When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Great Northern Railway (U.S.) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Northern_Railway_(U.S.)

    The Great Northern Railway (reporting mark GN) was an American Class I railroad. Running from Saint Paul, Minnesota, to Seattle, Washington, it was the creation of 19th-century railroad entrepreneur James J. Hill and was developed from the Saint Paul & Pacific Railroad. The Great Northern's route was the northernmost transcontinental railroad ...

  3. Burlington Northern Railroad - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burlington_Northern_Railroad

    The Burlington Northern Railroad (reporting mark BN) was a United States-based railroad company formed from a merger of four major U.S. railroads. Burlington Northern operated between 1970 and 1995. Its historical lineage begins in the earliest days of railroading with the chartering in 1848 of the Chicago and Aurora Railroad, a direct ancestor ...

  4. James J. Hill - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_J._Hill

    James Jerome Hill (September 16, 1838 – May 29, 1916) was a Canadian-American railroad director. He was the chief executive officer of a family of lines headed by the Great Northern Railway, which served a substantial area of the Upper Midwest, the northern Great Plains, and the Pacific Northwest in the United States.

  5. John Frank Stevens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Frank_Stevens

    John Frank Stevens. John Frank Stevens (April 25, 1853 – June 2, 1943) was an American civil engineer who built the Great Northern Railway in the United States and was chief engineer on the Panama Canal between 1905 and 1907. He also led the commission of American railway experts to Russia and was later President of the Interallied Technical ...

  6. BNSF Railway - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BNSF_Railway

    The Burlington Northern Railroad (BN) was created in 1970 through the consolidation of the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad, the Great Northern Railway, the Northern Pacific Railway and the Spokane, Portland and Seattle Railway. It absorbed the St. Louis-San Francisco Railway (Frisco) in 1980.

  7. Timeline of United States railway history - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_United_States...

    1795–96 & 1799–1804 or '05 — In 1795, Charles Bulfinch, the architect of Boston's famed State House first employed a temporary funicular railway with specially designed dumper cars to decapitate 'the Tremont's' Beacon Hill summit and begin the decades long land reclamation projects which created most of the real estate in Boston's lower elevations of today from broad mud flats, such as ...

  8. Louis W. Hill - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_W._Hill

    Maud Van Cortlandt. Cortlandt Taylor. Relatives. James J. Hill (father) Louis Warren Hill (May 19, 1872– April 27, 1948), was an American railroad executive. He was the president and board chairman of the Great Northern Railway, which served a substantial area of the Upper Midwest, the northern Great Plains, and Pacific Northwest.

  9. List of railway pioneers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_railway_pioneers

    A railway pioneer is someone who has made a significant contribution to the historical development of the railway (US: railroad). This definition includes locomotive engineers, railway construction engineers, operators of railway companies, major railway investors and politicians, of national and international importance for the development of rail transport.