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The Indianapolis Union Railway Company (reporting mark IU), is a terminal railroad operating in Indianapolis, Indiana.It was organized on May 31, 1850, as the Union Track Railway Company by the presidents of the Madison and Indianapolis Railroad (M&I), the Terre Haute and Richmond Railroad (TH&R), and the Indianapolis and Bellefontaine Railroad (I&B) for the purposes of establishing and ...
Transportation in Indianapolis consists of a complex network that includes a local public bus system, several private intercity bus providers, Amtrak passenger rail service, four freight rail lines, an Interstate Highway System, an airport, a heliport, bikeshare system, 115 miles (185 km) of bike lanes, and 116 miles (187 km) of trails and greenways.
Indianapolis and St. Louis Railway: Indianapolis and St. Louis Railway: NYC: 1882 1889 Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago and St. Louis Railway: Indianapolis and Sandusky Railroad: NKP: 1877 1879 Lake Erie and Western Railway: Indianapolis Southern Railroad: IC: 1906 1911 Illinois Central Railroad: Indianapolis Southern Railway: IC: 1899 1906 ...
The railroad's assets were wholly leased to the Indianapolis Traction and Terminal Company starting in 1903, and the two companies would eventually merge under the Indianapolis Street Railway Company name in 1919. [9] [10] [11] The new company was acquired by the Terre Haute, Indianapolis and Eastern Traction Company in 1920.
On May 31, 1850, the I&B co-founded the Union Track Railway Company with the Madison and Indianapolis Railroad and the Terre Haute and Richmond Railroad. [11] The Union Track changed its name to the Indianapolis Union Railway (IUR) in 1853. [12] The IUR opened the world's first union station in Indianapolis, Indiana, on September 20, 1853.
Indianapolis – Station history at Great American Stations (Amtrak) Indianapolis Amtrak Station (USA Rail Guide -- Train Web) Rethinking Adaptive Reuse, or, How Not to Save a Great Urban Terminal by Erik Ledbetter; Hetherington, James. "The History of Union Station" (PDF). Indiana Historical Society. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 8 ...
The Monon Railroad (reporting mark MON), also known as the Chicago, Indianapolis, and Louisville Railway (reporting mark CIL) from 1897 to 1971, was an American railroad that operated almost entirely within the state of Indiana.
The Indiana Railroad was created on July 2, 1930, when Midland Utilities purchased the Union Traction Company of Indiana (UTC) and transferred ownership to the IR. Union Traction (UTC) was the largest interurban system in Indiana with 410 miles (660 km) of interurban trackage and 44 miles (71 km) of streetcar lines in Anderson, Elwood, Marion and Muncie.