in 1882 The
Ligonier Valley Railroad was the first to use the method in 1878 in
Latrobe, Pennsylvania. It was also used in the same year by the
Rochester and State Line Railroad at its
Salamanca junction with the
Atlantic and Great Western Railroad, a gauge line. It was also adopted by the
Lehigh Valley Railroad;
Wilmington, Columbia and Augusta Railroad; W. C. Virginia Midland & Gt. S. Railroad;
Atlantic and Great Western Railroad; Pittsylvania [sic] R. R.;
Pittsburg Southern Railroad; Dayton, Covington & Toledo Railroad; Dayton & Southeastern R. R.; Memphis & Little Rock R. R. and many others. In Ogden, Ramsey devices allowed interchange between the standard gauge Union Pacific and
Central Pacific Railroad mainlines with narrow gauge routes on the Oregon Short Line and
Denver & Rio Grande Western Railway. Union Pacific operated extensive interstate traffic using the Ramsey transfer, such as shipping narrow gauge coal cars originating on the
Denver, South Park & Pacific Railroad to
Butte, Montana with Ramsey transfers when needed to account for the gauge breaks. The Ramsey devices along the Oregon Short Line were retired as narrow gauge routes were replaced with standard gauge, with the last narrow gauge transfers in Salt Lake City occurring in 1900 before the narrow gauge Utah & Nevada route was bypassed in 1900 to form the standard gauge line on what is now the
Lynndyl Subdivision. On one occasion in 1900 prior to retirement, the Ramsey Transfer in Salt Lake City was used to lend narrow gauge Utah & Northern passenger cars to the Rio Grande Western, which ran an excursion to
Park City, Utah over standard gauge rails on their
Parley's Canyon route using narrow gauge rolling stock. Ramsey car-transfer apparatuses were considered for use in
Australia, which due to the lack of patent recognition between the
United States of America and Colonial Australia at the time, resulted in members of the
Parliament of South Australia discussing using an unlicensed copy of the Ramsey design on the nation's railways. == Patents==