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The Michigan Star Clipper Dinner Train in 2007. The Michigan Star Clipper Dinner Train was a dinner train that operated in Michigan for 24 years; first out of Paw Paw, for approximately two years, then from Walled Lake, with trips heading from West Bloomfield to Wixom, where it connected to the CSX mainline and then back to West Bloomfield, MI.
PM 1223 - 2-8-4 "Berkshire" displayed at Chinook Pier in Grand Haven, Michigan. PM 1223 is the oldest surviving example of the 2-8-4s in America. PM 1225 - 2-8-4 "Berkshire" operational by the Steam Railroading Institute in Owosso, Michigan. PM 1225 appears in the motion-capture form in the 2004 Christmas movie The Polar Express.
A subsidiary of Berkshire Hathaway Energy: Ben Bridge Jeweler: Luxury Items 100% 2000/07/18 [8] [9] Benjamin Moore & Co. Materials and Construction 100% 2001 [10] $1 Billion [11] [12] Berkadia Mortgage Financing 50% 2009/12/31 [13] Joint venture with Jefferies Financial Group, formerly known as Leucadia Berkshire Hathaway Assurance: Insurance ...
Paw Paw Lake is an unincorporated community in Berrien County in the U.S. state of Michigan. It is a census-designated place (CDP) for statistical purposes, without legal status as a municipality. The community is located within areas of both Coloma Charter Township and Watervliet Township in the area surrounding Paw Paw Lake and Little Paw Paw ...
Paw Paw Railroad (Michigan), a defunct railroad which operated in Van Buren County, Michigan, between 1857 and 1887 Paw Paw Tunnel , in Maryland "paw-paw French", a nickname of the Missouri French
Paw Paw Township is a civil township of Van Buren County in the U.S. state of Michigan. The population was 6,881 at the 2020 census. [3] The village of Paw Paw is located in the northeast portion of the township. The east south and south branches of the Paw Paw River flow through the township.
Van Buren County was originally platted in 1829, and in 1837, the Board of Supervisors chose Paw Paw as the county seat. [2] Construction began on this site in 1842, and the building was occupied in 1845. [2] [3] In 1900, it was decided to construct a new courthouse for the county, [2] and a bond issue of $35,000 was approved by voters for the ...
Paw Paw Tunnel, abandoned canal tunnel, in use 1850–1924, 3,118 feet (950 m), Chesapeake and Ohio Canal, Allegany County, Maryland, across the Potomac River from Paw Paw, West Virginia, now a rail trail; through same ridge as Kessler Tunnel (Western Maryland Railway) and Graham Tunnel