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Rapid City, Black Hills and Western Railroad: 1909 1948 N/A Rapid City, Missouri River and St. Paul Railroad: CNW: 1891 1905 Pierre, Rapid City and North-Western Railway: St. Paul and Dakota Railroad: CNW: 1876 1878 Worthington and Sioux Falls Railroad: St. Paul, Minneapolis and Manitoba Railway: GN: 1886 1907 Great Northern Railway: St. Paul ...
The Rapid City, Black Hills and Western Railroad, also known simply as the Black Hills and Western Railroad and commonly referred to as the Rapid Canyon Line or the Crouch Line, [1] is a defunct standard gauge freight railroad line that operated in the Black Hills in the U.S. state of South Dakota.
Railroads of southern and southwestern Wisconsin. Wells, Print & Digital Services, Madison, Wi. LOC 85-90976. Rosholt, Malcolm (1992). Trains of Wisconsin. National Railroad Museum, Green Bay, WI. ISBN 0-9635065-0-1. Wisconsin Department of Transportation. "Travel by rail" Railway and Locomotive Historical Society (1937).
The Sioux was a named passenger train of the Milwaukee Road that operated between Chicago, Madison, Wisconsin, and Rapid City, South Dakota, via Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin and northern Iowa. The train, #11, westbound, and #22, eastbound, operated coaches, dining cars and sleeping cars through most of its history.
In 1983, the Chicago and North Western Railway (CNW) announced plans to abandon a section of railroad between Pierre, South Dakota and Rapid City. [8] Due to pressure from customers and Senator Larry Pressler from South Dakota, a deal was reached and announced on April 24, 1986, [9] to purchase divisions of the CNW from Winona, Minnesota, to Rapid City, creating the Dakota, Minnesota and ...
Rapid City, South Dakota: 142,107 Rapid City station: Last service was the Milwaukee Road's Sioux in 1951, when the run was truncated to Canton, South Dakota. Sumter, South Carolina: 140,466 Last service was a Florence, SC—Augusta, GA section of the Seaboard Coast Line's Champion in 1970. Morgantown, West Virginia: 139,044 Morgantown station
30th Street Station in Philadelphia Omaha station in Omaha, Nebraska, designed as part of the Amtrak Standard Stations Program This is a list of train stations and Amtrak Thruway stops used by Amtrak (the National Railroad Passenger Corporation in the United States). This list is in alphabetical order by station or stop name, which mostly corresponds to the city in which it is located. If an ...
The Milwaukee Road Depot in Madison, Wisconsin is a former railroad depot. It was built in 1903 and operated by the Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad (Milwaukee Road). It served numerous passenger trains, including the Sioux and Varsity, and was located next to a major yard, turntable, and roundhouse. [2]