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The Tours tramway is a tram network which is operated by the city of Tours, in Indre-et-Loire, in the French region of Centre-Val de Loire. Originally opening on 31 ...
The final Tours tram ran on September 14, 1949. (Trams were reintroduced in 2013.) For almost a month, buses provided a replacement service while awaiting the trolleybuses' full operational status. [7] In the aftermath of the Second World War, the tramway was perceived as an anachronism, a symbol of a "bygone era" associated with the war years ...
That line's original vision was to link Nashville, Arkansas to Memphis, Tennessee and Paris, Texas. [3] The name changed in 1910 to the Memphis, Dallas and Gulf Railway. [3] The railroad constructed a line from Ashland, Arkansas to Shawmut, Arkansas, about 61 miles. [1]
Nashville is a city in Howard County, Arkansas, United States. The population was 4,627 at the 2010 census. [4] The estimated population in 2018 was 4,425. [5] The city is the county seat of Howard County. [6] Nashville is situated at the base of the Ouachita foothills and was once a major center of the peach trade in southwest Arkansas. Today ...
Arkansas Valley Interurban Railway: Wichita ― Newton ― Hutchinson: Electric Interurban December 22, 1915 July 31, 1938 Union Street Railway Winfield: Horse August 31, 1886 [82] May 17, 1909 Southwestern Interurban Railway Winfield ― Arkansas City: Electric Interurban June 1909 May 24, 1926
The Nashville Commercial Historic District encompasses much of the historic downtown commercial area of Nashville, Arkansas, and the major commercial center in Howard County. It is centered at the junction of Main and Howard Streets, extending eastward along East Howard, and north and south along Main Street for about one block.
The Arkansas Southern Railroad (reporting mark ARS) is a short-line railroad which started service in October 2005. [1] ARS operates two disconnected lines consisting of Heavener, Oklahoma to Waldron, Arkansas (32 miles), and Ashdown to Nashville, Arkansas (29 miles), plus a switch track at Ashdown, [ 1 ] for a total of 63 miles. [ 2 ]
Other than an optimistic 1872 map suggesting the merger of the Arkansas Central, Helena & Corinth, and the Pine Bluff & Southwestern to form this, [4] [5] no evidence such a combined railway got off the ground. The Arkansas Central later became part of the Arkansas Midland Railroad. No info at all re: the existence of the others.