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New York State Route 76 (NY 76) is located entirely within Chautauqua County, New York, in the United States. It runs north–south from NY 474 in the hamlet of North Clymer in the town of Clymer at its southern end to NY 5 along the Lake Erie shoreline in the town of Ripley .
Erie and New York City Railroad: Erie main line at Salamanca: Pennsylvania Line near Niobe in Harmony: 47.7 miles (76.8 km) 1868–1880, 1874–1880, 1883-1960 Founded in 1862, as all three railroads merged were renamed in their respective states as the A&GW Railway. Reorganized as the New York, Pennsylvania and Ohio Railway in 1880 Meadville ...
New York: New York, Lake Erie, and Western Railroad Company. Erie Railroad Company (1918). Report of the Board of Directors of the Erie Railroad Company to the Bond and Shareholders for the Year Ending December 31, 1917 (Report). New York: Erie Railroad Company. hdl:2027/osu.32435067090118. Finkelman, Paul, ed. (2001).
The company was founded in 1907 as the Akron, Canton and Youngstown Railway and in 1912 completed a 9.5-mile (15.3 km) line from Mogadore to Akron. Effective March 1, 1920, the AC&Y leased the Northern Ohio Railway , an Akron– Delphos, Ohio line that had been part of the New York Central Railroad system via the Lake Erie and Western Railroad ...
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The line was built by the Cleveland, Painesville and Ashtabula Railroad and opened in 1851. [5] Through mergers, leases, and takeovers, it became part of the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway, New York Central Railroad, Penn Central and Conrail. When Conrail was broken up in 1999, the main line east of downtown Cleveland, including the ...
This diagram shows active mainline railway stations, and is current as of May 2022. This is a route-map template for the rail transport in Ohio , a state passenger rail network. For a key to symbols, see {{ railway line legend }} .
The Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway, established in 1833, and sometimes referred to as the Lake Shore, was a major part of the New York Central Railroad's Water Level Route from Buffalo, New York, to Chicago, Illinois, primarily along the south shore of Lake Erie (in New York, Pennsylvania and Ohio) and across northern Indiana.