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A New York City map that displays the terminus of various railroads, including the NYS&W at Edgewater, circa 1900. In 1880, investors from the original NJM regrouped and reorganized the company as the Midland Railroad of New Jersey, with Hobart serving as their president, and the company regained their finances by serving New Jersey industrial firms. [2]
Erie and Central New York Railroad: DL&W: 1902 1945 Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad: Erie and Central New York Railway: DL&W: 1863 1902 Erie and Central New York Railroad: Erie and Genesee Valley Railroad: ERIE: 1868 1891 Dansville and Mount Morris Railroad: Erie International Railway: ERIE: 1872 1895 Erie Railroad: Erie and Jersey ...
New York and Putnam Railroad (New York Central Railroad) Town of Edwards Nature Trail? St. Lawrence County: Gouverneur and Oswegatchie Railroad (New York Central Railroad) [18] Uncle Sam Bikeway: 3 miles (4.8 km) Troy: Boston and Maine Railroad: Vestal Rail Trail: 2.2 miles (3.5 km) Broome County: Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad
The Mohawk, Adirondack and Northern Railroad (MA&N) (reporting mark MHWA) is a class III railroad operating in Central and Northern New York. Specifically, it serves Oneida, Jefferson, Lewis, and St. Lawrence counties. It operates over trackage of the former New York Central Railroad.
The New York Central Railroad (reporting mark NYC) was a railroad primarily operating in the Great Lakes and Mid-Atlantic regions of the United States. The railroad primarily connected greater New York and Boston in the east with Chicago and St. Louis in the Midwest, along with the intermediate cities of Albany, Buffalo, Cleveland, Cincinnati, Detroit, Rochester and Syracuse.
New York State Railways was a subsidiary of the New York Central Railroad that controlled several large city streetcar and electric interurban systems in upstate New York. It included the city transit lines in Rochester , Syracuse , Utica , Oneida and Rome , plus various interurban lines connecting those cities.
NH system map ca. 1929. The New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad (reporting mark NH), commonly known as The Consolidated, or simply as the New Haven, was a railroad that operated principally in the New England region of the United States from 1872 to 1968.
NYLE 6758 switching tracks in preparation to couple to passenger cars in South Dayton, NY. The right-of-way was damaged by the 2009 flooding of the Cattaraugus Creek, resulting in passenger service on the New York & Lake Erie Railroad being suspended until late 2012. As of late 2016, the New York and Lake Erie offers a variety of excursion ...