0 a railway carriage with a roof, used for carrying goods: --
2 a railroad car with sliding doors and a roof, which is used to carry freight --
3 a covered railway car with sliding doors on its sides, used for transporting goods: --
Eight truckloads of merchandise a day are bound for the rail yard to be loaded onto boxcars.
He is forced to work for the railroad and is accidentally crushed by a boxcar.
When necessary, chairs were placed in the boxcar for passengers.
The locomotive was totally submerged with the attached wooden boxcars demolished.
Thereafter, and until 1860, the majority of shipments were made in conventional boxcars that had been fitted with open-structured iron-barred doors for ventilation.
The station also used an old boxcar as a tool shed for maintenance.
This group was marched to the railroad station and placed in open boxcars.
On the railway itself, the old exchange sidings with the mainline were packed with rusting narrow gauge wagons and boxcars.
They were able to output about one hundred tons of finished steel castings daily that were used in the construction of the railroad boxcars.