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The sleeping car or sleeper (often wagon-lit) is a railway passenger car that can accommodate all passengers in beds of one kind or another, for the purpose of sleeping. George Pullman was the American innovator of the sleeper car.
The new train was named the Night Owl (numbered 168/169) and carried coaches, sleeping cars, and a buffet-lounge-sleeper. The southbound Night Owl departed Boston's South Station at 10 PM and arrived in Washington's Union Station at 8:30 AM. The northbound train departed Washington at 10:30 PM and arrived in Boston at 8:25 AM. [2]
The Capitol Limited was inaugurated on May 12, 1923, as an all-Pullman sleeping car train running from Pennsylvania Station in New York City to Chicago, via Washington, D.C. Once west of the Pennsy's Newark station in New Jersey, the train used the Lehigh Valley and Reading Railroad as far as Philadelphia, where it reached B&O's own rails to ...
The 20th Century Limited was an express passenger train on the New York Central Railroad (NYC) from 1902 to 1967. The train traveled between Grand Central Terminal in New York City and LaSalle Street Station in Chicago, Illinois, along the railroad's "Water Level Route".
The Spring Street station is a local station on the IND Eighth Avenue Line of the New York City Subway.Located at Spring Street and Sixth Avenue (Avenue of the Americas) in the Hudson Square and SoHo neighborhoods of lower Manhattan, it is served by the C and E trains, the former of which is replaced by the A train during late nights.
Spring Street Depot, 1934-?, as new High Line terminus Harlem River and Port Chester Railroad Harlem River Terminal 1866–1931 New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad: 1917–present (under Amtrak) 1871–present (under Metro-North) Somewhere in downtown Manhattan 1849–1871 Morris and Essex Railroad 1996–present (under NJ Transit)
This image released by ÖBB shows a Nightjet sleeper train at a station in Vienna, Austria. A growing number of climate-conscious Europeans are giving up flying in favor of long-haul trains.
Railroad terminals in New York City (1 C, 9 P) Railway and subway stations on the National Register of Historic Places in New York City (1 C, 27 P) Railway stations in Queens, New York (2 C, 48 P)