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  • 28 bytes (3 words) - 17:45, 5 March 2024
  • |Alaska Railroad Locomotive.jpg|Alaska Railroad Locomotive
    1 KB (195 words) - 17:45, 5 March 2024
  • 41 bytes (4 words) - 17:45, 5 March 2024
  • 29 bytes (3 words) - 18:47, 30 May 2009
  • 39 bytes (4 words) - 17:45, 5 March 2024
  • 36 bytes (4 words) - 17:45, 5 March 2024
  • ...7802.jpg|thumb|right|350px|{{Ann Arbor No 7802.jpg/credit}}<br />Ann Arbor Railroad No. 7802 in May 2012, the last unit to bear the road's classic orange liver ...lroad''' (AAR reporting mark '''AA''') is a regional (Class III) shortline railroad operating mostly in Michigan. It is the remnant of a 260 mile line that inc
    6 KB (924 words) - 12:15, 29 May 2016
  • ...refers to the older name for [[Long Island]] which was Nassau Island. The railroad was incorporated on March 13, 1893, by [[Patrick H. Flynn]] and became know ...titors, the Atlantic Avenue Railroad, and the Brooklyn, Bath, and West End Railroad.
    2 KB (339 words) - 13:39, 18 September 2013
  • ...n 1984 the federal government took over transportation regulation, but the Railroad Commission kept its name. With an annual budget of $79 million it now focus ...sh and essentially vicious."<ref> See [http://www.tsl.state.tx.us/exhibits/railroad/early/page2.html for quote]</ref> Clark lost the 1892 election to Hogg but
    8 KB (1,284 words) - 00:27, 31 July 2023
  • #Redirect [[Texas Railroad Commission]]
    39 bytes (4 words) - 13:38, 16 June 2008
  • 133 bytes (15 words) - 17:45, 5 March 2024
  • ...nty Railroad Company''' (AAR reporting mark '''LCRC''') was a short-line [[railroad]] that operated between 1977 and 1990 in Lenawee County, [[Michigan (U.S. s ...ated the lines as essential to the local economy, it in turn purchased the railroad. The state contracted with private companies to operate the line until the
    2 KB (298 words) - 09:18, 1 July 2023
  • ...tral Pacific Railroad, shakes hands with Grenville M. Dodge, Union Pacific Railroad (center right).]] ...road''' was the California-to-Utah portion of the First [[Transcontinental Railroad]] in North America. It connected to the new [[Union Pacific]] and when it o
    14 KB (2,086 words) - 09:38, 8 August 2023
  • 38 bytes (6 words) - 08:51, 9 September 2020
  • ...als without the inclines. Even that was outstripped by the [[Pennsylvania Railroad]], which roared past it and consigned the system to history. [[Image:Portage Railroad 1839.jpg|thumb|right|300px|{{Portage Railroad 1839.jpg/credit}}<br />Head of Plane No. 6 in Cresson, [[Pennsylvania (U.S.
    7 KB (1,186 words) - 19:50, 6 March 2024
  • #REDIRECT [[Columbia and Philadelphia Railroad]]
    48 bytes (5 words) - 15:26, 29 July 2007
  • 45 bytes (5 words) - 17:45, 5 March 2024
  • 12 bytes (1 word) - 11:17, 24 September 2007
  • California-to-Utah portion of the first transcontinental railroad in North America.
    119 bytes (13 words) - 06:44, 18 November 2011
  • 12 bytes (1 word) - 04:54, 26 September 2007
  • 155 bytes (19 words) - 14:34, 7 December 2008
  • A former Class I railroad, now a regional short-line railroad operating mostly in Michigan.
    127 bytes (17 words) - 09:31, 22 February 2009
  • 152 bytes (20 words) - 08:19, 25 October 2010
  • * Childs, William R. ''The Texas Railroad Commission: Understanding Regulation in America to the Mid-Twentieth Centur * Childs, William R. "Origins of the Texas Railroad Commission's Power to Control Production of Petroleum: Regulatory Strategie
    1 KB (198 words) - 19:31, 22 February 2009
  • ...?id=3i6K_Nf9e2EC&lpg=PP1&pg=PA15#v=onepage&q&f=false Adrian and Blissfield Railroad Co.]," 15-16. ''American Shortline Railway Guide''. 5th ed. Milwaukee: K
    256 bytes (39 words) - 09:21, 28 November 2010
  • ...[[Pennsylvania Main Line of Public Works]]. It consisted of 82 miles of [[railroad|rail]] from Vine and Broad Streets in [[Philadelphia, Pennsylvania|Philadel ...on the same kind of sandstone sleeper stones used by the Allegheny Portage Railroad.
    4 KB (655 words) - 06:49, 28 March 2023
  • A short-line railroad that operated between 1977 and 1990 in Lenawee County, Michigan.
    122 bytes (14 words) - 15:13, 16 September 2013
  • 91 bytes (13 words) - 19:02, 30 January 2011
  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/Texas Railroad Commission]]. Needs checking by a human.
    536 bytes (70 words) - 01:53, 31 July 2023
  • 250 bytes (37 words) - 06:47, 18 November 2011
  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/Ann Arbor Railroad]]. Needs checking by a human.
    443 bytes (58 words) - 10:56, 11 January 2010
  • 12 bytes (1 word) - 06:34, 26 September 2007
  • There is also a legacy site at http://www.annarbor-railroad.com/ but this does not seem to have been updated since 2006. ...2.pdf Watco Media Release, 12/27/2012: "Watco Agrees to Purchase Ann Arbor Railroad"]
    891 bytes (116 words) - 12:20, 29 May 2016
  • {{r|Railroad}}
    28 bytes (3 words) - 15:14, 16 September 2013
  • ...ilroad/intro.html "Hazardous Business: Industry, Regulation, and the Texas Railroad Commission"] from Texas State Library and Archives Commission * [http://www.rrc.state.tx.us/ Railroad Commission of Texas, official website]
    279 bytes (39 words) - 19:32, 22 February 2009
  • ...ffrey. "[http://www.trainweb.org/chlopak/ A Tribute to the Lenawee County Railroad]." Trainweb, 2003. ...ad-in-michigan/ Riding Into History on the ‘Old Road’ in Michigan]." Akron Railroad Club, September 2010.
    839 bytes (104 words) - 22:09, 28 November 2010
  • {{r|Railroad}} Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/Allegheny Portage Railroad]]. Needs checking by a human.
    608 bytes (80 words) - 10:15, 17 September 2013
  • 264 bytes (36 words) - 15:11, 12 August 2013
  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/Columbia and Philadelphia Railroad]]. Needs checking by a human. {{r|Allegheny Portage Railroad}}
    540 bytes (70 words) - 15:32, 11 January 2010
  • '''Ann Arbor Railroad v. United States''' was a 1930 U.S. Supreme Court case which defined the Ho
    524 bytes (75 words) - 10:17, 13 December 2011
  • 12 bytes (1 word) - 09:51, 13 December 2011
  • 218 bytes (33 words) - 09:52, 13 December 2011
  • 827 bytes (133 words) - 09:51, 13 December 2011
  • 12 bytes (1 word) - 09:52, 13 December 2011

Page text matches

  • <!--[[Railway history/Catalogs/Railroads|Individual Railroad articles on CZ]]--> {{pl|Ann Arbor Railroad}}<br />
    679 bytes (94 words) - 11:26, 27 February 2016
  • ...ffrey. "[http://www.trainweb.org/chlopak/ A Tribute to the Lenawee County Railroad]." Trainweb, 2003. ...ad-in-michigan/ Riding Into History on the ‘Old Road’ in Michigan]." Akron Railroad Club, September 2010.
    839 bytes (104 words) - 22:09, 28 November 2010
  • A former Class I railroad, now a regional short-line railroad operating mostly in Michigan.
    127 bytes (17 words) - 09:31, 22 February 2009
  • {{r|Atlantic & St. Lawrence Railroad}} {{r|Rutland Railroad}}
    541 bytes (72 words) - 07:23, 26 April 2011
  • ...ilroad/intro.html "Hazardous Business: Industry, Regulation, and the Texas Railroad Commission"] from Texas State Library and Archives Commission * [http://www.rrc.state.tx.us/ Railroad Commission of Texas, official website]
    279 bytes (39 words) - 19:32, 22 February 2009
  • ...ilway that operated between December 12, 1911 and May 1, 1917. It was the railroad's first extra-fare train.
    218 bytes (30 words) - 14:46, 10 July 2014
  • ...eloper, and entrepreneur John D. Spreckels in 1919, dubbed "The Impossible Railroad" by many engineers of its day due to the immense logistical challenges invo
    274 bytes (38 words) - 11:29, 25 July 2013
  • ...s a regional Canadian railroad that became Canada's third transcontinental railroad, Canada's largest business failure, and the foundation for the Canadian Nat
    241 bytes (30 words) - 14:27, 8 February 2010
  • ...of a full-service, sit-down restaurant. It is distinct from other types of railroad food service cars that do not duplicate the full-service restaurant experie
    266 bytes (40 words) - 19:33, 4 September 2013
  • {{r|Railroad}} Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/Allegheny Portage Railroad]]. Needs checking by a human.
    608 bytes (80 words) - 10:15, 17 September 2013
  • There is also a legacy site at http://www.annarbor-railroad.com/ but this does not seem to have been updated since 2006. ...2.pdf Watco Media Release, 12/27/2012: "Watco Agrees to Purchase Ann Arbor Railroad"]
    891 bytes (116 words) - 12:20, 29 May 2016
  • {{r|Railroad}}
    28 bytes (3 words) - 15:14, 16 September 2013
  • #Redirect [[Texas Railroad Commission]]
    39 bytes (4 words) - 13:38, 16 June 2008
  • ...ucting the [[Canadian Pacific Railroad]], [[Canada]]'s first cross-country railroad, which paralleled the river.
    507 bytes (74 words) - 00:47, 15 February 2024
  • #REDIRECT [[Columbia and Philadelphia Railroad]]
    48 bytes (5 words) - 15:26, 29 July 2007
  • * Childs, William R. ''The Texas Railroad Commission: Understanding Regulation in America to the Mid-Twentieth Centur * Childs, William R. "Origins of the Texas Railroad Commission's Power to Control Production of Petroleum: Regulatory Strategie
    1 KB (198 words) - 19:31, 22 February 2009
  • [[railroad]] tracks set wider than 1435 mm apart
    84 bytes (10 words) - 20:25, 5 July 2014
  • {{r|Underground Railroad}} {{r|Underground Railroad}}
    467 bytes (64 words) - 16:05, 1 December 2010
  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>A U.S. railroad in southern Great Lakes region.
    82 bytes (12 words) - 14:26, 15 October 2010
  • A railroad system running from [[London, United Kingdom]] to [[Glasgow]]
    108 bytes (13 words) - 07:33, 20 April 2024
  • {{r|Railroad}} {{r|Central Pacific Railroad}}
    370 bytes (55 words) - 20:03, 10 September 2013
  • {{r|Railroad}} {{r|Central Pacific Railroad}}
    346 bytes (51 words) - 20:09, 4 September 2013
  • {{r|Railroad}} {{r|Central Pacific Railroad}}
    346 bytes (51 words) - 16:14, 8 March 2014
  • {{r|Railroad}} {{r|Central Pacific Railroad}}
    330 bytes (49 words) - 00:45, 27 August 2013
  • {{r|Railroad}} {{r|Central Pacific Railroad}}
    335 bytes (49 words) - 00:51, 27 August 2013
  • {{r|Railroad}} {{r|Central Pacific Railroad}}
    406 bytes (60 words) - 16:11, 8 March 2014
  • California-to-Utah portion of the first transcontinental railroad in North America.
    119 bytes (13 words) - 06:44, 18 November 2011
  • {{r|Railroad}} {{r|Central Pacific Railroad}}
    330 bytes (43 words) - 10:33, 28 March 2023
  • {{r|Railroad}} {{r|Central Pacific Railroad}}
    373 bytes (55 words) - 19:57, 10 September 2013
  • {{r|Railroad}} {{r|Central Pacific Railroad}}
    322 bytes (42 words) - 10:35, 28 March 2023
  • {{r|Railroad}} {{r|Central Pacific Railroad}}
    286 bytes (41 words) - 15:08, 15 August 2013
  • A short-line railroad that operated between 1977 and 1990 in Lenawee County, Michigan.
    122 bytes (14 words) - 15:13, 16 September 2013
  • ...ude>Steam locomotive engine which was part of the now defunct Nickel Plate Railroad.
    115 bytes (16 words) - 21:03, 14 October 2010
  • {{r|Railroad}} {{r|Central Pacific Railroad}}
    277 bytes (40 words) - 15:05, 15 August 2013
  • {{r|Railroad}} {{r|Central Pacific Railroad}}
    374 bytes (52 words) - 00:57, 27 August 2013
  • ...05|title=Riding the Transcontinental Rails: Overland Travel on the Pacific Railroad 1865-1881|publisher=Polyglot Press, Philadelphia, PA|id=ISBN 1411599934}} ...=Deverell, William|year=1994|title=Railroad Crossing: Californians and the Railroad 1850&ndash;1910|publisher=University of California Press, Los Angeles, CA|i
    801 bytes (110 words) - 20:33, 19 July 2013
  • Late 19th-century American railroad equipment salesman and bon vivant, famous for his enormous appetite.
    140 bytes (17 words) - 16:25, 4 February 2009
  • ...in 1830 by American inventor [[Peter Cooper]] for the [[Baltimore and Ohio Railroad]].
    139 bytes (17 words) - 15:13, 5 March 2009
  • The first [[railroad]] tunnel in the [[United States of America]].
    102 bytes (13 words) - 14:08, 2 February 2023
  • {{r|Railroad}} {{r|Central Pacific Railroad}}
    333 bytes (44 words) - 10:33, 28 March 2023
  • ...ipsio.com/~yulee/history.html About David Levy Yulee's role in the Florida Railroad]
    113 bytes (17 words) - 03:44, 14 September 2013
  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/Columbia and Philadelphia Railroad]]. Needs checking by a human. {{r|Allegheny Portage Railroad}}
    540 bytes (70 words) - 15:32, 11 January 2010
  • {{r|Railroad}} {{r|Central Pacific Railroad}}
    501 bytes (72 words) - 09:47, 17 July 2014
  • {{r|Railroad}} {{r|Central Pacific Railroad}}
    501 bytes (72 words) - 14:11, 14 July 2014
  • {{r|Railroad}} {{r|Central Pacific Railroad}}
    501 bytes (72 words) - 11:24, 7 July 2014
  • {{r|Railroad}} {{r|Central Pacific Railroad}}
    501 bytes (72 words) - 11:35, 28 August 2014
  • {{r|Railroad}} {{r|Central Pacific Railroad}}
    501 bytes (72 words) - 14:59, 15 July 2014
  • {{r|Railroad}} {{r|Central Pacific Railroad}}
    501 bytes (72 words) - 11:23, 7 July 2014
  • {{r|Railroad}} {{r|Central Pacific Railroad}}
    501 bytes (72 words) - 13:58, 24 September 2014
  • {{r|Railroad}} {{r|Central Pacific Railroad}}
    501 bytes (72 words) - 13:18, 16 July 2014
  • {{r|Railroad}} {{r|Central Pacific Railroad}}
    501 bytes (72 words) - 14:51, 10 July 2014
  • {{r|Railroad}} {{r|Central Pacific Railroad}}
    501 bytes (72 words) - 10:13, 25 September 2014
  • *[http://tigger.uic.edu/~rjensen/railroad.htm ''Guide to Railroad History''] web links to primary and scholarly sources
    133 bytes (19 words) - 22:24, 18 December 2012
  • The modern and historic [[railroad|rail]] transportation system of the [[United Kingdom]]
    125 bytes (15 words) - 12:18, 1 June 2009
  • ...51-1929) was a Detroit, Michigan, lawyer, member of Congress, and electric railroad promoter.
    148 bytes (19 words) - 21:44, 27 January 2010
  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>A piece of railroad rolling stock outfitted with cooling apparatus and designed to carry perish
    168 bytes (22 words) - 14:40, 12 August 2013
  • ...m locomotive.jpg|right|350px|A [[steam locomotive]] of the [[Union Pacific Railroad]], [[United States of America|USA]].}} ...t commonly run on wheels on each of the units which roll on the track or [[railroad]]. Early trains were powered by [[steam locomotive]]s, but today most trai
    1 KB (174 words) - 07:20, 24 February 2011
  • ...ng through the swamps and pine forests from the ocean to the gulf. Yulee’s railroad opened up the center of the state and planted new towns in the wilderness.
    693 bytes (110 words) - 03:43, 14 September 2013
  • ...pleted in 1832, it was sold to the [[Pennsylvania Railroad]] in 1857. The railroad continued to operate it until 1872. ==Ownership by the Railroad==
    3 KB (380 words) - 02:20, 24 October 2013
  • ...]. It was sold along with the rest of the Main Line to the [[Pennsylvania Railroad]] in 1857, which operated the canal until about 1901. ...ther to the east, down to Columbia, and meet the Columbia and Philadelphia Railroad.<ref name="Amazing">William H. Shank, P.E. (2001) ''The Amazing Pennsylvani
    3 KB (472 words) - 22:58, 5 February 2010
  • {{r|Allegheny Portage Railroad}} {{r|Columbia and Philadelphia Railroad}}
    718 bytes (95 words) - 09:38, 29 June 2023
  • ...?id=3i6K_Nf9e2EC&lpg=PP1&pg=PA15#v=onepage&q&f=false Adrian and Blissfield Railroad Co.]," 15-16. ''American Shortline Railway Guide''. 5th ed. Milwaukee: K
    256 bytes (39 words) - 09:21, 28 November 2010
  • ...nty Railroad Company''' (AAR reporting mark '''LCRC''') was a short-line [[railroad]] that operated between 1977 and 1990 in Lenawee County, [[Michigan (U.S. s ...ated the lines as essential to the local economy, it in turn purchased the railroad. The state contracted with private companies to operate the line until the
    2 KB (298 words) - 09:18, 1 July 2023
  • ...d States senator from Florida who was the driving force behind the Florida Railroad, the state’s first trans-state line.
    177 bytes (23 words) - 22:08, 12 July 2008
  • A structure to take a road, railroad, footpath, conveyer belt, or other structure over an unpassable obstacle, s
    181 bytes (27 words) - 06:19, 28 August 2009
  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>A railroad passenger car that had been constructed specifically to serve as a "mobile
    232 bytes (30 words) - 09:37, 20 August 2013
  • Short line, standard gauge American railroad founded in 1933 by the Southern Pacific Transportation Company as a direct
    218 bytes (30 words) - 05:06, 17 October 2013
  • Since [[railroad]]s use pairs of parallel rails, special sections of track are required to b
    158 bytes (24 words) - 20:33, 5 July 2014
  • ...us of the Main Line. Completed in 1831, it was sold to the [[Pennsylvania Railroad]] in 1857. ==Ownership by the Railroad==
    3 KB (514 words) - 19:50, 6 March 2024
  • ...utsch, Reena|year=2011|title=San Diego and Arizona Railway: The Impossible Railroad|publisher=Arcadia Publishing, Charleston, SC|id=ISBN 978-0-7385-8148-8}} ...uthor=Hanft, Robert M.|year=1984|title=San Diego & Arizona: The Impossible Railroad|publisher=Trans-Anglo Books, Glendale, CA|id=ISBN 0-87046-071-4}}
    1 KB (172 words) - 19:16, 5 August 2013
  • ...[[Darfur]], near the border with [[Chad]]; Sudanese terminus of the unsafe railroad that continues into Chad; linked by dirt road to [[El Fasher]]; much more l
    245 bytes (35 words) - 16:40, 10 August 2009
  • [[Red Sea]] port of [[Sudan]], reached by modern highway and railroad cut through rugged territory to [[Khartoum]]; landing of major undersea [[f
    233 bytes (32 words) - 16:42, 10 August 2009
  • ...[[Pennsylvania Main Line of Public Works]]. It consisted of 82 miles of [[railroad|rail]] from Vine and Broad Streets in [[Philadelphia, Pennsylvania|Philadel ...on the same kind of sandstone sleeper stones used by the Allegheny Portage Railroad.
    4 KB (655 words) - 06:49, 28 March 2023
  • ...lude>An American entrepreneur, developer of the first practical ice-cooled railroad car and founder of a meat-packing empire in the Midwest during the late 19t
    239 bytes (35 words) - 15:45, 12 August 2013
  • * {{cite book|author=Duke, Donald|year=1995|title=Santa Fe: The Railroad Gateway to the American West, Volume One|publisher=Golden West Books, San M
    195 bytes (31 words) - 11:17, 7 July 2014
  • ...nton]]/[[Guangzhou]] style home cooking prepared not by skilled chefs, but railroad workers and other laborers; some dishes, such as [[chop suey]], first appea
    263 bytes (41 words) - 11:05, 3 July 2009
  • ...ad Line, owned by a Japanese corporation, terminated in the Leasehold; the railroad provided cover for Japanese intelligence and covert action throughout Manch
    994 bytes (139 words) - 04:06, 6 September 2010
  • ...en featuring a creek in the lowest space often with a roadway or trail and railroad tracks.
    265 bytes (40 words) - 08:19, 17 May 2009
  • ...refers to the older name for [[Long Island]] which was Nassau Island. The railroad was incorporated on March 13, 1893, by [[Patrick H. Flynn]] and became know ...titors, the Atlantic Avenue Railroad, and the Brooklyn, Bath, and West End Railroad.
    2 KB (339 words) - 13:39, 18 September 2013
  • ...train'' passenger cars and locomotive No. 2 sit in storage at the National Railroad Museum in Green Bay in August, 1970, prior to restoration. ...credit}}<br />One of the two [[Disneyland Railroad|Santa Fe and Disneyland Railroad's]] ''[[Viewliner]]'' trains prepares to depart the ''Tomorrowland'' statio
    2 KB (339 words) - 14:09, 25 August 2013
  • ...different methods of [[transportation]] such as [[ship]], [[airplane]], [[railroad]], [[balloon]], or [[spaceship]]. In Britain, it's spelled '''traveller''';
    310 bytes (38 words) - 20:46, 12 April 2010
  • ...al records, a task simplified by standardized bookkeeping systems. For any railroad that resisted, the ICC's conditions would remain in effect until the outcom ...Act was a subset of one of President [[Theodore Roosevelt]]'s major goals: railroad regulation.
    2 KB (300 words) - 20:00, 22 February 2009
  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>At first a Japanese-owned [[railroad]] with a terminus in the [[Kwangtung Leasehold]], eventually a diversified
    291 bytes (38 words) - 16:12, 5 September 2010
  • ...992|title=The Harvey House Cookbook: Memories of Dining along the Santa Fe Railroad|publisher=Longstreet Press, Atlanta, GA|id=ISBN 1-56352-357-4}} ...3|title=Dining by Rail: The History and Recipes of America's Golden Age of Railroad Cuisine|publisher=St. Martin's Press, New York, NY|id=ISBN 0-312-18711-4}}
    1 KB (182 words) - 23:43, 23 September 2013
  • ...ennsylvania Main Line of Public Works which ran from the Allegheny Portage Railroad in the east into Pittsburgh, the western terminus of the Main Line.
    229 bytes (36 words) - 07:50, 18 November 2011
  • ...Chicago, Illinois, and paralleled [[William H. Vanderbilt]]'s [[Lake Shore Railroad]] for the entire length of its route. Thus it has been suggested that the ...that Bellevue paid so much for the privilege that one would think the new railroad was Nickel Plated. Other stories reference the quality of construction of
    4 KB (620 words) - 13:36, 15 January 2011
  • ...tern Railway]], the [[Southern Pacific Railroad]], and the [[Union Pacific Railroad]] also bore the moniker ''Overland Limited''.
    1 KB (152 words) - 10:25, 10 July 2014
  • * [http://www.barstowrailmuseum.org/ Western America Railroad Museum] official web site
    372 bytes (50 words) - 14:11, 15 August 2013
  • ...the passenger and freight transportations. As opposed to what are called [[railroad]]s in American English, they have stayed active and efficient, and indeed o
    303 bytes (47 words) - 12:15, 1 June 2009
  • ...127 miles to the west to Hollidaysburg, where it met the Allegheny Portage Railroad.
    257 bytes (40 words) - 12:10, 16 June 2008
  • [http://vermonthistory.org/documents/findaid/vtcentrl.pdf Vermont Central Railroad Records, 1849-1880], Leahy Library, [http://vermonthistory.org/research/lea Lubetkin, M. John. ''Jay Cooke's Gamble: The Northern Pacific Railroad, the Sioux, and the Panic of 1873.'' Norman: University of Oklahoma Press,
    2 KB (267 words) - 09:38, 17 July 2016
  • * {{cite book|author=Duke, Donald|year=1997|title=Santa Fe...The Railroad Gateway to the American West, Volume 2|publisher=Golden West Books, San Mar ...uthor=Schafer, Mike & Joe Welsh|year=2002|title=Streamliners: History of a Railroad Icon|publisher=MBI Publishing Company, St. Paul, MN|id=ISBN 0-7603-1371-7}}
    960 bytes (148 words) - 11:37, 28 August 2014
  • |Alaska Railroad Locomotive.jpg|Alaska Railroad Locomotive
    1,018 bytes (135 words) - 01:47, 13 March 2010
  • ...iegohistory.org/journal/94fall/carriso.htm "Formidable Places: Building a Railroad in Carriso Gorge"] details some of the history of the SD&A that appeared in
    413 bytes (62 words) - 14:31, 25 July 2013
  • ...region's population density is low. Transportation is largely by river or railroad.
    307 bytes (45 words) - 22:26, 2 January 2024
  • ...the [[United States of America]]. Constructed for the [[Allegheny Portage Railroad]] section of the [[Pennsylvania Main Line of Public Works]], it is located ...Appleton, who were contracted for both the tunnel and for Section 7 of the Railroad on May 25, 1831. Construction began on April 12, 1831, with [[Samuel Jones
    5 KB (729 words) - 08:51, 2 March 2024
  • ...award|year=1999|title=Empire Express: Building the First Transcontinental Railroad|publisher=Viking Press, New York, NY|id=ISBN 0-670-80889-X}} ...hor=Daniels, Rudolph|year=2000|title=Across the Continent: North American Railroad History|publisher=Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN|id=ISBN 0-253-2
    2 KB (386 words) - 22:18, 18 December 2012
  • ...the south. It is on the Hanoi-Lao Cai railroad, which connects to the main railroad system.
    1 KB (187 words) - 23:16, 14 February 2009
  • ...cisco in the Summer of 1859''] (1860). Book advocating a Transcontinental Railroad
    662 bytes (94 words) - 23:13, 14 September 2013
  • ...The 1854 Gadsden Purchase and the Building of the Second Transcontinental Railroad Across Arizona and New Mexico Twenty-Five Years Later'' (2004) 283 pp. popu ...lture'' 2001 35(2): 161-169. Issn: 0022-3840 Fulltext: [[Ebsco]], stresses railroad speculation and corruption themes
    1 KB (177 words) - 13:06, 15 February 2009
  • ...7802.jpg|thumb|right|350px|{{Ann Arbor No 7802.jpg/credit}}<br />Ann Arbor Railroad No. 7802 in May 2012, the last unit to bear the road's classic orange liver ...lroad''' (AAR reporting mark '''AA''') is a regional (Class III) shortline railroad operating mostly in Michigan. It is the remnant of a 260 mile line that inc
    6 KB (924 words) - 12:15, 29 May 2016
  • {{rpl|Railroad}}
    246 bytes (30 words) - 06:53, 15 July 2023
  • ...Columbia in the east, where it connected to the Columbia and Philadelphia Railroad, to Duncan's Island in the west, where it met the Juniata Division and the
    315 bytes (50 words) - 09:13, 16 June 2008
  • * {{r|Railroad}}
    197 bytes (22 words) - 19:53, 27 June 2008
  • {{r|Central Pacific Railroad}}
    185 bytes (24 words) - 02:52, 13 January 2009
  • ...t}}<br />Santa Fe #2, an EMD E1 locomotive is featured on the cover of the railroad's 1946 promotional publication [http://www.titchenal.com/atsf/ayw1946/ "Alo
    1 KB (221 words) - 14:32, 8 October 2014
  • {{r|Railroad}}
    230 bytes (27 words) - 02:44, 13 March 2010
  • {{r|Southern Pacific Railroad}}
    285 bytes (42 words) - 10:20, 30 July 2023
  • ...''Super C'' consists. #95 (seen here in July, 2003 at the Western America Railroad Museum in Barstow, California) began life in December, 1967 as Santa Fe #10 ...he home signal at the crossing with the [[Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad]]) is dropping from a high green to red.</ref>
    1 KB (200 words) - 19:17, 29 September 2014
  • {{r|Railroad}}
    134 bytes (16 words) - 02:47, 19 March 2010
  • {{r|Railroad}}
    151 bytes (16 words) - 02:48, 19 March 2010
  • ...uke, Donald |authorlink=Donald Norman Duke |year=1997|title=Santa Fe: The Railroad Gateway to the American West, Volume Two|publisher=[[Golden West Books]] |l ...year=1997|title=CF7 Locomotives: From Cleburne to Everywhere|publisher=The Railroad Press, Hanover, PA|isbn=0-9657709-0-7}}
    2 KB (207 words) - 20:52, 22 August 2013
  • {{r|Railroad}}
    300 bytes (46 words) - 12:50, 1 June 2009
  • {{r|Union Pacific Railroad}}
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  • ...als without the inclines. Even that was outstripped by the [[Pennsylvania Railroad]], which roared past it and consigned the system to history. [[Image:Portage Railroad 1839.jpg|thumb|right|300px|{{Portage Railroad 1839.jpg/credit}}<br />Head of Plane No. 6 in Cresson, [[Pennsylvania (U.S.
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  • * {{cite book|author=Duke, Donald|year=1997|title=Santa Fe...The Railroad Gateway to the American West, Volume 2|publisher=Golden West Books, San Mar ...992|title=The Harvey House Cookbook: Memories of Dining along the Santa Fe Railroad|publisher=Longstreet Press, Atlanta, GA|id=ISBN 1-56352-357-4}}
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  • |Alaska Railroad Locomotive.jpg|Alaska Railroad Locomotive
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  • * [http://www.csrmf.org/events-exhibits/railroad-car-favorites/fruit-growers-express-company-refrigerator-car-no-35832 Fruit ...a wooden ice-type "reefer" on display at the [http://www.irm.org/ Illinois Railroad Museum].
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  • ...us|first=|title=&nbsp;'Empire Builder' Hill's Grandson Builds a Jounceless Railroad Car|journal=LIFE Magazine|volume=8|issue=21|pages=41-42|date=May 20, 1940}} * {{cite book|author=Duke, Donald|year=1995|title=Santa Fe: The Railroad Gateway to the American West, Volume One|publisher=Golden West Books, San M
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  • {{r|Railroad}}
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  • ...After the war, Cooke sought to turn his sales talents to the marketing of railroad bonds, in particular those of the Northern Pacific. <!--Lubetkin--> ...ern Pacific (a railroad that [[Cornelius Vanderbilt]] derisively called a "railroad built from nowhere to nowhere") would not be making good on its bonds, he k
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  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/Ann Arbor Railroad]]. Needs checking by a human.
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  • '''Ann Arbor Railroad v. United States''' was a 1930 U.S. Supreme Court case which defined the Ho
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  • {{r|Railroad}}
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  • {{r|Allegheny Portage Railroad}}
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  • {{r|Allegheny Portage Railroad}}
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  • ...vania. However, the system rarely showed a profit. As the [[Pennsylvania Railroad]] grew in size, it began to pass the Main Line as a transportation system. ...btnew.pdf Historic Structure Report: Staple Bend Tunnel, Allegheny Portage Railroad, National Historic Site]</ref> At the time, this idea was not taken seriou
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  • {{r|Allegheny Portage Railroad}}
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  • {{r|Columbia and Philadelphia Railroad}}
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  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/Texas Railroad Commission]]. Needs checking by a human.
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  • ...''[[20th Century Limited]]'' and the [[Pennsylvania Railroad|Pennsylvania Railroad's]] ''[[Broadway Limited]]''. The complete trip between the two terminals t
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  • ...ns of the [[Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway]] and a workhorse of the railroad. It carried train Nos. 3 & 4 and ran between Chicago, Illinois and Los Ange .../credit}}<br />An aerial view of Disneyland in 1956, with the [[Disneyland Railroad]] route (which, at the time, encircled the entire park) visible.
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  • ...eer ~ by the custom of the day and his trade ~ left the family name to the railroad station here.
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  • ...uthor=Hanft, Robert M.|year=1984|title=San Diego & Arizona: The Impossible Railroad|publisher=Trans-Anglo Books, Glendale, CA|id=ISBN 0-87046-071-4}} * {{cite book|author=O'Connell, J.|year=1954|title=Railroad Album: The Story of American Railroads in Words and Pictures|publisher=Popu
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  • {{r|Ann Arbor Railroad}}
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  • ...://www.questia.com/library/book/the-interstate-commerce-commission-and-the-railroad-industry-a-history-of-regulatory-policy-by-richard-d-stone.jsp online editi
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  • {{rpl|Unnion Pacific Railroad}} {{rpl|Pacific Railroad Act of 1862}}
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  • ...of the December 14, 1906 edition of the ''San Diego Union'' proclaims, "''RAILROAD FROM SAN DIEGO TO YUMA IS NOW ASSURED.''" ...Topeka and Santa Fe Railway]]'s subsidiary line the [[California Southern Railroad]].</ref> and to the right is real estate developer Alonzo Horton.
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  • ...ap of Reno, April 1868 ~'''<br>J.R. Scupham & J.M. Graham, Central Pacific Railroad
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  • ...ki>sic<nowiki>]</nowiki> eye,<nowiki>'</nowiki> with the Southern Pacific [Railroad], from 1888 to 1890, publishing numerous pamphlets that included sections o ...Fe Railway]] depot in San Juan Capistrano was considered to be one of the railroad's finest when it was completed on October 8, 1894.]]
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  • ...rom Panama City in the Panama Bay. The islands were owned by the [[Panama Railroad Company]] and the [[Pacific Mail Company]] which built a coaling station, l
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  • {{r|Texas Railroad Commission}}
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  • ...overnorship of Vermont. He also became president of the [[Central Vermont Railroad]] and then later president of the [[Northern Pacific Railway]]. He was eve
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  • ...ghts, and obtain preapproval from Japan if other nationals wish to build a railroad, make loans secured by taxes from the area, or China engages political, fin
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  • ...rio]].}} A '''railway station''' is a facility found on [[railway]]s (or [[railroad]]s in some parts of the [[United States of America|U.S.]]), which serves as
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  • ...of a full-service, sit-down restaurant. It is distinct from other types of railroad food service cars that do not duplicate the full-service restaurant experie ...vertisement describes the dining experience aboard the [[Chicago and Alton Railroad]].]]
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  • ...d of observation cars. Occasionally, "special" trains (not included in the railroad's regular revenue service lineup) were chartered to make high-profile runs ...Francisco, California|San Francisco, California]] as a replacement for the railroad's ''Tourist Flyer'' from October 1, 1915 through January 14, 1940.
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  • ...built connecting Groesbeek to Nijmegen and Kleve&mdash;in 1991 use of the railroad was terminated. Notwithstanding the better connections, Groesbeek remained
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  • ...). Secondarily, historians began focusing on individual companies, and so railroad history is often considered a sub-field of [[business history]] as well. H * Walter Licht, ''Working for the Railroad: The Organization of Work in the Nineteenth Century'' Princeton University
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  • ...from an 1886 Supreme Court Case, ''Santa Clara County v. Southern Pacific Railroad''. It asserts that certain rights of natural persons, such as the right to ...he judge in the case and the court reporter as evidence of a conspiracy by railroad operators to create a variant interpretation of the decision in the case, a
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  • *{{cite book|author=Duke, Donald|year=1997|title=Santa Fe: The Railroad Gateway to the American West|volume=Volume Two|publisher=Golden West Books|
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  • {{Image|ParkScene08.jpg|right|250px|A photo of Cedar Point, including the Railroad, Mantis, Millennium Force and Top Thrill Dragster}}
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  • {{r|Texas Railroad Commission}}
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  • * {{cite book|author=Duke, Donald|year=1997|title=Santa Fe: The Railroad Gateway to the American West, Volume Two|publisher=Golden West Books, San M
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  • ...ment for Pullman dining car service on the Cincinnati, Hamilton and Dayton Railroad. ...ey.jpg/credit}}<br />An interior view of a [[Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad]] dining car kitchen shows a man in a chef uniform stirring a double boiler
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  • {{r|Underground railroad}}
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  • {{r|railroad infrastructure}}
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  • * [http://www.csrmf.org/events-exhibits/railroad-car-favorites/atasf-dining-car-no-1474-cochiti Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe * [https://www.psrm.org/trains/passenger/up-4054/ Union Pacific Railroad #4054] &mdash; photo and short history of a 36-seat heavyweight dining car
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  • {{r|railroad}}
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  • * Deverell, William. ''Railroad Crossing: Californians and the Railroad, 1850-1910,'' (1994) [http://content.cdlib.org/ark:/13030/ft9489p27w/?&quer ...7 pages [http://books.google.com/books?id=qkkEAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA160&dq=intitle:railroad+intitle:history&num=30&as_brr=1 online at Google]
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  • ...ana State Seminary and Military Academy, and president of the Fifth Street Railroad. He retired in 1883 and died on February 14, 1891, in New York City.
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  • ...Mike and Joe Welsh|authorlink=|year=2002|title=Streamliners: History of a Railroad Icon|publisher=MBI Publishing Co.|location=[[Saint Paul, MN]]|isbn=0-7603-1
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  • Destroying a bridge or section of railroad could be part of a guerrilla raid, but covert placement of an improvised ex
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  • ...iety at MIT in the 1960s, in which creative overhaul of the communal model railroad display was done by students called track hackers. (Hacksaws were often us
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  • {{r|Railroad}}
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  • ...es; each phase involves the construction and operation of a separate metro railroad connecting different parts of suburban and downtown Mumbai which are not ad ...velopment Authority]] (MMRDA). It involves the construction of an elevated railroad connecting [[Versova]], a suburb in northwestern Mumbai to [[Ghatkopar]] in
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  • ...Diego and Arizona Eastern Railway is a short line, standard gauge American railroad (AAR reporting mark SDAE) founded in 1933 by the the Southern Pacific Trans
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  • *{{cite book|author=Duke, Donald|year=1997|title=Santa Fe...The Railroad Gateway to the American West, Volume 1|publisher=Golden West Books, San Mar
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  • ...a southern transcontinental route that was used for the [[Southern Pacific Railroad]]. The chief city is [[Tucson]], Arizona. ...arolina (U.S. state)|South Carolina]], championed a southern cross-country railroad in 1846 to improve his hometown's [[economy]] and to export [[slavery]] wes
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  • ...om/books?id=yrEsAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA47 |date=May 1, 1881 |pages=p. 47 |publisher=Railroad Commission of Georgia}}
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  • *{{cite book|author=Duke, Donald|year=1997|title=Santa Fe: The Railroad Gateway to the American West, Volume One|publisher=Golden West Books, San M
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  • |event='''1880''': Railroad arrives in Pierre
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  • * {{cite book|author=Duke, Donald|year=1997|title=Santa Fe: The Railroad Gateway to the American West, Volume Two|publisher=Golden West Books, San M
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  • ...B-17 Flying Fortresses and British Lancasters hammered away at the French railroad system, complemented by Resistance fighters sabotaged some 350 locomotives ...ries, and other choke points. The "transportation policy" of targeting the railroad system came in for intense debate among Allied strategists. It was argued t
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  • ...n 1984 the federal government took over transportation regulation, but the Railroad Commission kept its name. With an annual budget of $79 million it now focus ...sh and essentially vicious."<ref> See [http://www.tsl.state.tx.us/exhibits/railroad/early/page2.html for quote]</ref> Clark lost the 1892 election to Hogg but
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  • ...tral Pacific Railroad, shakes hands with Grenville M. Dodge, Union Pacific Railroad (center right).]] ...road''' was the California-to-Utah portion of the First [[Transcontinental Railroad]] in North America. It connected to the new [[Union Pacific]] and when it o
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  • ...Pierce to send [[James Gadsden]] to [[Mexico]] to buy land for a southern railroad. He purchased the area now comprising southern [[Arizona (U.S. state)|Arizo Douglas's proposal, to organize western territories through which a railroad might run, caused extreme trouble. Douglas provided in his bills that the r
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  • *{{cite book|author=Duke, Donald|year=1997|title=Santa Fe: The Railroad Gateway to the American West, Volume Two|publisher=Golden West Books, San M
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  • ...ay to the port of [[Haiphong]]; Hanoi and Haiphong also are connected by [[railroad]], which continues into China.
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  • The [[Champlain and Saint Lawrence Railroad]] opened in 1836 was the first Canadian railway. ...antee Act which provided government guarantees of railroad bonds for every railroad in excess of 75 miles in length. This act prompted a rapid expansion railw
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  • * {{cite book|author=White, John H., Jr.|year=1978|title=The American Railroad Passenger Car|publisher=Johns Hopkins University Press |location=Baltimore,
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  • ...n [[National Highway 1 (Vietnam)|National Highway 1 (1A)]], the Trans-Viet railroad between Hanoi and Saigon, and is eastern starting point of [[National Highw
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  • *Nyala in South Darfur Province, and on the insecure railroad, in the central part and considered the regional capital For the first time since 1991, trains ran again on the railroad from Babanusa in central Sudan, to Awei in South Sudan. While the main bran
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  • ...n Francisco. In its later years, the train steadily lost passengers to the railroad's flashier, more-modern name trains such as the ''[[Super Chief]]'' and its
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  • *{{cite book|author=Duke, Donald|year=1997|title=Santa Fe: The Railroad Gateway to the American West, Volume Two|publisher=Golden West Books, San M
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  • *Bain, David Haward. ''Empire Express: Building the First Transcontinental Railroad'' (New York: Viking Penguin, 1999).
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  • The most northerly spur of the North-American [[railroad]] network ends in [[Hay River]], Northwest Territories. An [[intermodal te There are currently no railroad lines in Nunavut. A mining consortium has plans to build a 149 kilometre l
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  • ...rgest manufacturing plants include Hipolit Cegielski Poznań S.A. (engines, railroad cars) and [[Volkswagen]]'s automobile factory. Kompania Piwowarska, one of
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  • * {{cite web | title=Pacific Railroad Society | url=http://www.pacificrailroadsociety.org | accessmonthday=Novemb
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  • ...ding the [[California Museum]], [[Crocker Art Museum]], [[California State Railroad Museum]], [[California State Capitol Museum]], [[California Hall of Fame]],
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  • Durham was founded in the early 1850s, when a depot on the [[North Carolina Railroad]] was built there.<ref name=DurhamPostcardHistory/>
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  • ...ek Landing was selected in 1914 to be the headquarters of the new [[Alaska Railroad]] to run from [[Seward]] on the coast to the interior and funded by the Uni
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  • ...kland]]. The new owner plans to develop it for intermodal marine terminal, railroad and truck cargo activities. The site is environmentally contaminated due to
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  • ...nta Fe's #1460, affectionately known to rail fans as the "Beep," works the railroad's Argentine yard sometime prior to the 1995 BNSF merger.<ref>{{ATSF 1460.jp ...was removed from active service in 2008 and donated to the Western America Railroad Museum in Barstow, California the following year.
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  • * White, Jr., John H. (1993). ''The American Railroad Freight Car''. The Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, Maryland. IS
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  • ...ay]], the [[Union Pacific Railroad]] and the [[Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railroad]] all failed. This was followed by the bankruptcy of many other companies; ...o serve the mines, also went out of business. The [[Denver and Rio Grande Railroad]] stopped its ambitious plan, then under way, to convert its system from na
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  • ...e in 1921, and, with one break in service, worked for the [[South Shanghai Railroad Line]], rising to vice-president.
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  • ...and [[National Highway 14 (Vietnam)|14]], as well as being on the national railroad system. Its economic development has been slowed due, in part, to limited s
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  • ...rst Erie Canal was built prior to the construction of the [[North American railroad grid]], and its route through the mountains on the [[United States of Ameri
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  • ...1880, its site being the western terminus of the Chicago and North Western Railroad. Soon thereafter, it was named for Pierre Chouteau. an early fur trader. Wh
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  • ...e Twentieth Century which turned it into Canada's third [[transcontinental railroad]]. Over-expansion of track and over-extended in credit, the expansion led e ...n in Canada]]. It was chaired by the chairman of the [[New York Central]] Railroad [[Alfred H. Smith]], and assisted by British railway economist [[William M.
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  • ...r the issue of [[slavery]], and the city was a "stop" on the [[Underground Railroad]] because of its proximity to slave-holding [[Maryland (U.S. state)|Marylan
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  • {{Image|Alaska Railroad Locomotive.jpg|right|350px| Steam [[locomotive]], [[Skagway]], [[Alaska (U. A '''railway''' (GB) or '''railroad''' (US) is a means of transportation by rail-mounted vehicles for the conve
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  • .../>New York Central Railroad<br />Pennsylvania Railroad<br />Union Pacific Railroad ...to approximately $6,702,700 in 2018.</ref> This development drove several railroad companies' attempts to effectively "reinvent" streamlining (considered to b
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  • ...e it necessary to create a territorial infrastructure to allow settlement. Railroad interests were especially eager to start operations since they needed farme ...o make a compromise with the southern senators. In exchange for having the railroad go through Chicago, he would introduce the Kansas-Nebraska Act in 1854. At
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  • ...s. A direct competitor to the [[Southern Pacific Railroad|Southern Pacific Railroad's]] ''[[San Joaquin Daylight]]'', the ''Golden Gate's'' scheduled 9-hour an * October 8, 1935: The Santa Fe applies for permission from the California Railroad Commission to operate "''one-ticket, point-to-point, streamlined train serv
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  • ...ing days, they conducted [[armed reconnaissance]] and more strikes against railroad facilities. <ref name=Hallion>{{citation
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  • ...I recall that the burnt-out "Trenton Makes The World Takes" letters on the railroad bridge were only correctly lit just before Trump visited, one surmises at t
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  • ...Line]], owned by a Japanese corporation, terminated in the Leasehold; the railroad provided cover for Japanese intelligence and covert action throughout Manch ...ders of the leased Japanese territory, and take control of towns along the railroad. They then began a campaign to seize major cities of Manchuria. Reports fir
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  • * White, Jr., John H. (1993). ''The American Railroad Freight Car''. The Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, Maryland. IS
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  • A railroad connects the community of [[Hay River, NWT|Hay River]] to the rest of the [
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  • On August 14, 1927, a tugboat of the [[New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad]], towing two barges of railway rolling stock, collided with a train of roc
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  • |event='''1935''': Labor Day Hurricane destroys Overseas Railroad to Key West, kills more than 400.
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  • ...stern Railroad and the [[South Manchurian Railway Company|South Manchurian Railroad]], which provide an outlet to Dairen, shall be jointly operated by the esta
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  • ...which began operations in February, 1938 in response to the [[Pennsylvania Railroad]]'s ''Trail Blazer'', offered "low-cost passage with high-speed convenience * 1937: ''El Capitan'' is conceived to compete with the [[Pennsylvania Railroad]]'s low-cost, high-speed train the ''Trail Blazer''.
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  • ...he council created, the first municipal regulatory commission for a street railroad. (Massouh 1977, 204)
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  • ...e on the company, and in 1932 Spreckels' heirs sold their interests in the railroad (which was thereafter named the San Diego and Arizona Eastern Railway) to t ...p. 46</ref> Spreckels raised the additional money required to complete the railroad on is own. Construction delays, attacks by [[Mexico|Mexican]] revolutionari
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  • ...tes New York-Albany-Buffalo service. There are also state owned passenger railroad systems such as Metro North, LIRR, PATH, and New Jersey Transit. New York
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  • ...ter route across the [[Appalachian Mountains]]. Prior to development of [[railroad]] networks the [[Erie Canal]], which parallels the mohawk river,
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  • ...ores of Silver Lake''' (1939) - Dakota Territory late 1870s working on the railroad
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  • A '''troop sleeper''' was a railroad passenger car which had been constructed specifically to serve as a "mobile ...Kitchen Car" #8762 sits at the [[Lafayette, Indiana]] shops of the [[Monon Railroad]] on April 17, 1947.<ref>These units were generally referred to as "hospita
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  • ...gic location as a port on the Cumberland River and, in the 19th century, a railroad center. In 1862 during the [[American Civil War]], Nashville was the first
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  • Originally a [[railroad]] terminating in the [[Kwangtung Leasehold]], the '''South Manchuria Railw
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  • ...hen the North Western's Kenosha-Rockford line entered Harvard in 1859, the railroad built engine-handling facilities there. As railroad employment expanded, Harvard's population ballooned. In 1868 voters incorpo
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  • Kramer was the son of a blue-collar railroad worker for the Union Pacific railroad. As a boy he was a fine all-round athlete, particularly in basketball and
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  • ...salesman of railroad equipment who became wealthy during the Golden Age of railroad expansion at the end of the 19th century and beginning of the 20th century ...[New York Central Railroad]], and finally became the star salesman for the railroad supply company that made him rich, Manning, Maxwell & Moore. According to '
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  • The '''Grand Trunk Railway''' (GT or GTR) was a 19th-century Canadian [[railroad|railway]] system based primarily in [[Ontario]] and [[Quebec]] with operati ...treal. It also acquired a 999-year lease on the [[Atlantic & St. Lawrence Railroad]] that provided access to the ice-free port at [[Portland, Maine]].
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  • *[[George B. McClellan]], railroad president; general; Democratic presidential nominee in 1864
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  • ...Amtrak, the national railroad passenger system, and Metrolink, a commuter railroad.
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  • ...ford to fire economist Edward Ross. Ross’s opinion on immigrant labor and railroad monopolies did not sit well with the co-founder of Stanford University (AAU
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  • The '''Grand Trunk Railway''' (GT or GTR) was a 19th-century Canadian [[railroad|railway]] system based primarily in [[Ontario]] and [[Quebec]] with operati ...treal. It also acquired a 999-year lease on the [[Atlantic & St. Lawrence Railroad]] that provided access to the ice-free port at [[Portland, Maine]].
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  • ...nture of the [[Chicago and North Western Railway]] and the [[Union Pacific Railroad]], who could deliver the mail at a lower rate, albeit more slowly. The expr
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  • ...roducts to the small towns in the region. The boom years brought on by the railroad in the 1870s greatly accelerated the growth of Dallas while exacerbating cl ...en Sanger brothers built successful mercantile businesses along developing railroad lines, including the Sanger Bros. department store, and occupied numerous c
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  • ...chieved through other means of transportation.<ref>Robert William Fogel, ''Railroad and American Economic Growth: Essays in Econometric History'' (Baltimore: T
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  • ...e book|author=Schafer, Mike and Joe Welsh|title=Streamliners: History of a Railroad Icon|publisher=MBI Publishing Co., St. Paul, MN|year=1997|id=ISBN 0-7603-13
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  • ...a person so familiar with a mechanism, be it the trains of the Tech Model Railroad Club or of an operating system, that he or she could make an elegant change
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  • ..., the reform governor [[Hazen Pingree]] appointed Osborn to head the State Railroad Commission. Because his civil service kept him more and more from Sault St After his term as railroad commissioner, Osborn decided to travel, writing the ''The Andean Land'' (19
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  • Image:CO 914130 MW.jpg|{{CO 914130 MW.jpg/credit}}<br />Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad #914130, a troop sleeper that has been converted to a steam generator car.
    3 KB (404 words) - 14:39, 6 September 2013
  • ...nusual dissenting opinions. Prior to his tenure on Supreme Court, he was a railroad lawyer.
    3 KB (463 words) - 10:05, 6 August 2023
  • *[[Railroad Retirement Board]] *[[National Railroad Retirement Investment Trust]]
    7 KB (938 words) - 13:19, 6 April 2024
  • ...akage of the rails (in [[railroad]] tracks) that plagued the fast-growing railroad industry. The group subsequently developed a standard for the chemical com In the early 1920s, ASTM’s activities were focused on the steel, railroad, and cement industries, and most of its members were based in the Northeast
    9 KB (1,348 words) - 06:50, 28 March 2023
  • The battle over the location of railroad tracks in Shikoku, Japan, was affected by many factors, including the state
    3 KB (453 words) - 23:53, 14 September 2013
  • ...arly equal land trade which resulted in a net $75 payment from Lake to the railroad, along with its return to Lake of 13 northside lots (10 and 11 of Block V;
    3 KB (438 words) - 00:31, 27 January 2009
  • ...owever, primarily around the central part of the city, which is divided by railroad tracks running diagonally from southeast to northwest, builders have create
    3 KB (501 words) - 08:55, 8 June 2009
  • ...ext is focused on the construction and financing of the [[Northern Pacific Railroad]] and the accompanying struggles with the Native Americans of the Upper Pla
    7 KB (929 words) - 15:54, 17 May 2016
  • * Deverell, William. ''Railroad Crossing: Californians and the Railroad, 1850-1910,'' (1994) [http://content.cdlib.org/ark:/13030/ft9489p27w/?&quer * McAfee, Ward. ''California's Railroad Era, 1850-1911'' (1973)
    15 KB (2,148 words) - 15:25, 8 March 2023
  • ...G. ''Rebel of the Rockies: A History of the Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad.'' 1962.
    4 KB (554 words) - 08:17, 15 March 2023
  • .... The Bourbon Democrats defended business interests, supported banking and railroad interests, promoted laissez-faire capitalism, opposed imperialism and overs
    3 KB (456 words) - 12:53, 9 August 2023
  • ...iladelphia, Pennsylvania|Philadelphia]] corridor was to the [[Pennsylvania Railroad]]. Daily traffic could reach a density of ten trains (each way) during the ...00px|{{ATSF pendulum car 1100.jpg/credit}}<br />AT&SF chair car #1100, the railroad's distinctive, lone oval-window 56-seat pendulum coach. Santa Fe took deliv
    21 KB (3,144 words) - 15:22, 8 April 2023
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