive Engineering (later to become General Motors Electro-Motive Division) in Cleveland, Ohio.
October – International Union of Railways (UIC) established in Paris to promote co-operation and standardisation.
October 22 – Stuttgart Hauptbahnhof (first stage) opened in Germany.
The first Willamette locomotive is built for Coos Bay Lumber Company of Marshfield, Oregon.
July 26 – The Drammen Line in Norway takes electric traction into use between Oslo West Station and Brakerøya.
December 8 – Chemins de fer de Paris à Lyon et à la Méditerranée first runs the Calais-Mediterranée Express, known as Le Train Bleu because of its Wagons-Lits cars, between Calais Gare Maritime and Menton on the French Riviera.
The New York Central acquires the Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago and St. Louis Railroad (the Big Four Railroad).
Sir Henry Thornton succeeds David Blyth Hanna as president of Canadian National Railway.
George Hughes succeeds H. P. M. Beames as Chief Mechanical Engineer of the London and North Western Railway.
March 22 – Livio Dante Porta, Argentinian steam locomotive mechanical engineer (died 2003)
July 20 – Alan Stephenson Boyd, the first United States Secretary of Transportation 1966–1969, president of Illinois Central Railroad 1969-1972, president of Amtrak.
Robert B. Claytor, president of Norfolk and Western Railway (died 1993).
1922 in rail transport Wikipedia (Text) CC BY-SA