Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Three Notch Trail is a 10.6-mile (17.1 km) (26 mile planned), [1] shared-use rail trail in the US state of Maryland.It currently runs on the right-of-way of the old U.S. Naval Air Station Railroad from Deborah Drive in Hughesville, MD just inside Charles County to Baggett Park in Mechanicsville, MD with several short, disconnected sections in the California, MD area.
Fort Hill Rail Trail; Goffstown Rail Trail [41] Granite Town Rail Trail [42] Hillsborough Recreational Rail Trail [43] Industrial Heritage Trail; Lake Winnisquam Scenic Trail; Londonderry Rail Trail [44] Nashua River Rail Trail; New Boston Rail Trail [45] Northern Rail Trail; Piscataquog Trail [46] Rockingham Recreational Trail [47] South ...
The Washington, Brandywine & Point Lookout Railroad (WB&PL) (originally, the Southern Maryland Railroad) was an American railroad that operated in southern Maryland and Washington, D.C., from 1918 to 1942; but it and other, shorter-lived entities used the same right-of-way from 1883 to 1965.
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us more ways to reach us
Cape Cod Central Railroad. Departs Hyannis, Buzzards Bay, or Falmouth, Massachusetts. This train runs narrated two- and three-hour services giving visitors a scenic and educational overview of the ...
The exact route is not known; for instance, whether it ran through Andalusia, Alabama, is not clear. [1] Still, streets and buildings (including a school) in Andalusia bore names that included "Three Notch" ("East Three Notch Street" and "South Three Notch Street" (for over a century, as of 2010), [3] as does the Three Notch Museum (housed in a depot from the Central of Georgia Railway.) [4 ...
The building was re-opened as a history museum in 1987; [4] named after the Three Notch Trail of which two streets (East Three Notch Street and South Three Notch Street) in Andalusia are also named. Operated by the Covington Historical Society, the museum focuses on County history and area railroad history.
The New Haven & Northampton Canal Greenway Alliance (NHNCGA) represents seven nonprofit trail groups that advocate for the individual trails. As of 2025, 15 of the 16 municipalities through which the trail runs have officially supported the unified NHNCG name. [2] The NHNCG is a part of the greater New England Rail-Trail Network. [3]