When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: great scenic trains to cornwall boston to buffalo new york

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Great Lakes Seaway Trail - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Lakes_Seaway_Trail

    The byway is recognized as a state scenic byway by both New York and Pennsylvania (the latter designation coming in 2003) and was named a National Scenic Byway in two stages. In New York, the Seaway Trail became one of the first byways in the nation to be declared a National Scenic Byway when it received the distinction in 1996.

  3. Boston and Albany Railroad - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boston_and_Albany_Railroad

    During the 1940s period of peak passenger volume, the New Haven Railroad (with the cooperation of the New York Central) ran several Boston-New York City trains along the route to Worcester and Springfield and then south. The service included an overnight train with sleeping car service.

  4. List of New York railroads - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_New_York_railroads

    New York and Boston Railroad: NYC: 1869 1872 New York, Boston and Northern Railway: New York, Boston and Montreal Railway: NH, NYC, RUT: 1873 1876 Bennington and Rutland Railway, New York, Rutland and Montreal Railroad, New York, Westchester and Putnam Railway, Newburgh, Dutchess and Connecticut Railroad: New York, Boston and Northern Railway ...

  5. List of named passenger trains of the United States (A–B)

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_named_passenger...

    Pittsburgh–Buffalo, New York [1911] 1906–1916 Buffalo Train: Lehigh Valley Railroad, Grand Trunk Western Railroad: New York City–Chicago [1907] 1902–1914 Buffalonian: West Shore Railroad: New York City–Buffalo, New York (with sleeping cars to Chicago, St. Louis, and Boston) [1915] 1910–1925 Buffalonian: New York Central

  6. Finger Lakes Railway - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Finger_Lakes_Railway

    This was the Lehigh Valley's mainline from Waverly, New York to Buffalo, New York. This line saw much action during World War II and the Cold War, with many military movements in and out of the Seneca Army Depot, until it closed in the summer of 1998. The now-closed base has a very large yard which at current time is used for rail car storage ...

  7. West Shore Railroad - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/West_Shore_Railroad

    The West Shore Railroad was a railroad that ran from Weehawken, New Jersey, on the west bank of the Hudson River opposite New York City, north to Albany, New York, and then west to Buffalo. It was organized in 1864 as the Saratoga and Hudson River Railroad, a competitor to the New York Central and Hudson River Railroad , but was soon taken over ...

  8. Great American Railroad Journeys - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_American_Railroad...

    Great American Railroad Journeys is a BBC travel documentary series presented by Michael Portillo and broadcast on BBC Two. [1] Using an 1879 copy of Appleton's Guidebook to the railroads of the United States and Canada, Portillo travels across the United States and Canada primarily by train, though at times using other forms of transportation where necessary.

  9. Railroads in New England - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Railroads_in_New_England

    1849 Railroad Map of New England & Eastern New York. The first railroad in Connecticut was the New York and Stonington Railroad, which was chartered in May 1832 and began construction in 1833. [9] Rhode Island gained its first railroad company the next month in the New York, Providence and Boston Railroad. The two companies merged under the ...