In Mind The Gap, when a Commuter train heading to Lonchester has no destination set, it will route itself on the original Overground loop, via Cross Road, Dellgate, Wolfmill, and Herrington.
Episodes
Season 1 (2016-present)
| No. overall | No. in season | Title | Time | Original air date | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 1 | "Worst Games on Roblox 1" | 13:27 | June 19, 2016 | |
| Xenowolf introduces himself, BobBobbingSon1999 creates his account on Roblox, changes his avatar, and reviews 3 games: Welcome to the Town of Robloxia, Prison Life, and his own place, BobBobbingson1999's Place. | |||||
| 2 | 2 | "Worst Games on Roblox #2" | 10:47 | June 29, 2016 | |
| BobBobbingson1999 plays Farmulator, ..., and "Don't Fall in The Toilet Obby!" | |||||
| 3 | 3 | "Worst Games on Roblox #3" | 12:16 | July 5, 2016 | |
| Giga Gamby plays as BobBobbingson1999, reviews two games, which is Boys and Girls Dance Club and Mountain Exploration 1 and 2, but is taken over by BobBobbingson1999 himself, and the latter again reviews a game called Welcome to the Town of Robloxia. | |||||
| 4 | 4 | "Worst Games on Roblox #4" | 13:09 | August 15, 2016 | |
| BobBobbingson1999 plays Pokemon Tycoon, briefly Who's That Pokemon, Roblox's Top Model and Pokemon GO Roblox. | |||||
| 5 | 5 | "Worst Games on Roblox #5" | 11:21 | September 20, 2016 | |
| BobBobbingson1999 plays Adopt and Raise a Cute Kid, ROBLOX High School, and Zombie Rush. | |||||
| 6 | 6 | "Worst Games on Roblox #6" | 14:46 | November 4, 2016 | |
| Leeson plays Fishing Simulator V3.9.1, Trick or Treat in Hallowsville, and Dave plays ROBLOX High School again to expose the girl who tried to ruin Bob's dream. | |||||
| 7 | 7 | "Worst Games on Roblox #7" | 12:40 | November 23, 2016 | |
| BobBobbingson1999 plays three games again: ROBLOX Pokemon Go, Welcome to the Town of Robloxia, and Roblox's Top Model, as a judge. | |||||
| 8 | 8 | "Worst Games on Roblox #8" | 12:43 (original) 10:03 (edited) | December 25, 2016 | |
|
BobBobbingson1999 plays ROBLOX High School, to get a girlfriend, and plays Adopt and Raise a Cute Kid, as a baby; and "Escape the Subway Obby!" Note: A part of the episode was cut out due to inappropiate content. | |||||
| 9 | 9 | "Worst Games on Roblox #9" | 12:02 | January 9, 2017 | |
| Shekel introduces himself, and plays "Design It!", The Plaza, and Trump Zombie Mystery RPG. | |||||
| 10 | 10 | "Worst Games on Roblox #10" | 29:36 | March 3, 2017 | |
| Xenowolf plays Airplane Life 2017, Grand Blox Auto, Life in Paradise by Games_Page, Musical Chairs, and The Horror Mall. | |||||
| 11 | 11 | "Worst Games on Roblox #11" | 18:59 | April 2, 2017 | |
| BobBobbingson1999 plays A Scary Story, Obby Overload, and Deadpool Tycoon. | |||||
| 12 | 12 | "Worst Games on Roblox #12" | 17:30 | April 14, 2017 | |
| BobBobbingson1999 plays "ESCAPE THE SWITCH!", Zelda Breath of the Wild Roblox, and "Tattletail Roleplay!" | |||||
| 13 | 13 | "Worst Games on Roblox #13" | 17:04 | May 12, 2017 | |
| Shekel plays DO NOT PLAY, Can You Survive Star Power Mario in Area 51, and Bloody Mary {Warning} Scary. | |||||
| 14 | 14 | "Worst Games on Roblox #14" | 15:53 | July 1, 2017 | |
| BobBobbingson1999 plays "Fidget Spinners!" by epicthrills123, Mario Kart 8 Deluxe by T0sh0r1t, and A Scary Story Classic. | |||||
| 15 | 15 | "Worst Games on Roblox #15" | 16:58 | September 8, 2017 | |
| BobBobbingson1999 plays "SLIDE 999,999,999 MILES!", "The Emoji Obby!!", and High School Dorm Life. | |||||
| 16 | 16 | "Worst Games on Roblox #16" | 15:52 | October 31, 2017 | |
| BobBobbingson1999 plays Weight Lifting Simulator 2, High School Dorm Life, to ruin the life of his teacher; and Halloween Night by Derpie Studios. | |||||
| 17 | 17 | "Worst Games on Roblox #17" | 18:25 | December 23, 2017 | |
|
BobBobbinson1999 plays "Cuphead Roleplay!", Rick And Morty [RP] by mariogiver, and Super Mario Odyssey RP. Xenowolf does the Worst Games on Roblox Awards. "Slide 999,999,999 Miles!" wins "Most Free-Modeled Game", with 677 (52.5%) of total votes; Episode 11 wins "Funniest Episode", with 472 (36.6%) total votes; "The Hypocrite" wins "Best Hate Comment", with 596 (42.2%) total votes; and Can You Survive Star Power Mario in Area 51 wins "Worst Game Of The Year", with 557 (43.2%) total votes. | |||||
| 18 | 18 | "Worst Games on Roblox #18" | 15:22 | April 6, 2018 | |
| BobBobbingson1999 plays Super Smash Bros Roblox, Robloxian Life by DemSkittlesDoee, and "Play as Anthro!" by Duzuma. | |||||
| 19 | 19 | "Worst Games on Roblox #19" | 16:40 | June 11, 2018 | |
| BobBobbingson1999 plays YouTuber Tycoon by #YouTube, Robloxian Life, to destroy an online dater; and ESCAPE GYM by Packstabber Games™. | |||||
| 20 | 20 | "Worst Games on Roblox #20" | 22:18 | September 7, 2018 | |
| Shekel plays Growing Up by ScottSpiritWalker, Soda Drinking Simulator, and The Floor is Lava by TheLegendOfPyro. | |||||
| 21 | 21 | "Worst Games on Roblox #21" | 19:40 | November 30, 2018 | |
| BobBobbingson1999 plays Halloween Simulator by Nosniy Games™, "⭐ Survive a Crash to VIP Island! ⭐", and Zombie Hunter. | |||||
| 22 | 22 | "Worst Games on Roblox #22" | 25:02 | December 23, 2018 | |
| BobBobbingson1999 plays "Christmas Obby! [65 Stages]", Chritsmas Tycoon by *Crown Productions*, and North Pole Simulator. | |||||
| 23 | 23 | "Worst Games on Roblox #23" | 21:06 | February 22, 2019 | |
| BobBobbingson1999 plays "Doodley!", Agents, and SCP-106 by Mayk728. | |||||
| 24 | 24 | "Worst Games on Roblox #24" | 19:27 | May 7, 2019 | |
| BobBobbingson1999 plays Escape Escape Escape Escape Escape Escape Escape E, Hotel Elephant, and Horrific Housing. | |||||
| 25 | 25 | "Worst Games on Roblox #25" | 32:56 | September 7, 2021 | |
| BobBobbingson1999 plays 3008 by uglyburger0, and Brookhaven RP; Shekel plays Guess The Logo by AimFever and Among Us by MarcoSaurio, and Xenowolf plays FNAF Anime RP. | |||||
| 26 | 26 | "Worst Games on Roblox #26" | 26:00 | October 11, 2021 | |
|
Xenowolf plays Texting Simulator, Eating Simulator, Squid Game by kasstro, and Fish Game. Note: The games played in the episode are played in let's play style; Xenowolf also announced that he will be using real voices more and less text-to-speech voices, because it is boring to him. | |||||
| 27 | 27 | "Worst Games on Roblox #27" | 26:00 | October 31, 2021 | |
| Xenowolf plays some Halloween games. He plays Survive the Killer, Halloween Obby by ZombieObbys, and Scary Stories 2 (Jumpscares) by saracandy132. | |||||
| 28 | 28 | "Worst Games on Roblox #28" | 17:41 | December 12, 2021 | |
| BobBobbingson1999 plays The Mysterious Party by Edguita Studios, Color Block by 11aganfy, and Climb 1,000 Stairs by Vez Studios. | |||||
| 29 | 29 | "Worst Games on Roblox #29" | 17:40 | December 25, 2021 | |
| Shekel plays "Saving Christmas 2021!" by StoryCraft, Home Alone (STORY) by ChainLemonade Studios, and Save Christmas from Grinch by catykatejan. | |||||
| 30 | 30 | "Worst Games on Roblox #30" | 17:36 | February 10, 2022 | |
| BobBobbingson1999 plays ⬆️ GET TO THE TOP! ⬆️ [NEW SHOP!] by PlatinumFalls, Escape Running Head by manato48, and The Dropper by KoolWaterLK. | |||||
| 31 | 31 | "Worst Games on Roblox #31" | 24:00 | April 20, 2022 | |
|
Xenowolf and zachbealetv plays Nanny by ECB Studios, It Lurks by ragingskull182, and Scary Stories Unexpected use of template {{2}} - see Template:2 for details. (JUMPSCARES) by saracandy132. | |||||
| 32 | 32 | "Worst Games on Roblox #32" | 14:12 | August 9, 2022 | |
| Xenowolf plays "Survive and Kill the Killers in Area 51 !!!", Bitcoin Miner, and TikTok Dances 3 (TTD 3). | |||||
| 33 | 33 | "Worst Games on Roblox #33" | 17:19 | February 15, 2023 | |
| Xenowolf plays [💗 NEW] Valentines Obby by Dreamzy Studios, 🍫Chocolate Factory Tycoon by FutureWeb Games, and Ballroom Dance ⭐ by Ballroom Dance. | |||||
| 34 | 34 | "Worst Games on Roblox #34" | 17:32 | March 10, 2023 | |
| Xenowolf plays "MINI MARIO 2.0" by kirillka5657, Red Plumber Adventure Obby! by Aurarus, and "(NEW) Escape King Turtle's Kingdom Obby!" by FrootLoopsPoptart. | |||||
| 35 | 35 | "Worst Games on Roblox #35" | 18:08 | March 17, 2023 | |
| Xenowolf plays "Save St. Patricks Day!" by DeathWeazel, "St. Patrick's Day Obby!" by Snowbox Games, and "[🍕 PIZZA!] Leprechaun Simulator" by Buckaboo Games. | |||||
List of railway electrification systems
Overhead systems
AC voltage
| Voltage | Frequency | Country | Location | Name of system | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3,300 | 15 Hz | Tulare County, California | Visalia Electric Railroad | 1904–1992 | |
| 25 Hz | Napa and Solano Counties, California | San Francisco, Napa and Calistoga Railway | 1905–1937 | ||
| 5,500 | 16 2⁄3 Hz | Murnau | Ammergau Railway | 1905–1955, after 1955 15 kV, 16.7 Hz | |
| 6,250 | 50 Hz | London, Essex, Herts | Great Eastern suburban lines | Great Eastern suburban lines from Liverpool Street London, 1950s–c1980 (converted to 25 kV) | |
| Glasgow | Glasgow suburban lines | Sections of the North Clyde Line and Cathcart Circle Line from 1960-1970s | |||
| 6,300 | 25 Hz | Hamburg | Hamburg S-Bahn | Operated with AC 1907–1955. Used both AC and DC (1,200 V 3rd rail) 1940–1955. | |
| 6,500 | 25 Hz | Sankt Pölten | Mariazellerbahn | ||
| 6,600 | Orkdal | Thamshavnbanen | |||
| 6,600 | 50 Hz | Cologne Lowland | Hambachbahn and Nord-Süd-Bahn | transports lignite from open-pit mines to powerplants. Owned by RWE. | |
| 6,700 | 25 Hz | Morecambe branch line | Lancaster to Heysham | 1908–1951 Converted to 25 kV 50 Hz as a test bed for the future main line electrification system | |
| South London line | London Victoria station to London Bridge station | 1909–1928 Converted to 660 V (later 750 V) DC third-rail supply | |||
| 8 kV | 25 Hz | Karlsruhe | Alb Valley Railway | 1911–1966, today using 750 V DC | |
| 10 kV | The Hague - Rotterdam | Hofpleinlijn | from 1908, in 1926 converted to 1,500 DC, In 2006 replaced by 750 V DC light rail | ||
| 10 kV | 50 Hz | industrial railways at quarries | Russian Railways | operated from 1950s at coal and ore quarries | |
| Ukrainian Railways | |||||
| some private industrial railways in Kazakhstan | |||||
| 11 kV | 16 2⁄3 Hz | Graubünden | Rhätische Bahn (RhB) | Except the Bernina line, which is electrified at 1,000 V DC | |
| Matterhorn-Gotthard-Bahn (MGB) | formerly Furka Oberalp Bahn (FO) and BVZ Zermatt-Bahn | ||||
| 50 Hz | Saint-Gervais-les-Bains | Mont Blanc Tramway | |||
| 11 kV | 25 Hz | Pennsylvania Railroad Etc., |
All lines now 12 kV 25 Hz or 12.5 kV 60 Hz See Railroad electrification in the United States | ||
| Bronx and Westchester County, New York | New York, Westchester and Boston Railway | 1912-1937 | |||
| Washington | Cascade Tunnel | Converted from three-phase 6600 V 25 Hz in 1927, dismantled 1956 | |||
| Colorado | Denver and Intermountain Railroad | dismantled c. 1953[1] | |||
| 12 kV | 16 2⁄3 Hz | lines in Pyrenees | Chemin de fer du Midi | most converted to 1,500 V 1922–23; Villefranche-Perpignan diesel 1971, then 1,500 V 1984 | |
| 12 kV | 25 Hz | Washington, DC - New York City | Northeast Corridor (NEC), Amtrak | 11 kV until 1978 | |
| Harrisburg, PA to Philadelphia, PA | Keystone Corridor, Amtrak | 11 kV until 1978 | |||
| Philadelphia | SEPTA | Regional Rail system only; 11 kV until 1978 | |||
| 12 kV | 25 Hz | Rahway to Aberdeen-Matawan, New Jersey | North Jersey Coast Line, New Jersey Transit | 1978-2002 (11 kV until 1978). Converted to 25 kV 60 Hz | |
| 12.5 kV | 60 Hz | Pelham, NY-New Haven, CT | New Haven Line, Metro-North Railroad, Amtrak | 11 kV until 1985 | |
| 16 kV | 50 Hz | Budapest–Hegyeshalom railway | Budapest to Hegyeshalom | Kandó system 1931–1972, converted to 25 kV 50 Hz | |
| 20 kV | 50 Hz | Freiburg | Höllentalbahn | Operated 1933–1960. Converted to 15 kV 16 2⁄3 Hz. | |
| Aix-les-Bains – La Roche-sur-Foron | Société Nationale des Chemins de fer (SNCF) | Operated 1950–1953. Converted to 25 kV 50 Hz. | |||
| 20 kV | 50 Hz | most electrified JR/the third sector lines in Hokkaidō and Tōhoku | JR East, JR Hokkaidō, and others | ||
| 60 Hz | most electrified JR/the third sector lines in Kyūshū and Hokuriku region | JR Kyūshū and others | |||
| 50 kV | 50 Hz | Northern Cape, Western Cape | Sishen–Saldanha railway line | opened in 1976 and hauls iron ore | |
| 60 Hz | British Columbia | Tumbler Ridge Subdivision of BC Rail (Now Canadian National Railway) | Opened in 1983 to serve a coal mine in the northern Rocky Mountains. No longer in use. | ||
| 60 Hz | Arizona | Black Mesa and Lake Powell Railroad | First line to use 50 kV electrification when it opened in 1973. This was an isolated coal-hauling short line; no longer in use. | ||
| 60 Hz | Utah | Deseret Power Railroad | Formerly Deseret Western Railway. This is an isolated coal-hauling short line. |
Third rail
Bottom contact
Top contact
Video game releases of 2013 (July-September)
July–September
October–December
Far Lands Minecraft (in rolling stock format)
| Far Lands | |
|---|---|
| In service | March 27, 2010-November 2, 2021 |
| Manufacturer | Glitched |
| Designer | Glitched |
| Constructed | 2010 |
| Entered service | March 27, 2010 |
| Number built | 18,446,744,000,000,000,000 |
| Number in service | 18,446,744,000,000,000,000 |
| Number preserved | 0 |
| Number scrapped | 18,446,744,000,000,000,000 |
| Line(s) served | Anybody's world |
Timeline of the London Overground
2007
- 11 November: London Overground takes over the North London Railway routes from Silverlink Metro.
2008
2009
- 15th April: North London line trains at Stratford was moved to new high-level platforms 1 and 2 from low-level platforms 1 and 2, which were needed for the Docklands Light Railway's Stratford International service. The new platforms 1 and 2 are an island platform with step-free access to platform 12 and subway links to platforms 3–11.
- 29 July: British Rail Class 378 Electrostars introduced.
- 27th September: Imperial Wharf station opened on the West London line, between West Brompton and Clapham Junction.
2010
- 19th February: Last day of British Rail Class 313 operation on the North and West London Lines
- 27th April: East London Line reopening phase 1, with extension northwards, mostly along the former Broad Street viaduct of the North London line, to the re-opened Dalston Junction, and southwards to Crystal Palace and West Croydon.
- 10th July: The Class 172 enters service on the Gospel Oak to Barking Line.
- 13th September: Last day of Class 313 operations on the Watford DC Line, and the Overground network as a whole.
- 28th October: Last day of Class 150 operation on the Gospel Oak to Barking Line.
WIP
HSR stuff
Some video title template I got from this YouTuber named "CHOO-CHOO!!Plane"
[Train company] [Rolling stock] Ride: [Destination 1] to [Destination 2] (via [Station]) - MM/DD/YY or DD/MM/YY
For example: Long Island Rail Road M7 Ride: Atlantic Terminal to Hempstead - 02/20/19
Stuff random
| DaMobile12/sandbox | |
|---|---|
| In service | M1: 1968-2007 M1A: 1971-2009 M3: 1985-2020 M3A: 1984-present |
| Manufacturer | Budd Company |
| Built at | Red Lion Assembly Plant Northeast Philadelphia, PA |
| Family name | Budd Metropolitan |
| Replaced | Pennsylvania Railroad MP54 New York Central MU Cars |
| Constructed | M1/M1A: 1968-1973 M3/M3A: 1984-1986 |
| Entered service | M1: 1968 M1A: 1971 M3: 1985 M3A: 1984 |
| Scrapped | M1: 2007 M1A: 2009 M3: 2021 M3A: |
| Number built | 1264
|
| Number in service | M1: (2 in work service) M3: (4 in work service)[2] M3A: 142 |
| Number preserved | 2 (M1 only) |
| Number scrapped | 988
|
| Formation | Married Pair |
| Fleet numbers | M1: 9001-9770 M1A: 8200-8377 M3: 9771-9890, 9893-9946 M3A: 8000-8141 |
| Capacity | 120 (M3)[3] |
| Operator(s) | Long Island Rail Road Penn Central Conrail Metro-North Railroad |
| Specifications | |
| Car body construction | Stainless Steel, with fiberglass end caps on the operating ends |
| Train length | 170 ft (51.82 m) - 1,020 ft (310.90 m) |
| Car length | 85 ft (25.91 m) |
| Width | 10 ft 6 in (3,200 mm) |
| Height | 13 ft (3,962 mm) excluding rooftop horns |
| Floor height | 4 ft (1,219 mm) |
| Platform height | 4 ft (1,219 mm) |
| Doors | Quarter point, double leaf automatic |
| Maximum speed | 100 mph (160 km/h) design 80 mph (130 km/h) service |
| Traction system | DC camshaft resistance control (GE) |
| Traction motors | M1/M1A: 4 × 148 hp (110 kW) GE 1255 A2 DC motor M3/M3A: 4 × 160 hp (120 kW) GE 1261 DC motor |
| Power output | M1/M1A: 592 hp (441 kW) M3/M3A: 640 hp (480 kW) |
| Train heating | electric heat, air conditioning |
| Electric system(s) | 650–750 V DC third rail |
| Current collection method | Contact shoe |
| Bogies | M1: Budd Pioneer M3: General Steel GSI 70 |
| Braking system(s) | Pneumatic, dynamic |
| Safety system(s) | Cab signals with Automatic Train Control. emergency brakes |
| Coupling system | WABCO Model N-2 |
| Headlight type | Halogen light bulbs |
| Track gauge | 4 ft 8 1⁄2 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge |
HST CrossCountry parody page
After privatisation, the Cross-Country Route was operated by Virgin CrossCountry, who replaced their InterCity 125 trains in the period 2002–2004 with Bombardier Voyager high-speed DMUs.[39] Most of the former Virgin CrossCountry fleet were stored for several years but a few ran on the Midland Mainline.
In 2007 the franchise passed to Arriva CrossCountry. Because of overcrowding, the company reintroduced five HSTs to supplement its Voyagers.
In late September 2008, CrossCountry refurbished its first HST set: the coaches were refurbished to a similar "Mallard" standard as GNER trains, though their interior is in burgundy and there are fewer tables. They also differ from the East Coast sets in having electronic seat reservations, and the buffet car has been removed, with all catering provided at-seat from a catering base in coach B. Most of the carriages are rebuilt from loco-hauled Mark 3s. The refurbishment was carried out by Wabtec, Doncaster Works. Each set has had a TS removed, making them 2 power cars + 7 coaches.[30]
All carriages to be retained are to be fitted with automatic doors, toilets with controlled emission tanks and other accessibility modifications at Doncaster Works.
CrossCountry operated HSTs to the following destinations:
- Plymouth
- Leeds
- Edinburgh
- Dundee
- Glasgow
- Newquay (summer weekends only)
- Penzance (summer weekends only)
- Paignton (summer weekends only)
On 2023, CrossCountry retired their final InterCity 125 trains, which were replaced by CrossCountry with Class 221, which had been displaced thanks to the introduction of Class 805 and Class 807 at Avanti West Coast.
Streetcar lines in Brooklyn
BMT
Almost every surface line in Brooklyn eventually came under control of the Brooklyn and Queens Transit Corporation, a subsidiary of the Brooklyn–Manhattan Transit Corporation,[4] prior to the takeover of the lines by the New York City Board of Transportation on June 5, 1940. Many of the lines ended at the Brooklyn Bridge in downtown Brooklyn or Williamsburg Bridge in Williamsburg, with some going over to the Park Row or Essex Street terminals in Manhattan. The small number of BMT streetcar lines that operated only in Queens are also included here.
| Name | From | To | Major streets | Abandoned | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
East-west lines | |||||
| Sea Gate Line | Sea Gate | Sheepshead Bay | Surf Avenue, Neptune Avenue, and Emmons Avenue | December 1, 1946 | now the B36 bus |
| Norton's Point Line | Sea Gate | Coney Island | private right-of-way | November 7, 1948 | now the B74 bus |
| Norton's Point Shuttle | Sea Gate | Surf Avenue | September 26, 1935; also ran June 1943 | ||
| 86th Street Line | Bay Ridge | Coney Island | 3rd Avenue, 5th Avenue, 86th Street, and Cropsey Avenue | August 12, 1948 | now the B64 bus |
| Bay Ridge Avenue Line | Bay Ridge | Coney Island | 3rd Avenue, Bay Ridge Avenue, 13th Avenue, 86th Street, and Cropsey Avenue | May 15, 1949 | now the B1 bus |
| Bergen Beach Line | Flatbush | Bergen Beach | Flatbush Avenue and Avenue N | August 6, 1930 (east end); March 5, 1951 (whole line) | now the B41 bus |
| Cortelyou Road Line | Kensington | Flatbush | Cortelyou Road and 16th Avenue | July 23, 1930 | Replaced as part of B23 bus on July 23, 1930. Discontinued on June 27, 2010 due to a budget crisis. |
| Holy Cross Cemetery Line | Prospect Park South | Holy Cross Cemetery | Tilden Avenue | April 1, 1951 | |
| Church Avenue Line | Greenwood Heights | Brownsville | 39th Street and Church Avenue | October 31, 1956 | now the B35 bus |
| Gravesend and Church Avenues Line | Kensington | Brownsville | Gravesend Avenue (McDonald Avenue) and Church Avenue | June 1, 1949 | Identical service continued as branch of Church Avenue Line until 10/31/1956 |
| New Lots Avenue Line | Brownsville | New Lots | New Lots Avenue | September 1, 1947 | now the B15 bus |
| Fifteenth Street Line | Red Hook | Windsor Terrace | Hamilton Avenue and 15th Street | December 1, 1945 | |
| Union Street Line | Red Hook | Windsor Terrace | Union Street and Prospect Park West | December 1, 1945 | Replaced as part of B71 bus on December 1, 1945. Discontinued on June 27, 2010 due to a budget crisis. |
| St. Johns Place Line | Downtown | Brownsville | Atlantic Avenue, Sterling Place, St. Johns Place, and Rockaway Avenue | August 24, 1947 | now the B45 bus |
| Bergen Street Line | Red Hook | Ozone Park, Queens | Sackett Street, Bergen Street, and Liberty Avenue | July 20, 1947 | now the B65 bus |
| Fulton Street Line | Downtown | East New York | Fulton Street | August 10, 1941 | now the B25 bus |
| Putnam Avenue Line | Downtown | Ridgewood, Queens | Fulton Street, Putnam Avenue, and Halsey Street | September 21, 1941; restored November 29, 1942 to February 5, 1950 | now the B26 bus |
| Greene and Gates Avenues Line | Downtown | Ridgewood, Queens | Fulton Street, Greene Avenue, and Gates Avenue | October 5, 1941 | now the B52 bus |
| DeKalb Avenue Line | Brooklyn Bridge | Ridgewood, Queens | DeKalb Avenue and Seneca Avenue | January 30, 1949 | now the B38 bus |
| Montague Street Line | Downtown | Montague Street | |||
| Myrtle Avenue and Court Street Line | Red Hook | Ridgewood, Queens | Court Street and Myrtle Avenue | July 17, 1949 | now the B54 and B57 buses |
| Park Avenue Line | Brooklyn Bridge | Trinity Cemetery | Park Avenue and Wilson Avenue | June 19, 1930 | |
| Flushing Avenue Line | Brooklyn Bridge | Maspeth, Queens | Flushing Avenue | November 21, 1948 | now the B57 bus |
| Broadway Line | Williamsburg Bridge | Cypress Hills | Broadway and Fulton Street | January 15, 1950 | now the Q24 (ex-B22) bus |
| Williamsburg Bridge Local | Williamsburg Bridge | Williamsburg Bridge | December 4, 1948 | now the B39 bus | |
| Jamaica Line | Ocean Hill | Jamaica, Queens | Fulton Street and Jamaica Avenue | November 30, 1947 | now the Q56 (ex-B56) bus |
| Bushwick Avenue Line | Williamsburg Bridge | Ridgewood, Queens | Meserole Street, Bushwick Avenue, and Myrtle Avenue | September 1, 1947 | |
| Wilson Avenue Line | Williamsburg Bridge | Canarsie | Johnson Avenue, Wilson Avenue, and Rockaway Avenue | May 27, 1951 | now the B60 bus |
| Cypress Hills Cemetery Line | Ridgewood, Queens | Cypress Hills Cemetery, Queens | Cypress Avenue | September 1, 1947 | |
| Richmond Hill Line | Ridgewood, Queens | Jamaica, Queens | Myrtle Avenue | April 26, 1950 | now the Q55 (ex-B55) bus |
| Metropolitan Avenue Line | Williamsburg Bridge | Jamaica, Queens | Grand Street and Metropolitan Avenue | June 12, 1949 | now the Q54 (ex-B53) bus |
| Metropolitan Avenue Shuttle | Williamsburg | East Williamsburg | Metropolitan Avenue | 1920 | |
| Flushing-Ridgewood Line | Ridgewood, Queens | Flushing, Queens | Fresh Pond Road, Grand Avenue, and Corona Avenue | July 17, 1949 | now the Q58 (ex-B58) bus |
| Grand Street Line | Williamsburg | Maspeth, Queens | Grand Street and Grand Avenue | December 11, 1949 | now the Q59 (ex-B59) bus |
| Calvary Cemetery Line | Greenpoint | Calvary Cemetery, Queens | Greenpoint Avenue | January 26, 1930 | now the B24 bus |
North-south lines | |||||
| Furman Street Line | Red Hook | Downtown | Columbia Street and Furman Street | ||
| Hicks Street Line | Red Hook | Cobble Hill | Hicks Street | 1921 | |
| Erie Basin Line | Red Hook | Brooklyn Bridge | Columbia Street | March 5, 1944 | now the B61 bus |
| Crosstown Line | Red Hook | Greenpoint | Columbia Street, Flushing Avenue, Wythe Avenue, Driggs Avenue, Bedford Avenue, and Manhattan Avenue | January 27, 1951 | now the B61 & B62 bus |
| 65th Street-Fort Hamilton Line | Fort Hamilton | Sunset Park | 3rd Avenue and 2nd Avenue | March 1, 1942 | |
| Hamilton Avenue Line | Bay Ridge | Red Hook | 3rd Avenue and Hamilton Avenue | March 29, 1942 | Replaced as part of B33 bus on March 29, 1942. Discontinued on March 29, 1992. |
| Smith Street Line | Windsor Terrace | Brooklyn Bridge | 9th Street and Smith Street | February 11, 1951 | now the B57 bus |
| Third Avenue Line | Fort Hamilton | Brooklyn Bridge | 3rd Avenue | March 1, 1942 | B37 bus until June 2010, service restored June 29, 2014 |
| Fifth Avenue Line | Fort Hamilton | Cobble Hill | 5th Avenue and Atlantic Avenue | February 20, 1949 | now the B63 bus |
| Seventh Avenue Line | Windsor Terrace | Brooklyn Bridge | 7th Avenue and Flatbush Avenue | February 11, 1951 | now the B67 bus |
| Eighth Avenue Line | Bay Ridge | Sunset Park | 8th Avenue and 39th Street | May 15, 1949 | now the B70 bus |
| West End Line | Coney Island | Sunset Park | New Utrecht Avenue | June 28, 1947 | |
| Sixteenth Avenue Line | New Utrecht | Kensington | 16th Avenue and Cortelyou Road | January 26, 1930 | Replaced as part of B23 bus. Discontinued on June 27, 2010 due to a budget crisis. |
| McDonald Avenue Line | Coney Island | Windsor Terrace | McDonald Avenue | October 31, 1956 | |
| Coney Island Avenue Line | Coney Island | Windsor Terrace | Coney Island Avenue | November 30, 1955 | now the B68 bus |
| Greenpoint Line | Downtown | Greenpoint | Myrtle Avenue, Kent Avenue, and Franklin Street | November 19, 1945 | |
| Flatbush Avenue Line | Marine Park | Downtown | Flatbush Avenue | March 5, 1951 | now the B41 bus |
| Vanderbilt Avenue Line | Windsor Terrace | Downtown | Vanderbilt Avenue and Flushing Avenue | August 20, 1950 | now the B69 bus |
| Franklin Avenue Line | Prospect Park South | Williamsburg Bridge | Franklin Avenue and Wythe Avenue | October 28, 1945 | now the B48 bus |
| Ocean Avenue Line | Sheepshead Bay | Crown Heights | Ocean Avenue and Rogers Avenue | April 29, 1951 | now the B49 bus |
| Nostrand Avenue Line | Sheepshead Bay | Williamsburg Bridge | Nostrand Avenue and Lee Avenue | April 1, 1951 | now the B44 bus |
| Meeker and Marcy Avenues Line | Stuyvesant Heights | Greenpoint | Marcy Avenue and Meeker Avenue | April 17, 1939 | now the B24 bus |
| Tompkins Avenue Line | Prospect Park | Williamsburg Bridge | Empire Boulevard, Kingston Avenue, and Tompkins Avenue | August 24, 1947 | now the B43 bus |
| Union Avenue Line | Ridgewood, Queens | Greenpoint | Knickerbocker Avenue, Flushing Avenue, and Union Avenue | December 1, 1945 | |
| Lorimer Street Line | Prospect Park South | Greenpoint | Franklin Avenue, Lorimer Street, and Nassau Avenue | December 14, 1947 | now the B48 bus |
| Graham Avenue Line | Brooklyn Bridge | Hunters Point, Queens | Flushing Avenue, Graham Avenue, and Manhattan Avenue | December 21, 1948 | now the B43 bus |
| Sumner Avenue Line | Brownsville | Williamsburg Bridge | 98th Street, Sumner Avenue (Marcus Garvey Boulevard), and Broadway | July 20, 1947 | now the B15 bus |
| Utica and Reid Avenues Line | Flatlands | Williamsburg Bridge | Utica Avenue, Reid Avenue, and Broadway | March 18, 1951 | now the B46 bus |
| Ralph Avenue Line | Brownsville | Williamsburg Bridge | 98th Street, Ralph Avenue, and Broadway | November 1, 1943 | now the B47 bus |
| Ralph and Rockaway Avenues Line | Brownsville | Williamsburg Bridge | Rockaway Avenue, Ralph Avenue, and Broadway | May 27, 1951 | now the B47 bus |
| Rockaway Parkway Line | Canarsie Landing | Canarsie | Rockaway Parkway | April 29, 1951 | now the B42 bus |
| North Beach Line | Elmhurst, Queens | North Beach, Queens | Junction Boulevard | August 24, 1949 | now the Q72 (ex-B72) bus |
Other companies
| Name | From | To | Major streets | Abandoned | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Manhattan Bridge Three Cent Line | Downtown Brooklyn | Chinatown, Manhattan | Manhattan Bridge | November 13, 1929 | Replaced as part of first version of B15 bus on November 13, 1929. Changed to a branch of the B63, and finally the B51. Discontinued on June 27, 2010 due to a budget crisis. |
| Hudson Avenue Line | Prospect Park | Downtown | Flatbush Avenue and Hudson Avenue | 1871 |
PRR
| Reporting mark | PRR |
|---|---|
| Locale | Northeastern United States |
| Dates of operation | April 13, 1846–January 31, 1968 (renamed to Penn Central Transportation Company) |
| Successor | Penn Central Transportation Company |
| Track gauge | 4 ft 8 1⁄2 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge |
| Previous gauge | at one time 4 ft 9 in (1,448 mm) |
| Electrification | 12.5 kV 25 Hz AC: New York City-Washington, D.C./South Amboy; Philadelphia-Harrisburg; North Jersey Coast Line 650V DC: Long Island Rail Road |
| Length | 11,640.66 miles (18,733.83 kilometers) (1926) |
| Headquarters | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania |
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- ↑ "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 22 September 2020.
- ↑ https://new.mta.info/document/25251 page 143
- ↑ "Supplementary Information for §1269(d) 2012 – 2017" (PDF). mta.info. Metropolitan Transportation Authority. 2012. Retrieved July 24, 2016.
- ↑ BMT Surface Division map, undated
