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The Heartland Flyer is a daily passenger train that follows a 206-mile (332 km) route between Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, and Fort Worth, Texas. It is operated by Amtrak and jointly funded by the states of Oklahoma and Texas. [3] The train's daily round-trip begins in Oklahoma City in the morning and reaches Fort Worth in the early afternoon.
Fort Worth Central Station (Amtrak: FTW) is an intermodal transit center in downtown Fort Worth, Texas. It serves two commuter rail lines ( TEXRail and Trinity Railway Express ), two (later three) Amtrak intercity rail lines ( Texas Eagle , Heartland Flyer and proposed Crescent (train) ), and Greyhound intercity bus .
Heartland Flyer: State-supported Oklahoma City – Fort Worth: 821, 822: 1 80,371 206 Hiawatha: State-supported Chicago – Milwaukee: 329–343 6 (Monday-Saturday), 5 (Sunday) 665,279 86 Illini and Saluki: State-supported Chicago – Carbondale: 390–393 2 296,616 310 Illinois Zephyr and Carl Sandburg: State-supported Chicago – Quincy: 380 ...
The proposed Heartland Flyer extension would link Kansas with Oklahoma City and Dallas/Fort Worth. All of the cities along the route would connect with Amtrak’s Southwest Chief, which serves ...
This is a route-map template for the Heartland Flyer, an Amtrak train service in the United States.. For a key to symbols, see {{railway line legend}}.; For information on using this template, see Template:Routemap.
Fort Worth: Trinity Metro: TEXRail: Fort Worth Central Station [a] Serves Fort Worth Convention Center, Fort Worth Water Gardens, Sundance Square Trinity Metro: TEXRail Amtrak: Heartland Flyer Texas Eagle: Trinity Lakes [b] Will serve planned Trinity Lakes mixed-use transit-oriented development: Bell [c] Hurst [d]
The Inter-American entered service in 1973 as short-distance train between Laredo and Fort Worth. It was extended north to St. Louis in 1974 and further to Chicago in 1976. In 1974 Amtrak renamed the Super Chief to the Southwest Limited and the Texas Chief to the Lone Star following the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway revoking permission ...
Passenger rail service ceased on December 5, 1979 with the discontinuation of Amtrak's Lone Star train. The railway deeded the depot to the city on October 19, 1981, [4] and it was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1983. [3] On June 15, 1999, the station was brought into service once again for Amtrak's new Heartland Flyer ...