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The New York Central Railroad introduced the Twilight Limited on April 25, 1926. The new train was first-class only, with parlor cars and a dining car.It was the fastest of the 13 New York Central (Michigan Central) trains from Chicago to Detroit, leaving Central Station at 3:00 PM and taking six hours for 283.5 miles to Detroit.
The New York Central Railroad (reporting mark NYC) was a railroad primarily operating in the Great Lakes and Mid-Atlantic regions of the United States. The railroad primarily connected greater New York and Boston in the east with Chicago and St. Louis in the Midwest, along with the intermediate cities of Albany, Buffalo, Cleveland, Cincinnati, Detroit, Rochester and Syracuse.
Michigan Central Railroad: PC (NYC) Monongahela Railway: MGA Merged on May 1, 1993 Mount Hope Mineral Railroad: CNJ New York Connecting Railroad: PC (NH/PRR) New York and Long Branch Railroad: PC (PRR)/CNJ Niagara Junction Railway: EL (Erie)/LV/PC (NYC) North Brookfield Railroad: PC (NH) North Pennsylvania Railroad: RDG Northern Central Railway ...
The Detroit, Monroe and Toledo Railroad opened a line from Detroit to Toledo in 1856. The Toledo, Canada Southern and Detroit Railway opened a parallel line, just to the east, in 1873. With the 1930 lease of the Michigan Central Railroad by the New York Central Railroad, both lines were placed under NYC operation.
New York Central: New York, New York - Buffalo, New York [1952] 1929-1953; 1965-1967 Cayuga: Amtrak: Albany, New York - Schenectady, New York [1984] 1984 Centennial State: Santa Fe: Denver, Colorado - Kansas City, Missouri [1948] 1940-1950 Central Express: New York Central: Buffalo, New York - Detroit, Michigan [1930] 1927-1933 Central New York ...
St. John's Terminal, also known as 550 Washington Street, is a building on Washington Street in the Hudson Square neighborhood of Manhattan in New York City. Designed by Edward A. Doughtery, it was built in 1934 by the New York Central Railroad as a terminus of the High Line , an elevated freight line along Manhattan's West Side used for ...