Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The museum sponsors passenger excursion train trips on a seasonal schedule between Medina and Lockport - as well as hosting an annual (June) Thomas the Tank Engine, Day Out with Thomas events. In 1997 the boundaries of the village's Main Street Historic District were redrawn to include the building as a contributing property after research ...
Cooperstown and Charlotte Valley Railroad; Delaware and Ulster Railroad; Medina Railroad Museum; New York Museum of Transportation; New York Transit Museum; Railroad Museum of Long Island; Rochester & Genesee Valley Railroad Museum; Saratoga Corinth & Hudson Railway; Saratoga and North Creek Railway (Closed in April 2018) Trolley Museum of New York
The Niagara & Western New York Railroad (reporting mark NIAX) was a short-lived company that operated a heritage railroad and excursion train service over the tracks of the Falls Road Railroad. Trains operated between Lockport and Medina, New York for a single season in 2002. Three locomotives were leased from Guilford Rail System: two GE U18Bs ...
RIDE THE RAILS: 12 best Amtrak vacations and scenic train rides in North America The Green Mountain State is known for its autumn displays with oak, maple, and ash trees exploding in rainbow pops ...
Medina Railroad Museum, 530 West Street. A 300-by-40-foot (91 by 12 m) timber frame clapboard-sided structure built in 1905 that is believed to be the largest extant wooden freight depot in the country. It was converted to its present purpose in 1991. New York Central Railroad Station, 615 West Street.
Medina / m ɪ ˈ d aɪ n ə / [4] is a village in the Towns of Shelby and Ridgeway in Orleans County, New York, United States.It is located approximately 10 miles south of Lake Ontario.
The name was used by the New York Central beginning in 1967, but dropped by Amtrak in 1971. [4] Amtrak restored the Empire Service brand with the June 11, 1972, timetable, and added individual train names on the May 19, 1974, timetable.
The FGLK operates 18 diesel locomotives on 167 miles (269 km) of ex-Conrail trackage, formerly owned by the New York Central Railroad, the Pennsylvania Railroad and the Lehigh Valley Railroad. Between 2001 and 2013, the railroad operated a heritage railroad known as the Finger Lakes Scenic Railway which offered passenger train excursions. [1] [2]