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Winterthur Museum, Garden and Library, Winterthur, Delaware, US Washington at Verplanck's Point is a full-length portrait in oil painted in 1790 by the American artist John Trumbull of General George Washington at Verplanck's Point on the North River in New York during the American Revolutionary War .
The pose and general composition are virtual of copies of Washington at Verplanck's Point painted earlier in 1790, but instead of the background seen through the horse's legs being a romanticized depiction of a review of Continental Army troops at their encampment at New York's Verplanck's Point [a] Washington had staged for departing French commander-in-chief General Rochambeau on September ...
[3] [10] After 20:00, trains from Winterthur terminate in Bauma and strations between Bauma and Rüti are served by busses. [8] The stations in the Winterthur suburbs are also served by other S-Bahn services, with the S12 and S35 serving Winterthur Grüze (combined half-hourly service), while the S11 also serves Winterthur Seen and Sennhof ...
Point-to-point transit is a transportation system in which a plane, bus, or train travels directly to a destination, rather than going through a central hub. This differs from the spoke-hub distribution paradigm in which the transportation goes to a central location where passengers change to another train, bus, or plane to reach their destination.
Takeover date Swiss Northern Railway (SNB) Zürich–Baden railway: 9 August 1847: 22.53 km – 1 July 1853 Zürich-Bodenseebahn (ZBB) Zürich–Winterthur –Romanshorn (18 May 1855) 82.54 km: Taken over before start of operation – 1 July 1853 Rheinfall Railway: Winterthur–Schaffhausen (16 April 1857) 30.38 km: Taken over before start of ...
The Zurich–Winterthur railway line is part of the route that the Zurich-Lake Constance Railway (Zürich-Bodenseebahn) planned to build from Zurich to Romanshorn.The Swiss Northeastern Railway (Schweizerische Nordostbahn) the successor to the Zurich-Lake Constance Railway opened the Winterthur–Romanshorn section on 18 May 1855 and the section from Winterthur to Oerlikon went into operation ...
Point-to-point, point to point, or port to port may refer to: Technology. Point-to-point construction, an electronics assembly technique;
The high-point of this section is reached between Wiesendangen and Rickenbach. [5] The Rickenbach-Attikon station building dates back to 1907, this station was only opened on 15 October 1907. After Attikon, the Winterthur–Romanshorn line runs over a three kilometre-long embankment while descending 85 metres to the Thur valley. [6]