Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Old Colony Railroad (OC) was a major railroad system, mainly covering southeastern Massachusetts and parts of Rhode Island, which operated from 1845 to 1893.
The following is a list of historic Old Colony Railroad (OCRR) stations, at the time of the 1893 lease by the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad and shortly after. [1] City/town include current town name, some of which were incorporated after 1893.
The Newport and Narragansett Bay Railroad is a heritage railroad that operates on Aquidneck Island, Rhode Island. It was formed in 2014-15 from the merger of the for-profit Newport Dinner Train and the nonprofit Old Colony and Newport Scenic Railway.
The Old Colony and Fall River Railroad operated from 1854 to 1863, and later as part of the extensive Old Colony Railroad system. [1] The museum is located directly across from the former Fall River Line Terminal, part of the Old Colony's "boat train" service between Boston and New York City.
The railroad of the Old Colony Railroad Company, herein called the Old Colony Railroad, is a standard-gage, steam railroad, located in the States of Massachusetts and Rhode Island. The principal main lines extend from Boston, Mass., to Newport, R.I.; Middleboro to Provincetown, Mass.; and Fitchburg and Lowell to New Bedford, Mass.
Old Colony Railroad Station is an historic Italianate train station located off Dean Street (US Route 44) in Taunton, Massachusetts.The historic station, also known as Dean Street, is proposed to be joined by the modern Taunton station around 2030 as part of Phase 2 of the South Coast Rail project.
The New Haven Railroad ended its remaining Old Colony Division service, including commuter service to South Hanson, on June 30, 1959. [3] The former station building remains intact, though unused. [4] On September 29, 1997, the MBTA restored commuter rail service on the two Old Colony Lines, part of the former Old Colony Railroad system. [1]
The Old Colony Railroad opened from Plymouth to South Boston in November 1845. [4] Savin Hill was a flag stop for South Braintree and Dorchester and Milton Branch trains by 1848. [5] A station building was located just north of the modern location by 1852. [6] The station was moved to its modern location just south of Savin Hill Avenue by 1874. [7]