Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Power of street authority or district council to do street works Offences Recovery of costs or expenses Service of notices and other documents Reckoning of periods. Arbitration Agreements inconsistent with Part III Effect on certain and all other special enactments or instruments Former controlled land Meanings and index of expressions
A login page may have a return URL parameter, which specifies where to redirect back after logging in or out. For example, it is returnto= on this site. In the case of websites that use cookies to track sessions, when the user logs out, session-only cookies from that site will usually be deleted from the user's computer.
Peschkes (Part Four, 1998, Page 57) states that, although included in some statistics, the following (horse-drawn) streetcar systems were not built: Beloit. Dighton. Peschkes states that one source, dated 1888, states that this town had a streetcar line, but no confirmation was found. El Dorado. Marion. Peschkes states that "there is no more ...
Ex-Eastern Mass. Street Railway car 4387 at the Seashore Trolley Museum 1930s map of Eastern Mass streetcar and bus lines. The Eastern Massachusetts Street Railway (Eastern Mass) was a streetcar and later bus company in eastern Massachusetts, serving northern and southern suburbs of Boston, Massachusetts.
A few years later when Galesburg was selected for the "Main Street Project" in 1977 it made front page news just below the Galesburg Register-Mail masthead. In the article, Robert Carter with the National Trust for Historic Preservation commented "One of the problems we face in this type of work has never been done before."
The growing transportation systems in the United States did not develop just through historical transportation uses such as horses and wagons. [1] The exploration experiences of the Spanish, British, and French settlers as they sailed through the ocean reaching land became an opportunity to develop possible transportation systems.
The OC Streetcar is a modern streetcar line currently under construction in Orange County, California, running through the cities of Santa Ana and Garden Grove.The electric-powered streetcar will be operated by the Orange County Transportation Authority (OCTA), and will serve ten stops in each direction along its 4.15-mile (6.68 km) route.
The Authority, successor to the New Jersey Expressway Authority and the Atlantic County Transportation Authority (ACTA), is responsible for coordinating South Jersey's transportation system, including highways, airports and other transportation needs.