Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Louisville and Nashville Railroad: Lexington and Knoxville Railroad: SOU: 1852 1853 Knoxville and Kentucky Railroad: Little River Railroad: LR 1901 1940 N/A Livingston Terminal Company: 1910 1911 Overton County Railroad: Louisville, Cincinnati and Charleston Railroad: SOU: 1837 1843 N/A Sold at foreclosure; no property in Tennessee Louisville ...
US 421 south – Boone: Continuation from North Carolina; southern end of SR 34 overlap: Trade: 0.8: 1.3: SR 67 east – Warrensville: Southern end of SR 67 overlap: Mountain City: 8.9: 14.3: SR 167 (Roan Creek Road/Forge Creek Road) – Doeville, Fig: Provides access to Johnson County Airport: 10.5: 16.9: SR 418 north (Church Street) – Downtown
The railroad is restoring a large 0-6-0 steam locomotive from the Union railroad built by ALCO in 1944 and uses diesel locomotives for its excursion trains. [ 2 ] The adjacent McCreary County Museum (admission included in train ticket) demonstrates life in Kentucky's coal company towns during the first half of the 20th century.
Zone 2. Ready! is a demand-responsive service that replaces the former route 6 bus. [11] Interstate I-40 runs through the southern reaches of Frayser. US 51/SR 3 bisects the western quadrants of the neighborhood. Frayser entirely encapsulates SR 300, which connects US 51 to I-40 exit 2A. Frayser also serves as the southern terminus of SR 388. [12]
In 1983, an 11-mile (18 km) section of the line was purchased by the Boone Railroad Historical Society, and its 2254 charter members, for $50,000. The stretch of track winds through the Des Moines River Valley and across a 156-foot (47.5 m) tall bridge spanning Bass Point Creek, a tributary of the Des Moines River.
Northbound NC 105, in Linville Southbound NC 105 with overlapping US 221, US 321, and US 421 Truck routes, in Boone North end of NC 105, in Boone. NC 105 follows the general route of the old East Tennessee and Western North Carolina Railroad (ET&WNC), also known as the "Tweetsie," connecting Linville to Boone before a major flood washed away many sections of the railbed in 1940.
The railroad was constructed as the Centerville Branch of the Louisville and Nashville (L&N) railroad. The service largely focused on freight, including finished goods, farm products, phosphate, iron ore, and timber products. In its early years, the line also was served by a Monday through Saturday daily round trip passenger train. [3]
The Lexington-Henderson County Everett Horn Public Library serves the city. [19] Lexington is home to the very popular Beech Lake. Lexington has one museum, Beech River Heritage Museum, that holds a variety of historical artifacts of Lexington and Henderson County. Lexington was the setting of a 1994 episode of The X-Files called "E.B.E." [20]