A legacy in locomotion
La Grange. The name has been synonymous with diesel locomotives since shovels met dirt in an open field adjacent to the Indiana Harbor Belt Railroad in the western suburbs of Chicago on March 27, 1935. Technically the plot of land was in McCook, Ill., but the Electro-Motive Corporation locomotive factory that sprung from that fertile ground would be forever known by its La Grange, Ill., mailing address. The first factory operated by the up-and-coming locomotive builder (a subsidiary of General Motors since 1930), the Electro-Motive plant would burgeon to a sprawling 3.6 million-square-foot facility that would ultimately employ some 13,000 workers engaged in just about every aspect of locomotive building, from development and design to fabrication of components, engines, and electrical gear, to final assembly and testing. “The home of the…