Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
If you want to celebrate Chattanooga’s train history this fall, but save your leaf peeping for scenic hikes or drives, then a stay at The Hotel Chalet at The Choo Choo is your ticket. The Choo ...
The Tennessee Valley Railroad Museum (reporting mark TVRM) [1] is a railroad museum and heritage railroad in Chattanooga, Tennessee.. The Tennessee Valley Railroad Museum was founded as a chapter of the National Railway Historical Society in 1960 by Paul H. Merriman and Robert M. Soule, Jr., along with a group of local railway preservationists.
The Chattooga and Chickamauga Railway (reporting mark CCKY) is a short-line railroad which is headquartered in LaFayette, Georgia, USA.The railroad operated 22 miles (35 km) of the Tennessee, Alabama and Georgia Railway (a.k.a. the TAG route) from Chattanooga, Tennessee to Kensington, Georgia, which reverted to the Norfolk Southern System and was partially removed after the Dow Reichhold ...
The Chattanooga Choo-Choo (formerly known as Terminal Station) in Chattanooga, Tennessee, is a former railroad station once owned and operated by the Southern Railway. Listed on the National Register of Historic Places , the station operated as a hotel from 1973 to 2023, and was a member of Historic Hotels of America , part of the National ...
The Chattanooga Southern Railway was founded in 1887 and began operations in 1891. It ran about 93 miles (150 km) of track between Chattanooga, Tennessee , and Gadsden, Alabama , hauling mainly iron, timber, and coal from the Lookout Mountain area.
A preserved L&N train depot in Murphy, North Carolina. The city of Atlanta, Georgia, is home to the General and the Texas, two 4-4-0 locomotives originally built for the Western and Atlantic Railroad, which was later leased to L&N predecessor Nashville, Chattanooga, and St. Louis. The lease of the W&A was passed to, and renewed by, L&N and its ...
Upgrade to a faster, more secure version of a supported browser. It's free and it only takes a few moments:
Originally chartered in 1881 as the Rome and Carrollton Railroad, the railroad's name became the Chattanooga, Rome and Columbus Railroad in 1887, before any tracks were constructed. The railroad started construction between Rome and Cedartown, Georgia , as a 3 ft ( 914 mm ) narrow gauge [ 1 ] railroad, but the 20 miles (32 km) of rail were ...