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Byesville Scenic Railway – Byesville, Ohio [9] Byesville Station; N Cabin (C&M Crossing) Cedar Point & Lake Erie Railroad – Sandusky, Ohio [10] Main Station (Funway Station) Frontier Town Station; Boneville Station; Connotton Valley Railway – Bedford, Ohio [11] Bedford Depot; Cuyahoga Valley Scenic Railroad – Peninsula, Ohio [12 ...
1990–present (under Amtrak) Euclid Avenue 1953-1965 Cleveland and Mahoning Valley Railway 1949-1977 -1949 Wheeling and Lake Erie Railway: 1929-1935 Vinegar Hill (Ontario Street) ?-1929 Commercial Road 1935-1938
30th Street Station in Philadelphia Omaha station in Omaha, Nebraska, designed as part of the Amtrak Standard Stations Program This is a list of train stations and Amtrak Thruway stops used by Amtrak (the National Railroad Passenger Corporation in the United States). This list is in alphabetical order by station or stop name, which mostly corresponds to the city in which it is located. If an ...
The Cleveland Terminal Subdivision is principally used by Amtrak's Lake Shore Limited to access Cleveland Lakefront Station, however local freights and coal trains occasionally use the line as well. Though downgraded and single-tracked, the Cleveland Terminal Subdivision still has its Traffic Control System in place.
Cleveland Lakefront Station is an Amtrak train station at North Coast Harbor in Cleveland, Ohio. The current station was built in 1977 to provide service to the Lake Shore Limited route (New York/Boston-Chicago), which was reinstated by Amtrak via Cleveland and Toledo in 1975. [3] It replaced service to Cleveland Union Terminal.
The Erie station was one of three railroad stations in Kent. In addition to the Erie Railroad, the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad (B&O) operated a Kent station until 1971 and the Wheeling and Lake Erie Railway (W&LE) until 1938. Both of those stations were located less than one mile from the Erie station, though neither were as large or prominent ...
The Erie West Subdivision is a railroad line owned by CSX Transportation in the U.S. states of Pennsylvania and Ohio. The line runs from Derby, New York southwest along the shore of Lake Erie to Cleveland, Ohio , [ 2 ] along the former New York Central Railroad main line.
Warren station consisted of a one-platform structure at the junction of South Street (U.S. Route 422 / State Route 169) at Main Avenue in the center of town. The station depot on Main Avenue was an Erie Type IV wooden frame depot that was shaped 24.5' x 50' x 17'.