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Station/stop Name Location Code Image Line(s) Annual Ridership (FY 2023) [1] Station Owner(s) Amtrak Thruway / Rail connection(s) Notes Anaheim† : Anaheim
Amtrak added Wasco as a flag stop on October 26, 1975. [3] The train station was demolished in 1978 and replaced with a couple of benches and a parking lot. Part of the train station would be used in the restoration of the Shafter Santa Fe station. [5] At some point, [when?] Wasco became a regular stop for the San Joaquin route, and a shelter ...
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The Wasco depot served both passenger and freight trains along the route, which reached as far south as Shaniko and spurred economic development in the region. While the Oregon Trunk Railway 's new line to Bend became the main inland Oregon route in 1911, the Columbia Southern route continued to serve Sherman County as a local route.
Old Towne was built with space for up to 140 tenants along a brick-lined central concourse, with Kmart as the sole anchor store. Features of the mall included an antique carousel, a movie theater, a gazebo for live performances, and balconies from which entertainers such as jazz bands and barbershop quartets could perform.
Wasco (formerly, Dewey and Deweyville) [7] is a city in the San Joaquin Valley, in Kern County, California, United States. Wasco is located 24 miles (39 km) northwest of Bakersfield , [ 7 ] at an elevation of 328 feet (100 m). [ 5 ]
Wasco State Prison, located in Wasco, California Wasco, Illinois , a former hamlet (unincorporated town) in Illinois, now part of Campton Hills Wasco, Oregon , a city in Oregon