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Research Notes from Park Genealogical Books.
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Nacogdoches & Southeastern Railroad Company
Collection held at the Stephen F. Austin State University.
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Railroad Workers Memorial, Cotter, Arkansas, Trout Capital USA
A memorial dedicated to the history of the White River Division of the St. Louis, Iron Mountain and Southern Railroad and the people who made that history. Includes a list of over 200 names of those history makers and their jobs.
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Railroads and the Making of Modern America
From the University of Nebraska Lincoln. Includes photos, databases, and much more.
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A not-for-profit online project which provides access to electronic copies of original documents, together with supporting data, which have played a key role in driving and reflecting change on the railways of the United Kingdom. Includes railway Law, safety, economics, and politics.
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Cheshire, England. From the Cheshire West and Chester Council, Cheshire Record Office web site. The Archives holds 17 staff registers of 4 former railway companies: Cambrian Railway, Great Western Railway, London and North Western Railway, London and North Western & Great Western Joint Railway. The registers cover staff working over a large area of the North West including western Cheshire, Shropshire, Herefordshire and nine counties in North and mid Wales. They do not include stations in the east of Cheshire (eg Crewe). The registers provide a summary of an employee
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The Texas Transportation Archive Employee Database Project attempts to
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The Auburn Branch of the New York & Oswego Midland Railroad
This branch, which ran from Norwich to Scipio NY, was later operated by the Utica, Ithaca & Elmira, then the Elmira, Cortland & Northern, and finally by the Lehigh Valley.
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The St. Louis San Francisco Railroad did not make it to California like the name implies. Missouri was its center point. It was better known as The Frisco. Information relating to employment on the line from 1895 to the 1940s.
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The Frisco: A Look Back at the St. Louis-San Francisco Railway
From the Springfield-Green County Library
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There is no longer a Railway in Malta, it closed down in 1931 mainly due to the introduction of Trams and Motor Buses, but it is still possible to find visible traces of the railway.
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Railroads » Locality Specific
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