Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Lost Train (German: Verlorener Zug) also known as "The lost Transport" (German: Zug der Verlorenen), was the third of three trains that were intended to transport prisoners from the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp to Theresienstadt during the final phase of World War II as Allied troops approached the camp.
Emigrants marked their path on this juniper limb, found southeast of present-day Redmond, Oregon.The limb is now on display in the Deschutes County Museum. Meek Cutoff was a horse trail road that branched off the Oregon Trail in northeastern Oregon and was used as an alternate emigrant route to the Willamette Valley in the mid-19th century.
The Nazi gold train or WaĆbrzych gold train is an urban legend about a train laden with gold and treasure that was hidden by the Nazis in southwest Poland during the last days of World War II. The apocryphal tale claims the train full of valuables, including artwork, was concealed in a sealed-up rail tunnel or mine in the Central Sudetes by ...
The Seems is a children's novel series by John Hulme and Michael Wexler. The series follows the character of Becker Drane, age 12, living in a world called "The Seems"; in the series, The Seems world is responsible for the protection of the reader's "reality" (that is, planet Earth).
1863 Chunky Creek Train Wreck, Hickory, Mississippi; ~75 killed plus ~25 injured.All but one of the dead were Confederate reinforcements headed for Vicksburg, with the disaster--Mississippi's deadliest rail disaster to date--further hindering the city's defenses against Union forces [12]
Oberski was on The Lost Train, a train heading East with no clear destination. The train was captured by the Red Army in Tröbitz. [3] He was taken care of by a foster family. He dedicated his first book Childhood (1978) to his foster parents:
A train was at a train station and then it began to leave the station and as it was moving away a person jumped onto a rear carriage of the train and as they were attempting to get off they lost their footing and fell from the train. They received serious head and leg injuries and were in a stable condition in hospital. [40] 13 February 1997
Lost railways of West Yorkshire Archived 10 November 2006 at the Wayback Machine Chronologies and line charts for Scottish railways Disused lines and stations in London, Wales, and England