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Foreston Central station layout (Foreston Metro Transit Simulator Roblox)

Caption text
side platform
Ostarlanian Railways terminates here ->
<- Ostarlanian Railways suburban service to ???
island platform
No regular service
No regular service
island platform, unused
No regular service
No regular service
island platform
Metro Line 2 to Kennet-Kelbrook ->
<- Metro Line 2 to Pavlov Port
island platform
Metro Line 1 to Lubelskaya ->
<- Metro Line 1 to Victory Park
side platform

Line 4

Caption text
Metro Line 4 terminates here ->
island platform
<- Metro line 4 to Zatino

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Episode list of WGOR (revamped)

No.
overall
No. in
season
TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal air dateProd.
code
U.K. viewers
(millions)
11"Worst Games on Roblox #1"XenowolfXenowolfTBAJune 19, 2016 (2016-06-19)1–010.4
22"Worst Games on Roblox #2"XenowolfXenowolfTBAJune 29, 2016 (2016-06-29)1–020.3

MurphyRune: The Christie Revolving

Rail Transport in ALEX AND MATTHEW Minecraft World

There are currently two railroad lines operating in the ALEX AND MATTHEW (Minecraft) world. One is a railroad from the mountain shore to the now-destroyed guest-house, and another one runs from the mountain shore to the hilltop, with a former (now-demolished/destroyed) branch line to the now-destroyed Second House. The latter was destroyed around 2019, but was rebuilt and put back to service on October 10, 2021.

Map Men

Map Men is a series of educational YouTube videos co-presented with Mark Cooper-Jones. The series is largely influenced by Horrible Histories and premiered in 2016 and ended in 2021. It consists of around 5 minutes long videos about specific maps and abnormalities considering them.

Part Title Subject Uploaded
1 "Bir Tawil – the land that nobody wants" Bir Tawil 4 May 2016
2 "Mappa Mundi – the worst world map?" Hereford Mappa Mundi 25 May 2016
3 "Where is the north/south divide?" North–South division of England 10 June 2016
4 "India/Bangladesh – The world's worst border" Enclaves on the India-Bangladesh border 8 July 2016
5 "Why is there a BLANK space in this map of East Berlin?" Maps leaving blank spaces, including the map of East Berlin with blank in the place of West Berlin 4 August 2016
6 "Who Owns the South China Sea?" Territorial disputes in the South China Sea 8 August 2016
7 "The world's oldest border?" Anglo-Scottish border 15 April 2019
8 "Why do maps show places that don't exist?" Trap streets 13 May 2019
9 "Why every world map is wrong" Map projection 20 June 2019
10 "How did triangles shrink France?" Cassini map 7 August 2019
11 "The world's silliest time zones" Time zone anomalies 2 September 2019
12 "The map that saved the most lives" 1854 Broad Street cholera outbreak 16 November 2020
13 "Why are British place names so hard to pronounce?" British place names 14 December 2020
14 "Why does Russia have the best maps of Britain?" The Soviet Union's maps made during the Cold War 11 January 2021
15 "What will the world look like in 250 million years?" Continental drift 15 February 2021
16 "Who Owns Antarctica?" Territorial claims in Antarctica 15 March 2021
17 "The mystery of the squarest country" Country border shapes (features a song in the style of Horrible Histories parodies) 12 April 2021
18 "Where is America?" Naming of the Americas 26 April 2021
19 "How do you start a new country?" Sovereignty 31 May 2021
20 "How many continents are there?" Number of continents 28 June 2021
21 "The longitude problem: history's deadliest riddle" History of longitude 28 July 2021
22 "English counties explained" Counties of England 13 September 2021

Politics Unboringed

Politics Unboringed is a series of educational YouTube videos with the first episode uploaded in 2015 and the last in 2017.[1] Each episode is roughly 5 minutes long and handles various topics relating to British politics.

Part Title Subject Uploaded
1 "Whom should I vote for?" Voting and British political parties 27 April 2015
2 "Is there a good reason for NOT voting?" Abstention 27 April 2015
3 "What is tactical voting?" Tactical voting 28 April 2015
4 "Who's in charge of Britain?" Government of the United Kingdom 29 April 2015
5 "Why don't politicians answer questions?" Gotcha journalism 2 May 2015
6 "Who is the Speaker of the House of Commons?" Speaker of the House of Commons 16 May 2017
7 "Why do they make that noise in PMQs?" Hear, hear and PMQs 7 June 2017
8 "How do you become a Lord?" Membership of the House of Lords 31 July 2017

Unfinished London

Unfinished London is a series of educational YouTube videos with the first episode uploaded in 2009. Each Unfinished London episode is roughly 10 minutes long and handles a specific area of evolution of London's infrastructure, urban planning and local government. Foreman describes it, on his YouTube description page as "A show about London's quirky, unexplained unbuilt infrastructure, exploring bridges over nothing, tunnels to nowhere, and borders that don't make any sense." The series has guest appearances from Beardyman, Tom Scott, Suzanna Kempner, Mark Silcox, Dan Bull, Stuart Ashen, Hannah Witton, TomSka, Dodie Clark, and Matt Lucas, amongst others.

Part Title Subject Uploaded
1 "The Unfinished Northern Line" Northern Heights plan 16 December 2009
2 "London's unfinished motorways" London Ringways 11 March 2011
3 "Why does London have so many airports?" Airports of London 29 May 2014
4 "Why does Heathrow need to expand?" 25 July 2014
5 "Why isn't cycling normal in London?" Cycling in London 15 March 2018
6 "Why drivers should want cycle lanes" 19 April 2018
7 "What happened to London's trams?" Trams in London 4 December 2018
8 "Where does London stop?" Creation of Greater London
and the London boroughs
1 March 2019
9 "Why does London have 32 boroughs?" 4 April 2020
10 "What's wrong with London's boroughs?" 8 May 2020
11 What happened to Old London Bridge? History of London Bridge 31 January 2022
12 Tower Bridge could have looked very different History of Tower Bridge 28 February 2022
13 Why are there no bridges in East London? Planned/never built bridges and tunnels in East London 23 May 2022

Rosentale

Rosentale is an AU where many of the characters are replaced with Michael Rosen's faces.

Trash bin/Storage

Alex Berry Twitter

Hello there.[2]

Top contact systems

Voltage Type Country Location Name of system Notes
50 See notes  United Kingdom Brighton Volk's Electric Railway Volk's Railway prior to 1884
(current fed through running rails)
110 third rail Claims to be the world's oldest operational electric railway
160 Volk's Railway between 1884 and 1980s
100 fourth rail Beaulieu Monorail at National Motor Museum current fed by 2 contact wires
180 See notes Germany Berlin-Lichterfelde Siemens streetcar Current fed through the running rails
Operated 1881–1891
200 third rail  United Kingdom Southend Southend Pier Railway Until 1902[3]
250 Hythe, Hampshire Hythe Pier Railway
United States Chicago, Illinois Chicago Tunnel Company Morgan Rack

1904, revenue service 1906–1908

300 Georgia New Athos Cave Railway
400 Germany Berchtesgaden Berchtesgaden Salt Mine Railway
440  United Kingdom London Post Office Railway Disused by post office since 2003[4] Now small section near Mount Pleasant operated as tourist attraction with battery powered stock[5]

150 V was used in station areas to limit train speed

550 Argentina Buenos Aires Buenos Aires Metro (Subterráneos de Buenos Aires) Only Line B
625 United States New York City New York City Subway A Division lines
630 4th rail London London Underground (LUL) Supplied at +420 V and -210 V (630 V total); It is proposed to increase the voltage to 750 V (+500 V and -250 V)[6]
630 Third rail United States Delaware and Montgomery Counties, Pennsylvania Norristown High Speed Line
650  United Kingdom London Euston to Watford DC Line Third rail with fourth rail bonded to running rail

To enable London Underground trains to operate between Queens Park and Harrow & Wealdstone. Similar bonding arrangements are used on the North London Line between Richmond and Gunnersbury and South West Trains Putney Bridge to Wimbledon.

650  United States New York City and Long Island Long Island Rail Road Original Pennsylvania Railroad electrification scheme to Pennsylvania Station (1910-1963). Upgraded to 750 V in the 1970s.
660  United Kingdom Southern Railway & LSWR some areas up to 1939, original standard, mostly upgraded to 750 V (except for sections that operate with LUL stock).
700 United States Baltimore, Maryland Baltimore Metro SubwayLink
800 Germany Berlin Berlin S-Bahn discontinued, today 750 V
825 North Korea Pyongyang Pyongyang Metro uses old 750 V Berlin U-Bahn rolling stock
1000 United States San Francisco Bay Area Rapid Transit [7]
1500 France Chambéry - Modane Culoz–Modane railway used between 1925 and 1976, today overhead wire

Test

SeasonEpisodesOriginally aired
First airedLast aired
112September 20, 2014 (2014-09-20)February 9, 2015 (2015-02-09)
28April 25, 2015 (2015-04-25)June 13, 2015 (2015-06-13)
312November 14, 2015 (2015-11-14)April 18, 2016 (2016-04-18)
423July 16, 2016 (2016-07-16)December 17, 2016 (2016-12-17)
516August 5, 2017 (2017-08-05)November 11, 2017 (2017-11-11)
612April 13, 2019 (2019-04-13)TBA
FilmDecember 2, 2017 (2017-12-02)

Announcements in the style of National Rail (United States)

Note: These are parody announcements.

Metro North

Hudson Line

Version 1

Welcome aboard the Metro North rail service to Poughkeepsie, calling at Harlem-125th Street, Yankees-E. 153rd Street, Morris Heights, University Heights, Marble Hill, Spuyten Duyvil, Riverdale, Ludlow, Yonkers, Glenwood, Greystone, Hastings-on-Hudson, Dobbs Ferry, Ardsley-on-Hudson, Irvington, Tarrytown, Philipse Manor, Scarborough, Ossining, Croton-Harmon, Cortlandt, Peekskill, Manitou, Garrison, Cold Spring, Breakneck Ridge, Beacon, New Hamburg, and Poughkeepsie.

Version 2

Welcome to this service for Poughkeepsie. Calling at Harlem-125th Street, Yankees-E. 153rd Street, Morris Heights, University Heights, Marble Hill, Spuyten Duyvil, Riverdale, Ludlow, Yonkers, Glenwood, Greystone, Hastings-on-Hudson, Dobbs Ferry, Ardsley-on-Hudson, Irvington, Tarrytown, Philipse Manor, Scarborough, Ossining, Croton-Harmon, Cortlandt, Peekskill, Manitou, Garrison, Cold Spring, Breakneck Ridge, Beacon, New Hamburg, and Poughkeepsie.

Long Island Rail Road (electric territory only)

Hempstead Branch

General

Welcome aboard the Long Island Rail Road service to Hempstead, calling at Nostrand Avenue, Jamaica, Hollis, Queens Village, Bellerose, Floral Park, Stewart Manor, Nassau Boulevard, Garden City, Country Life Press, and Hempstead.

When at the station

This is Bellerose. This train is for Hempstead. The next stop will be Floral Park.

Shore Line East (if it had electric trains)

To Old Saybrook

Welcome to this service for Old Saybrook. Calling at New Haven Union Station, New Haven State Street, Branford, Guilford, Madison, Clinton, Westbrook, and Old Saybrook.

To New London

Welcome to this service for Old Saybrook. Calling at New Haven State Street, Branford, Guilford, Madison, Clinton, Westbrook, Old Saybrook, and New London.

IRL LIRR Announcements

At Brentwood

This station is, Brentwood. This is a train to Penn Station. The next station is Deer Park.

PATH destination sign with British station codes

NNG

Cranford-Bayonne Shuttle map

stuff
Cranford
Roselle–Roselle Park
Elizabeth
Elizabethport
West 8th Street
East 22nd Street
East 33rd Street

LIRR Least used stations (WIP)

Least Used LIRR Station for 2020/21 period (current)

Southold
LocationUnited States
Platforms1
Key dates
July 29, 1844Opened
December 11, 2021Unofficially announced as least used station
Traffic
Passengers (2006)Decrease 3
Passengers (2012)Increase 10

This article will show a list of the top five least used stations of the Long Island Rail Road in the year stated. A least used station is a station that received the fewest entries/exits (described as a passenger) as defined by the Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) in a given timeframe. These statistics are never released by the MTA, so unofficial sources are used instead.

FE2 Crappy Bloodbath test

#1: Crappy Bloodbath v1.0 [Crazy] : Superstevew

Shitty levels (GD)

Shitty levels are levels that are based on other levels, mostly Extreme Demons, that have little to no decoration and 1.0 blocks. They can either be nerfed or unerfed.

The main list for "shitty" levels is the GD Shitty List, which is a parody of the Geometry Demonlist. Currently, the list classifies Shitty Frozen Cave as the hardest "shitty" Demon level in the game.

Trivia

  • The most downloaded and liked "shitty" level is Shitty Sonic Wave by RealOptagonus, at 1,849,023 downloads and 106,493 likes.

Shitty Nine Circles

HaiImKev

Shitty Nine Circles is a 2.1 Insane level created by HaiImKev. It is the tenth most downloaded Shitty Demon level in Geometry Dash. It is like Nine Circles by Zobros, but with 1.0 blocks. The level cannot be copied. The level also contains 5,997 objects.

GmD826

Shitty Circles is a 2.0 Insane level created by GmD826. It is like Nine Circles by Zobros, and the other "shitty" version of Nine Circles by HaiImKev, but it is unnerfed, meaning that the wave part still has the flashing lights, and Zobros's name is at the end. The password for this level is 826069. It is currently unknown how many objects this level has.

Emoji Test

🦴 🦴 🦴 🦴
🦴 🦴 🦴 🦴
🦴 🦴 🦴 🦴

🦴 🦴 💙 🦴 🦴

TSW2 "Rapid transit" cameo appearances

Boston Sprinter

  • Between Back Bay an Forest Hills station, the tracks of the Orange Line can be seen.

Long Island Rail Road

  • At Woodside station, when the player looks up, they can see the Woodside-61st Street station, which looks bare.

Largest wikis

Name Total Edits Views Users Active Users Admins Images Updated
1 Operator's Life Wiki 116 454 TBA 6 2 2 10 2021-12-09
2 Transit City Roblox Wiki 103 664 TBA 8 2 2 26 2021-12-19
3 Potato Transit Authority Wiki 92 1,833 TBA 27 9 1 366 2021-12-24
4 Robloxian Automatic Subway 2 Wiki 82 405 TBA 10 2 1 6 2021-12-24
5 New York, Streets, Highways, and Routes Wiki 74 842 TBA 7 3 1 1 2021-12-24

England

City or town Namesake Notes
Abingdon-on-Thames, Oxfordshire Abingdon, Maryland [8]
Acton, London Acton, Maine [9]
Alton, Hampshire Alton, New Hampshire [9]
Amesbury, Wiltshire Amesbury, Massachusetts [9]
Great and Little Amwell, Hertfordshire East Amwell Township, New Jersey [10]
Andover, Hampshire Andover, Massachusetts [9]
Andover, New Jersey
Ashburnham, Sussex Ashburnham, Massachusetts [10]
Ashton Ashton, South Dakota [11] needs disambiguation
Aston, Oxfordshire Aston Township, Pennsylvania  
Attleborough, Norfolk Attleboro, Massachusetts [9]
Barnstaple, Devon Barnstable, Massachusetts [9]
Barton-upon-Humber, Lincolnshire Barton, Maryland [8]
Bath, Somerset Bath, Maine [9]
Battle, East Sussex Battle, Maryland[12] [8]
Beddington, Surrey Beddington, Maine [13]
Bedminster, Bristol Bedminster, New Jersey [14]
Beenham, Berkshire Beenham, New Mexico[15] [16]
Berwick-upon-Tweed, Northumberland Berwick, Maine [9]
Beverley, East Riding of Yorkshire Beverly, Massachusetts [9]
Bexley, Kent Bexley, Ohio [17]
Bideford, Devon Biddeford, Maine [9]
Billericay, Essex Billerica, Massachusetts [9]
Birmingham, West Midlands Birmingham, Alabama [9]
Birmingham, Iowa
Birmingham, Michigan
Birmingham, Missouri  
Blenheim Palace, Oxfordshire Blenheim, South Carolina [10]
Boothby, Lincolnshire Boothbay, Maine  
Boston, Lincolnshire Boston, Massachusetts There are several towns and cities named Boston in the US, but this is the only one named after the one in England. All the others were named after this city or a person named Boston.[9]
Bowdon, Greater Manchester (historically in Cheshire) Bowdon, North Dakota [18]
Boxford, Suffolk Boxford, Massachusetts [9]
Bradford, West Yorkshire Bradford, Massachusetts [9]
Braintree, Essex Braintree, Massachusetts [9]
Brampton, Carlisle, Cumbria Brampton, Michigan [19]
Brentford, Greater London Branford, Connecticut [9]
Brentwood, Essex Brentwood, New Hampshire [9]
Brentwood, New York
Bridgwater, Somerset Bridgewater Township, New Jersey [14]
Bridlington, East Yorkshire Burlington, New Jersey [9]
Brighton, East Sussex Brighton, Alabama [9]
New Brighton, Pennsylvania
Brighton Beach, Brooklyn
New Brighton, Staten Island
West New Brighton, Staten Island
Brimfield, Herefordshire Brimfield, Massachusetts [10]
Brinklow, Warwickshire Brinklow, Maryland [8]
Bristol, Bristol Bristol, Tennessee [9]
Bristol, Indiana
Bromley, Greater London Bromley, Kentucky [20]
Broseley, Shropshire Broseley, Missouri [21]
Brunswick (Hove), East Sussex Brunswick, Missouri [21][22]
Buckingham, Buckinghamshire Buckingham, Pennsylvania  
Bude, Cornwall Bude, Mississippi  
Burton upon Trent, Staffordshire Burton, Illinois [23]
Bury, Greater Manchester Woodbury, New Jersey  
Buxton, Norfolk Buxton, Maine [13]
Calne, Wiltshire Caln Township, Pennsylvania [24]:331
Cambridge, Cambridgeshire Cambridge, Massachusetts [9]
Canterbury, Kent Canterbury, Connecticut [9]
Carlisle, Cumbria Carlisle, Pennsylvania [9]
Chalfont St Giles, Buckinghamshire Chalfont, Pennsylvania [24]:307
Chatham, Kent Chatham, Massachusetts  
Chatsworth, Derbyshire Chatsworth, Illinois [23]
Chelmsford, Essex Chelmsford, Massachusetts [9]
Chelsea, London Chelsea, Massachusetts [9]
Cheltenham, Gloucestershire Cheltenham, Maryland  
Chester, Cheshire Chester, Illinois [23]
Westchester County, New York
Chester, Pennsylvania
Chesterfield, Derbyshire Chesterfield Township, New Jersey [14]
Chichester, West Sussex Upper Chichester Township, Pennsylvania [24]:331
Chilham/Chilham Castle Chillum, Maryland [8]
Chilmark, Wiltshire Chilmark, Massachusetts [9]
Chipping Barnet, Greater London Barnet, Vermont [9]
Claremont (country house), Surrey Claremont, Virginia [25]:200
Clifton, Bristol Clifton, North Dakota[26] [18]
Coalville, Leicestershire Coalville, Utah [27]
Cobham, Surrey Cobham, Albemarle County, Virginia [25]:25
Colchester, Essex Colchester, Connecticut [9]
Coventry, West Midlands Coventry, Connecticut [9]
Crewe, Cheshire Crewe, Virginia [25]:152
Croydon, Greater London Croydon, New Hampshire [9]
Danbury, Essex Danbury, Connecticut [9]
Danby, North Yorkshire Danby, Vermont [9]
Darlington, County Durham Darlington, Indiana [28]
Dartmouth, Devon Dartmouth, Massachusetts [9]
Deal, Kent Deal, New Jersey [9]
Dedham, Essex Dedham, Massachusetts [9]
Deptford, Greater London Deptford Township, New Jersey [9]
Derby, Derbyshire Derby, Connecticut [9]
Dorchester, Dorset Dorchester, Boston, Massachusetts [9]
Dover, Kent Dover, Delaware [9]
Dover, New Jersey  
Dunstable, Bedfordshire Dunstable, Massachusetts [9]
Durham, County Durham Durham, Connecticut [9]
Durham, North Carolina
Duxbury Hall, Lancashire Duxbury, Massachusetts [10]
East Ardsley, West Riding of Yorkshire Ardsley, New York [29]
Easton Neston, Northamptonshire Easton, Pennsylvania [24]:47
Easton, Massachusetts
East Raynham, Norfolk Raynham, Massachusetts  
Edgeley, Greater Manchester (originally Cheshire) Edgeley, North Dakota [18]
Edgmond, Shropshire Edgmont Township, Pennsylvania [24]:331
Enfield Town, Greater London Enfield, Connecticut  
Epping, Essex Epping, New Hampshire [9]
Epsom, Surrey Epsom, New Hampshire [9]
Epworth, Lincolnshire Epworth, Iowa [30]
Eton, Berkshire Eton, Georgia [31]
Evesham, Worcestershire Evesham Township, New Jersey [14]
Exeter, Devon Exeter, New Hampshire [9]
Falmouth, Cornwall Falmouth, Massachusetts  
Farmington, Gloucestershire Farmington, Connecticut [9]
Farnham, Surrey Farnham, Virginia [25]:173
Foxhall, Suffolk Foxton, Colorado [32]
Framlingham, Suffolk Framingham, Massachusetts [9]
Glastonbury, Somerset Glastonbury, Connecticut [9]
Gloucester, Gloucestershire Gloucester, Massachusetts [9]
Gravesend, Kent Gravesend, New York [29] see also 's-Gravenzande, Netherlands
Great Barrington, Gloucestershire Great Barrington, Massachusetts  
Great Wilbraham, Cambridgeshire Wilbraham, Massachusetts  
Great Yarmouth, Norfolk Yarmouth, Massachusetts [9]
Greenwich, Greater London Greenwich, Connecticut [9]
Groton, Suffolk Groton, Massachusetts [19]
Guildford, Surrey Guilford, Connecticut [9]
Much Hadham and Little Hadham, Hertfordshire Haddam, Connecticut [10]
Hadleigh, Suffolk Hadley, Massachusetts  
Halifax, West Yorkshire Halifax, Massachusetts  
Hampstead, Greater London Hampstead, New Hampshire [9]
Hampton, London Hampton, New Hampshire [9]
Harpswell, Lincolnshire Harpswell, Maine [9]
Harrogate, North Yorkshire Harrogate, Tennessee [10]
Harwich, Essex Harwich Port, Massachusetts [9]
Hastings, East Sussex Hastings-on-Hudson, New York [29]
Hatfield Hatfield, Massachusetts [9] needs disambiguation
Haverhill, Suffolk Haverhill, Massachusetts [9]
Haworth, West Yorkshire Haworth, New Jersey [14]
Hemel Hempstead, Hertfordshire Hempstead, New York [9]
Hereford, Herefordshire Hereford, South Dakota [11] named for the breed of cattle, which originated in Herefordshire
Hertford, Hertfordshire Hartford, Connecticut [9]
Highgate, Greater London Highgate, Vermont [9]
Hillington, Norfolk Hillington, Wisconsin neighborhood in Madison, Wisconsin[33]
Hingham, Norfolk Hingham, Massachusetts [9]
Huntingdon, Cambridgeshire Huntingdon, Pennsylvania  
Ilchester, Somerset Ilchester, Maryland [8]
Ipswich, Suffolk Ipswich, Massachusetts [9]
Islip, Northamptonshire Islip, New York [9]
Kennett, Cambridgeshire Kennett Square, Pennsylvania [9]
Kenilworth, Warwickshire Killingworth, Connecticut  
Kensington, Greater London Kensington, Maryland  
Keswick, Cumbria Keswick, California [9]
Kimbolton, Cambridgeshire Kimbolton, Ohio [9]
King's Lynn, Norfolk Lynn, Massachusetts [9]
Kingston upon Hull, East Riding of Yorkshire Hull, Massachusetts [9]
Lancaster, Lancashire Lancaster, Pennsylvania [9]
Langley, Berkshire Langley, South Carolina [23]
Laxton, Nottinghamshire Lexington, Massachusetts [9]
Leamington Spa, Warwickshire Leamington, Utah [27]
Leeds, West Yorkshire Leeds, Alabama [9]
Leominster, Herefordshire Leominster, Massachusetts [9]
Lewes, East Sussex Lewes, Delaware [34]
Limington, Somerset Limington, Maine [13]
Lincoln, Lincolnshire Lincoln, Massachusetts [9]
Lichfield, Staffordshire Litchfield, Connecticut [9]
Liverpool, Merseyside Liverpool, New York [9]
London London, Kentucky [9]
New London, Missouri  
Longton, Staffordshire Longton, Kansas [35]
Ludlow, Shropshire Ludlow, Massachusetts [9]
Lyme Regis, Dorset Lyme, Connecticut [9]
Maidstone, Kent Maidstone, Vermont [9]
Maldon, Essex Malden, Massachusetts [9]
Malvern, Worcestershire Malverne, New York  
Malvern Hill, Virginia Site of The Battle of Malvern Hill, an American Civil war battle
Malvern, Pennsylvania
Manchester Manchester, New Hampshire [9]
North Manchester, Indiana
Mansfield, Nottinghamshire Mansfield Township, New Jersey [14]
Margate, Kent Margate City, New Jersey [14]
Marlborough, Wiltshire Marlborough, Massachusetts [9]
Marlow, Buckinghamshire Marlow, New Hampshire [9]
Matfield, Kent Matfield Green, Kansas [35]
Matlock, Derbyshire Matlock, Iowa [30]
Mendham, Suffolk Mendon, Massachusetts [9]
Meriden, West Midlands Meriden, Connecticut  
Middlesbrough, North Yorkshire Middlesboro, Kentucky [20]
Middlesex, London West Middlesex, Pennsylvania
Milford Milford, Connecticut [9] needs disambiguation
Modbury, Devon Madbury, New Hampshire  
Needham Market, Suffolk Needham, Massachusetts [9]
Nether Winchendon, Buckinghamshire Winchendon, Massachusetts  
Newark-on-Trent, Nottinghamshire Newark, New Jersey [9]
Newbury, Berkshire Newbury, Massachusetts [9]
Newcastle upon Tyne, Tyne and Wear Newcastle, Texas [9]
New Castle, Pennsylvania
Newmarket, Suffolk Newmarket, New Hampshire [9]
Newstead Abbey, Nottinghamshire Newstead, New York  
Northampton, Northamptonshire Northampton, Massachusetts [9]
Norton, Oxfordshire Norton, Massachusetts [9] needs disambiguation
Norwich, Norfolk Norwich, Connecticut [9]
Nottingham, Nottinghamshire Nottingham, New Jersey  
Oakham, Rutland Oakham, Massachusetts [9]
Oldham, Greater Manchester Oldham, South Dakota [11]
Olney, Buckinghamshire Olney, Maryland [8]
Oxford, Oxfordshire Oxford, Ohio [17]
Penn, Buckinghamshire Penn, North Dakota [18]
Petersham, London Petersham, Massachusetts [10]
Plaistow Plaistow, New Hampshire needs disambiguation[10]
Plymouth, Devon Plymouth, Massachusetts [9]
Plymouth, Indiana
Pontefract, West Yorkshire Pomfret, Connecticut [9]
Portsmouth, Hampshire Portsmouth, Virginia [9]
Preston, Lancashire Preston, Connecticut  
Raynham, Norfolk Raynham, Massachusetts  
Reading, Berkshire Reading, Pennsylvania [9]
Reigate, Surrey Ryegate, Vermont [10]
Reydon, Suffolk Reydon, Oklahoma [36]
Richmond, London Richmond, Virginia [25]:227
Ridley, Cheshire Ridley Park, Pennsylvania [9]
Ripon, North Yorkshire Ripon, Wisconsin [9]
Rochdale, Greater Manchester Rochdale Village, Queens New York [29]
Rochester, Kent Rochester, Massachusetts [9]
Rowley, East Riding of Yorkshire Rowley, Massachusetts [9]
Royal Tunbridge Wells, Kent Tunbridge, North Dakota[37] [18]
Rugby, Warwickshire Rugby, North Dakota [10]
Runnymede, Surrey Runnymede, Kansas [35]
Ryde, Isle of Wight Ryde, California [10]
Rye, East Sussex Rye, New Hampshire [9]
Rye, New York
St Albans, Hertfordshire St. Albans, Vermont  
St. Albans, Queens Salisbury, Wiltshire Salisbury, Maryland [8]
Sandown, Isle of Wight Sandown, New Hampshire  
Sandwich, Kent Sandwich, Massachusetts [9]
Scarborough, North Yorkshire Scarborough, Maine [9]
Scarborough, New York
Shadwell, Greater London Shadwell, Virginia  
Sheffield, South Yorkshire Sheffield, Massachusetts [9]
Shrewsbury, Shropshire Shrewsbury, Massachusetts [9]
Skelton Skelton, West Virginia [38] needs disambiguation
Smithfield, London Smithfield, Rhode Island  
Somerset Somerset County, Pennsylvania
Sotterley, Suffolk Sotterley (Hollywood, Maryland) [8]
Southampton, Hampshire Southampton, New York [9]
South Norwood, Greater London Norwood, Massachusetts [9]
Southwark, London Southwark, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania [24]:33
Springfield, Essex Springfield, Massachusetts [9]
Stamford, Lincolnshire Stamford, Connecticut  
Staplehurst, Kent Staplehurst, Nebraska [39]
Stockbridge, Hampshire Stockbridge, Massachusetts [9]
Stockport, Greater Manchester Stockport, Ohio [9]
Stockton-on-Tees, County Durham Stockton Springs, Maine [13]
Stourbridge, West Midlands Sturbridge, Massachusetts [9]
Stow Stow, Massachusetts needs disambiguation[10]
Stratford-upon-Avon, Warwickshire Stratford, Connecticut  
Sudbury, Suffolk Sudbury, Massachusetts [9]
Sunbury-on-Thames Sunbury, Pennsylvania [24]:49
Sutton Scarsdale, Derbyshire Scarsdale, New York [9]
Taunton, Somerset Taunton, Massachusetts [9]
Tewkesbury, Gloucestershire Tewksbury, Massachusetts [9]
Thornbury, Gloucestershire Thornbury Township, Pennsylvania [24]:331
Teignmouth, Devon Tinmouth, Vermont [10]
Tisbury, Wiltshire Tisbury, Massachusetts [9]
Tolland, Somerset Tolland, Connecticut [9]
Toppesfield, Essex Topsfield, Massachusetts [9]
Topsham, Devon Topsham, Maine [9]
Trafford, Greater Manchester Trafford, Pennsylvania [40]
Truro, Cornwall Truro, Massachusetts [9]
Turton, Lancashire Turton, South Dakota [11]
Ventnor, Isle of Wight Ventnor City, New Jersey [14]
Wakefield, West Yorkshire Wakefield, New Hampshire  
Wallingford, Oxfordshire Wallingford, Pennsylvania [10]
Wantage, Oxfordshire Wantage Township, New Jersey [14]
Wareham, Dorset Wareham, Massachusetts [9]
Warminster, Wiltshire Warminster, Pennsylvania  
Warwick, Warwickshire Warwick, Pennsylvania [24]:244
Wellingborough, Northamptonshire Willingboro Township, New Jersey [14]
Wells, Somerset Wells, Maine [9]
Wenham Magna, Suffolk Wenham, Massachusetts [9]
Westminster, Greater London Westminster, California [41] named for the Westminster Assembly
Weymouth, Dorset Weymouth, Massachusetts [9]
Wickford, Essex Wickford, Rhode Island  
Willoughby, Lincolnshire Williba, Kentucky [20]
Wilmington, Kent New Wilmington, Pennsylvania  
Wilmington, North Carolina [42]
Wilton, Wiltshire Wilton, New Hampshire [9]
Wimbledon, London Wimbledon, North Dakota [18]
Winchester, Hampshire Winchester, Virginia [25]:89
Windsor, Berkshire Windsor, Maine [9]
Woburn, Bedfordshire Woburn, Massachusetts [10]
Woodstock, Oxfordshire Woodstock, Alabama [43]
Woolwich, London Woolwich, Maine [9]
Worcester, Worcestershire Worcester, Massachusetts [9]
Wrentham, Suffolk Wrentham, Massachusetts [9]
Wylam, Northumberland Wylam, Alabama neighbourhood of Birmingham, AL[10]
Wymondham, Norfolk Windham, Maine [13]
York, North Yorkshire York, Pennsylvania  

Run 3 in Super Smash Bros

This section is for a concept character to represent Run 3 in Super Smash Bros. Yes, Run 3 in Smash is ridiculously unlikely to actually happen, but making a concept moveset is still cool.

Character Info

Name: Runner

Alternate Costumes

Costume 1 (default) is the Runner.

Costume 2 is the Skater.

Costume 3 is the Lizard.

Costume 4 is the Student.

Costumes 5-8 would be some of the characters from Run 3.

Moveset

Special Name Description Strengths Weaknesses
Up Bookbag Attack Uses the Student's bookbag to recover, depending on the time held. Very good at full charge Takes time to charge to maximum, does not do much damage
Side Skate Hit Uses skates to kick the opponent. Fast, good knockback, helpful for recovery Occasionally can be too fast, and hard to stop
Down Sleep flop Jump in mid-air, flop on the floor and fall asleep. Multiple hits Can't move for 5 seconds
Neutral Map slap Uses the Runner's map to deal slapping damage. Pretty weak

Specials

TBA

Normal Attacks

TBA

Final Smash: TBA

TBA

Stage: Tunnels

The Tunnels are the stage to represent Run 3. The stage pretty much a combinational of the first few Run 3 levels reworked to be an autoscroller stage.

Run 3: Nintendo Switch Edition (fanon)

Run 3: Nintendo Switch Edition
Created by: player03
Developed by: player03
Platforms: Nintendo Switch
Release date Early 2023
Format eShop Download/Physical Game Card.
Genre Platformer game
Ratings PEGI: 3, ESRB: E
Series Run

Run 3: Nintendo Switch Edition is a upcoming Switch port of Run 3 which has extra features to accomodate on Nintendo Switch. It is being developed by player03 and published by himself. Run 3 Switch is mostly a platform/runner game in which you dodge holes and obstacles, and complete levels.

Gameplay

You play as a gray space alien, known as the Runner, running through a tunnel in space. The objective is to reach the end of the level and move onto the next one by maneuvering around obstacles like holes. If you fall out of the tunnel, the level restarts. The game starts out with several easy levels, but the difficulty slowly increases as you progress.

When you jump on the wall of a tunnel, you can change gravity and run along it. This is a necessity to complete most levels and makes some levels easier.

You mostly use the two analog sticks on the two Joycon's of the switch to move and look with ZL/ZR or L/R being used to switch between menu buttons with Y/X for usage and A for jumping, and B is for going back in the main menu.

Exclusive Packages

The Switch version will have exclusive costumes but themed around a select few Nintendo characters with these characters being Mario, Luigi, Pikachu, Samus Aran, Shulk and Kirby. There will also be an exclusive costume of the Runner playing the Nintendo Switch console.

SAB

SAB, or Sab, may refer to:

Businesses

Literature

Transport

Others

2018 in rail transport (real and fictional)

Years in rail transport
Timeline of railway history

This article lists events related to rail transport that occurred in 2018.


Events

January

February

  • United States February 4 – An Amtrak passenger train collides with a freight train at Cayce, South Carolina and is derailed; two people are killed.[50]
  • China February 23China Railway Corporation reports that 12.2 million passenger trips were taken on the company's trains on Thursday, February 22, 2018, setting a new record for services following the Spring Festival holiday. Known as 'Chunyun,' the travel rush around the holiday is the busiest time for rail travel on the network every year.[51]

March

April

May

June

July

August

September

October

November

December

Deaths

Ostrich Rail

Ostrich Rail
LocaleOstarland
Dates of operation2018 (2018)–2020 (2020)
SuccessorOstarlanian Railways
Track gauge8 studs (2,240 mm or 7 ft 4.19 in)
Length100000
HeadquartersForeston, Ostarland

Long Island Rail Road station names with an English origin

Atlantic Branch

Babylon Branch

  • Seaford

City Terminal Zone

  • Kew Gardens

Far Rockaway Branch

Hempstead Branch

  • Hempstead (Anglo-Dutch)

Long Beach Branch

Montauk Branch

  • St. Albans
  • Islip
  • Southampton

Oyster Bay Branch

  • Roslyn

Port Jefferson Branch

  • New Hyde Park
  • Westbury
  • Huntington

Port Washington Branch

  • Port Washington

Ronkonkoma Branch/Greenport Branch

  • Brentwood
  • Central Islip
  • Southold

West Hempstead Branch

  • Malverne
  • Hempstead Gardens (Anglo-Dutch)
  • West Hempstead (Anglo-Dutch)

Metro-North Railroad station names with an English origin

Danbury Branch

  • Danbury

Harlem Line

  • Melrose (Scottish)
  • Scarsdale
  • Dover Plains

Hudson Line

  • Hastings-on-Hudson
  • Ardsley-on-Hudson
  • Scarborough

New Canaan Branch

New Haven Branch

  • Rye
  • Greenwich
  • Old Greenwich
  • Stamford
  • Southport
  • Stratford
  • Milford

Pascack Valley Line

Port Jervis Branch

  • Salisbury Mills–Cornwall

Waterbury Branch

  • Derby–Shelton

NJ Transit Rail Operations station names with an English origin

  • Newark Penn Station
  • Newark Broad Street
  • Newark Liberty International Airport

Atlantic City Line

Bergen County Line

Gladstone Branch

  • Gladstone (named after British Prime Minister William Ewart Gladstone)
  • East Orange (named after William III of England)
  • South Orange (named after William III of England)
  • Orange (named after William III of England)

Main Line

Meadowlands Rail Line

Montclair-Boonton Line

  • Dover
  • Mount Arlington (named after Henry Bennet, 1st Earl of Arlington)

Morristown Line

  • Chatham (named after William Pitt, 1st Earl of Chatham)

North Jersey Coast Line

  • Perth Amboy ("Perth" part named after James Drummond, 4th Earl of Perth)

Northeast Corridor Line

  • Jersey Avenue

Princeton Branch

Raritan Valley Line

  • Bridgewater
  • Somerville
  • Annandale (Scottish; presumably)
  • Aberdeen-Matawan ("Aberdeen" part is Scottish)

B&O

Baltimore and Ohio Railroad
Reporting markB&O
BO
Locale
  • Delaware
  • Illinois
  • Indiana
  • Ohio
  • Maryland
  • Massachusetts
  • Missouri
  • New Jersey
  • New York
  • Pennsylvania
  • Virginia
  • Washington, D.C.
  • West Virginia
Dates of operation1828–1987
SuccessorChessie System/Chesapeake & Ohio Railway/CSX Transportation
Track gauge4 ft 8 12 in (1,435 mm)
Previous gauge+
Electrification600V DC (1899–1971):
Staten Island Rapid Transit
675V DC (1895–1952): Baltimore Belt Line
HeadquartersB&O Railroad Headquarters Building, 2 North Charles Street, Baltimore, Maryland 1906–1987

1998 video game releases

July–September

Month Day Title Platform(s) Genre(s) Source(s)
J
U
L
Y
4 Heart of Darkness PS1 Platform [citation needed]
9 FIFA 99 PS1 Sports (soccer) [citation needed]
Super Gem Fighter Mini Mix Sat Fighting [citation needed]
14 F-Zero X N64 Racing [90]
WWF War Zone PS1 Sports (professional wrestling) [citation needed]
16 Brave Fencer Musashi PS1 Action role-playing [citation needed]
Hopkins FBI Win Adventure [91]
23 Radiant Silvergun Sat Shoot 'em up [citation needed]
Real Bout Fatal Fury 2: The Newcomers NeoCD Fighting [citation needed]
30 Star Ocean: The Second Story PS1 Action role-playing [citation needed]
31 Urban Assault Win First-person shooter, real-time strategy [citation needed]
F-1 World Grand Prix N64 Racing [citation needed]
Heart of Darkness Win Platform [citation needed]
Iggy's Reckin' Balls N64 Racing [citation needed]
A
U
G
U
S
T
1 Gex: Enter the Gecko N64 Platform [citation needed]
Pokémon Stadium N64 Role-playing [92]
6 Resident Evil: Director's Cut – Dual Shock Version PS1 Survival horror [citation needed]
Wachenröder Sat Tactical role-playing [citation needed]
11 WWF War Zone N64 Sports (professional wrestling) [citation needed]
14 Touhou: Lotus Land Story PC-98 Bullet hell/Shoot-em-up [citation needed]
21 Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six Win Tactical shooter [citation needed]
27 Black/Matrix Sat Tactical role-playing [citation needed]
S
E
P
T
E
M
B
E
R
3 Metal Gear Solid PS1 Action-adventure, stealth [93]
9 NASCAR 99 N64 Racing [94]
NFL Blitz N64 Sports (football) [95][94]
10 NFL Blitz PS1 Sports (football) [96]
Spyro the Dragon PS1 Platform [97]
12 Pokémon Yellow GB Role-playing [98]
17 Suikoden Sat Role-playing [citation needed]
23 Digital Monster Version S: Digimon Tamers Sat Virtual pet [citation needed]
Madden NFL 99 N64 Sports (football) [94]
Shining Force III Scenario 3 – Bulzome Rising Sat Tactical role-playing [citation needed]
25 Dragon Warrior Monsters GBC Role-playing [citation needed]
26 Dance Dance Revolution Arcade Music [citation needed]
30 Body Harvest N64 Action-adventure [citation needed]
Caesar III Win City-building [citation needed]
Delta Force Win Tactical shooter [citation needed]
Gex: Enter the Gecko Win Platform [citation needed]
NHL 99 PS1, Win Sports (ice hockey) [citation needed]
Rogue Trip: Vacation 2012 PS1 Vehicular combat [citation needed]
Shogo: Mobile Armor Division Win First-person shooter [citation needed]

October–December

Month Day Title Platform(s) Genre(s) Source(s)
O
C
T
O
B
E
R
1 MediEvil PS1 Action-adventure [99]
NHL 99 N64 Sports (ice hockey) [100]
2 NFL Blitz Win Sports (football) [101]
12 Need for Speed III: Hot Pursuit Win Racing [citation needed]
21 Turok 2: Seeds of Evil N64 First-person shooter [102]
Tetris DX GBC Puzzle [103]
Wario Land II GBC Platform [104]
22 Marvel Super Heroes vs. Street Fighter Sat Fighting [citation needed]
28 Grim Fandango Win Adventure [105]
29 Fallout 2 Win Role-playing [106]
31 Age of Empires: The Rise of Rome Win Real-time strategy [citation needed]
Apocalypse PS1 Third-person shooter [citation needed]
Centipede Win Shoot 'em up [citation needed]
Crash Bandicoot: Warped PS1 Platform [107]
FIFA 99 Win Sports (soccer) [citation needed]
Glover N64, Win Platform [citation needed]
Heretic II Win Action-adventure [citation needed]
NBA Live 99 PS1, Win Sports (basketball) [108]
Oddworld: Abe's Exoddus PS1, Win Platform [109]
Railroad Tycoon II Win Business simulation [citation needed]
N
O
V
E
M
B
E
R
1 Red Comrades Save the Galaxy Win Adventure [citation needed]
4 NBA Live 99 N64 Sports (basketball) [110]
9 SiN Win First-person shooter [111]
10 Rush 2: Extreme Racing USA N64 Racing [citation needed]
11 Sonic R Win Racing [citation needed]
19 Half-Life Win First-person shooter [112]
20 The Settlers III Win Real-time strategy, city-building [113]
Tomb Raider III PS1, Win Action-adventure [114]
21 The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time N64 Action-adventure [115]
25 Blood II: The Chosen Win First-person shooter [116]
27 Puyo Puyo Sun GBC Puzzle [citation needed]
D
E
C
E
M
B
E
R
1 Gex: Enter the Gecko GBC Platform [citation needed]
Thief: The Dark Project Win Stealth [117]
3 Star Wars: Rogue Squadron Win Action [citation needed]
4 Magic and Mayhem Win Real-time strategy [citation needed]
7 Star Wars: Rogue Squadron N64 Action [citation needed]
12 Falcon 4.0 Win Air combat simulation [citation needed]
Hey You, Pikachu! N64 Virtual pet [118]
The Legend of Zelda: Link's Awakening DX GBC Action-adventure [119]
17 Suikoden II PS1 Role-playing [citation needed]
18 Mario Party N64 Party [120]
Pokémon Trading Card Game GBC Digital collectible card game [121]
StarCraft: Brood War Win Real-time strategy [122]
21 Baldur's Gate Win Role-playing [123]
South Park N64 First-person shooter [124]
23 Chocobo's Mystery Dungeon 2 PS1 Roguelike [125]
Sonic Adventure DC Platform [126]
Starsiege: Tribes Win First-person shooter [127]
28 Myth II: Soulblighter Win Real-time tactics [128]
30 Touhou: Mystic Square PC-98 Bullet hell/shoot-em-up [citation needed]
31 Akuji the Heartless PS1 Action-adventure [citation needed]

Plotagon military school stuff

Caillou wakes up from bed, but then Boris comes in to make him go to school., and makes him change. He is done so Boris makes him brush his teeth and get out of the house. However, Caillou just stands there, and Boris slaps him, Caillou wanting an answer from Boris. Boris tells him to go to school now, and Caillou says that didn't Boris say later.

Caillou: Now I'm done Boris: OK then, brush your teeth and get out of my house

Caillou walks to the bathroom

Caillou: Well, I have to brush my teeth now, so let's start with this

When after Caillou done brushing his teeth

Boris: Tell my why if you're just standing there like a fool

Caillou: I'm waiting for you to answer, what does it look like?

Boris slaps Caillou

Boris: Now go to school now

Caillou: Aren't you going to say later? Or no?

Boris: I said go to school now

Caillou: Ah whatever you say Boris

Caillou smashes the window

Caillou: I can't believe that dad threw me out the window and he broke his window anyway and dad is such as booty scratcher

Caillou: Well anyway I can just walk from school

After when caillou walks from school Meanwhile

Caillou: My god man, I've been so tired of walking from school. Well that in case is going to be so ohohohohohohoh boring at school. Well here I am.

Walks in the school

Ms. Martin: All right class, so today you will be answering science today everyone. So now who even know the questions

Caillou: Well the question is your breath smells like dog pee

Ms. Martin: What did you said you bald-headed looking like Tyrone?

Caillou: I said you smell like dog pee

Ms. Martin: Do you know what? I'm not dealing with this nonsense. That's it, go to the detention for three hours

Caillou: But

Ms. Martin: Go now

Caillou: But

Ms. Martin: Go now

Caillou: But

Ms. Martin: Go now

Caillou: But

Ms. Martin: Go now

Caillou: But

Ms. Martin: Go now

Caillou: But

Ms. Martin: Go now

Caillou: But I'm not doing what you say and I could do it Ms. Martin (angry voice): Freaking now now now now now now now now now you bald-headed creep

Gets out of the classroom

Caillou: well great, I have to go to the detention

  • Caillou goes in the detention room*

Caillou: Leo since when you go to the detention?

Leo: Well I got sent to detention because I push a student to the stairs. Even now I have to stay to detention for nine hours Caillou: Well that's a lot of hours. Well I got sent to detention because I called my teachers names too much, and now I have to say to detention for three hours

Leo: Well at least you don't have to stay detention for long, but especially me.

Shocked sound effect happens

Mr. Hernandez comes in

Mr. Hernandez: Hello Leo and Caillou. So my name is Mr. Hernandez. So since I put you two to detention, and you need to be quiet. If you're doing bad ideas thing then I will call your parents. Got it?

Caillou: OK, Mr. Hernandez

Mr. Hernandez: Alright. Now I'm watching you

Mr. Hernandez stares

Caillou: Hey Leo

Leo: Yeah Caillou

Caillou: Let's talk smack to him, so we get out of the school

Leo: Great idea Caillou

Caillou: Okay Leo, but first, you have to say something.

Leo: Okay okay

More stuff I fixed

City Metropolitan area population (2019 est.)[129] Notes
Las Vegas, Nevada 2,266,715 Last service was the Desert Wind in 1997. Planned high-speed rail service by Brightline West to Enterprise, Nevada expected in 2024. Amtrak service is also proposed under the American Jobs Plan.[130]
Columbus, Ohio 2,122,271 Last service was the National Limited in 1979. Largest city in the United States without rail transport of any kind. Amtrak service is proposed under the American Jobs Plan.[130]
Nashville, Tennessee 2,012,476 Last inter-city service was the Floridian in 1979. Amtrak service is proposed under the American Jobs Plan while a Nashville route has been in early talks since January 2020.[130][131] Commuter rail service provided by the Music City Star.
Louisville, Kentucky 1,395,855 Last service was the Kentucky Cardinal in 2003. Amtrak service is proposed under the American Jobs Plan.[130]
Tulsa, Oklahoma 1,023,988 Last service was the Santa Fe's The Tulsan in 1971. Several plans for rail service have been proposed, but all of them have fallen through.[132]
Honolulu, Hawaii 1,016,508 Last service was by the Oahu Railway and Land Company in the late 1930s or early 1940s. New Honolulu Rail Transit light rail line is currently under construction and planned to open in late 2022.
Knoxville, Tennessee 869,046 Last service was the Southern Railway's Pelican in 1970.
McAllen, Texas 868,707 Last service was the Southern Pacific's McAllen-Brownsville shuttle in 1952.
Baton Rouge, Louisiana 854,884 Last service was the Kansas City Southern's Southern Belle in 1969. New service from New Orleans has been studied and has support.[133] Amtrak service is also proposed under the American Jobs Plan.[130]
AllentownBethlehemEaston, Pennsylvania 844,046 Last service was regional service in 1981, carried by SEPTA. Amtrak service is proposed under the American Jobs Plan.[130]
North PortSarasotaBradenton, FloridaVenice, Florida 836,995 Last service was the Seaboard Coast Line's Champion in 1971.[134]
Dayton, Ohio - Springfield, Ohio 807,611 Last service was the National Limited in 1979. Amtrak service is proposed under the American Jobs Plan.[130]
Boise, Idaho 764,718 Last service was the Pioneer in 1997.
Cape Coral, Florida - Fort Myers, Florida 760,822 Last service was the Seaboard Coast Line's Champion in 1971.[135]
Colorado Springs, Colorado 755,105 Last service was Burlington Route's Texas Zephyr in 1967. New service planned as a new section of the Southwest Chief to Colorado Springs under study.[136] Amtrak service is also proposed under the American Jobs Plan.[130]
Des Moines, Iowa 699,292 Last service was a Rock Island unnamed successor (ending in 1970) to the Des Moines Rocket and Corn Belt Rocket, both ending in 1967. There were plans for a new service from Chicago to Des Moines and Omaha but Iowa refused to provide funds for operations.[137]
Augusta, Georgia 608,980 Last traditional passenger service was by the Georgia Railroad in 1969, although the Georgia provided a little-used mixed train service until 1983.[citation needed]
Space Coast area (Cocoa Beach – Melbourne – Palm Bay – Titusville, Florida) 601,942 Last had passenger service in 1968, when the Florida East Coast Railroad ended its operations. The last interstate trains were in 1963 when the East Coast Champion and City of Miami routes were moved inland from the Atlantic Coast. The Havana Special ended entirely that year. However, a private regional rail line, Brightline, is now open between Miami and West Palm Beach with an extension planned to Orlando. It will use the FEC right-of-way, and a newly built segment Cocoa Beach-Orlando.
Chattanooga, Tennessee 565,194 Last service was the Louisville and Nashville's The Georgian in 1971. New service possible via proposed Nashville route and the American Jobs Plan mentioned above.[131][130]
ScrantonWilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania 553,885 Last service was the Erie Lackawanna's Lake Cities in 1970. Amtrak service is proposed under the American Jobs Plan.[130]
Antelope Valley (LancasterPalmdale, California)[138] 541,726 Last service was the Southern Pacific's San Joaquin Daylight and Sacramento Daylight in 1971. Currently served by Metrolink commuter rail. California High-Speed Rail planned for 2033.
Youngstown, Ohio 536,081 Last service was the Three Rivers in 2005.
Fayetteville, Arkansas 534,901 Last service was a section of the Frisco's Meteor in 1965.
Tri-Cities area (Kingsport/Johnson City/Bristol, Tennessee, Bristol, Virginia) 530,385 Last service was the Norfolk and Western and Southern Railway's unnamed successor train to their Birmingham Special in 1971. Virginia officials are working on bringing Amtrak service to Bristol.[139][140]
Lexington, Kentucky 517,056 Last service was the Southern Railway's Royal Palm in 1970 and the Chesapeake and Ohio's George Washington in 1971.
Pensacola, Florida 502,629 Service suspended August 2005, on Sunset Limited east of New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina. It is proposed to return service to the line.
Myrtle Beach, South Carolina 496,901 Last service was a mixed train operated by the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad in 1955.[141]
Santa Rosa, California 494,336 Last intercity service was an unnamed Northwestern Pacific Railroad train in 1958. Currently served by the SMART commuter rail line.
Treasure Coast area (Fort Pierce - Port St. LucieSebastianVero Beach, Florida) 489,297 Last had passenger service in 1968, when the Florida East Coast Railroad ended its operations. The last interstate trains were in 1963 when the East Coast Champion and City of Miami routes were moved inland from the Atlantic Coast. The Havana Special ended entirely that year. However, a private regional rail service, Brightline, is now open Miami-West Palm Beach with an extension planned to Orlando. It will use the FEC right-of-way, and a newly built segment Cocoa Beach-Orlando.
Huntsville, Alabama 471,824 Last service was the Southern Railway's Tennessean in 1968.
Springfield, Missouri 470,300 Last service was the Frisco's Meteor and Will Rogers in 1967.
Asheville, North Carolina 462,680 Last service was the Southern Railway's Asheville Special in 1975. Amtrak service is proposed under the American Jobs Plan.[130]
Mobile, Alabama 429,536 Service suspended August 2005, on Sunset Limited east of New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina. As stated with the Mississippi part of the route, service could come back as early as January 2022.[142]
Corpus Christi, Texas 429,024 Last service was the Texas Mexican Railway's Tex Mex Express in 1986.
Brownsville, Texas 423,163 Last service was the Missouri Pacific Railroad's Pioneer in 1964.
GulfportBiloxiPascagoula, Mississippi 417,665 Service suspended August 2005, on Sunset Limited east of New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina. Amtrak has announced Gulf Coast Service between New Orleans and Mobile would start as early as January 2022 once repairs are made.[142]
ManchesterNashua, New Hampshire 417,025 Last was regional service in 1981, carried by the MBTA.[143]. Last interstate service was unnamed successor train to the Boston and Maine's Alouette in 1965. Amtrak service is proposed under the American Jobs Plan.[144] Extension of MBTA's Lowell Line is also proposed.
SalisburyOcean City, Maryland 415,726 Last service was the Pennsylvania Railroad's Del-Mar-Va Express in 1958.
Appleton – Oshkosh – Neenah, Wisconsin 409,881 Last service was an unnamed Chicago and North Western train in 1971, having been previously served by the CNW's Peninsula 400. At least part of the area could see proposed Amtrak service under the American Jobs Plan.[130]
Peoria, Illinois 400,561 Last service was the Prairie Marksman in 1981. However, Amtrak continued to stop at Chillicothe, 20 miles north, until 1996. New service to Peoria was studied by Illinois DOT.[145]
ShreveportBossier City, Louisiana 394,706 Last service was the Kansas City Southern's Southern Belle in 1969. Planned Amtrak service from Birmingham to Dallas/Fort Worth via Shreveport never materialized, service from the city to Dallas being studied by DOT.[146]
Tallahassee, Florida 387,227 Service suspended August 2005, on Sunset Limited east of New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina. It is proposed to return service to the line.
Naples, Florida 384,902 Last service was an Atlantic Coast Line connector service to the West Coast Champion in 1960, between Ft. Myers and Naples.
Clermont, Florida - Leesburg, Florida 383,956 Last service was Seaboard Coast Line local Jacksonvile - St. Petersburg service in 1971.
Quad Cities area (Davenport/Bettendorf, Iowa, Rock Island/Moline, Illinois) 379,172 Last service was the Rock Island's Quad Cities Rocket in 1979. A proposed line that would use the same name would bring service back to Moline and is supported by local officials and the American Jobs Plan.[147][130]
Montgomery, Alabama 373,290 Last service was the Gulf Breeze in 1995. Amtrak service is proposed under the American Jobs Plan.[130]
Hickory–Lenoir–Morganton, North Carolina 369,711 Last service was the North Carolina branch of the Southern Railway's Carolina Special in 1968. At least part of the area could see proposed Amtrak service under the American Jobs Plan.[130]
Fort Collins, Colorado 356,899 Last service was the Burlington Route's Shoshone in 1967. Amtrak service is proposed under the American Jobs Plan.[130]
MidlandOdessa, Texas 348,826 Last service was the Missouri Pacific's West Texas Eagle in 1969.
Ocala, Florida 343,254 Last service was the Palmetto in 2004, when Amtrak truncated the run to Savannah, Georgia.
Rockford, Illinois 336,116 Last service was the Black Hawk in 1981. New service under the same train name that was planned by 2015 was suspended by Illinois Governor Bruce Rauner, but was restored in 2019 by Governor J.B. Pritzker.[148][149] Amtrak service is also proposed under the American Jobs Plan.[130]
Gainesville, Florida 329,128 Last service was the Seaboard Coast Line's South Wind in 1971, when the train was rerouted via Orlando.
Greeley, Colorado 324,492 Last service was the Pioneer in 1997.
Green Bay, Wisconsin 322,906 Last service were unnamed Chicago and North Western trains in 1971, having been previously served by the CNW's Flambeau 400 and Peninsula 400. At least part of the area could see proposed Amtrak service under the American Jobs Plan.[130]
Lubbock, Texas 322,257 Last service was the Santa Fe's unnamed service between Temple and Clovis, New Mexico, ending between 1968 and 1970.
Columbus, Georgia 321,048 Last service was the Illinois Central's City of Miami in 1971. Amtrak service is proposed under the American Jobs Plan.[130]
Evansville, Indiana 315,086 Last service was the Louisville and Nashville's The Georgian in 1971.
Clarksville, Tennessee 307,820 Last service was a Memphis section of the L&N's Pan-American in 1965.
Wilmington, North Carolina 297,533 Last service was the Seaboard Coast Line's Palmetto in 1968. Amtrak service is proposed under the American Jobs Plan.[130]
Twin Ports area (Duluth, Minnesota, Superior, Wisconsin) 288,732 Last service was the North Star in 1985. There are plans to restore passenger service from St. Paul with a new train called the Northern Lights Express, although the owner of the train is currently unknown.[150][151] Amtrak service is also supported under the American Jobs Plan.[130]
CrestviewFort Walton BeachDestin, Florida 286,973 Service suspended August 2005, on Sunset Limited east of New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina. It is proposed to return service to the line.
Laredo, Texas 276,652 Last service was the Inter-American in 1981.
Cedar Rapids, Iowa 273,032 Last service was the Rock Island's Zephyr Rocket on April 8, 1967, with the Milwaukee Road ending service on the combined "City of Everywhere" on May 30, 1971 at nearby Marion.[152][153] Amtrak service is proposed in Iowa City, Iowa 20 miles to the south under the American Jobs Plan.[130]
Sioux Falls, South Dakota 268,232 Last service was a Sioux Falls section of the Milwaukee Road's Arrow in September 1965.
Amarillo, Texas 265,053 Last service was the Santa Fe's San Francisco Chief in 1971.
College StationBryan, Texas 264,728 Last service was the Dallas-Houston section of the Texas Eagle in 1995. Texas Central Railway service is projected to operate in the vicinity in 2026. Amtrak service is also proposed under the American Jobs Plan.[130]
Atlantic City, New Jersey 263,670 Last inter-city service was the Atlantic City Express in 1995. Currently served by NJ Transit's Atlantic City Line.
Bloomsburg–Berwick–Sunbury, Pennsylvania 259,332 Last service was a Penn Central remnant of the Pennsylvania Railroad's Buffalo Day Express in 1971.[154][citation needed]
Yakima, Washington 250,873 Last service was in 1981 when the Empire Builder was rerouted through Everett, Washington.
Fort Smith, Arkansas 250,368 Last service was a section of the Frisco's Meteor in 1965.
North Las Vegas, Nevada 249,369 Last service was the Desert Wind at Las Vegas in 1997. As with Las Vegas, there is a planned high-speed rail service by Brightline West to Enterprise, Nevada expected in 2024. Amtrak service is also proposed under the American Jobs Plan.[130]
Binghamton, New York 238,691 Last service was the Erie Lackawanna's Lake Cities in 1970.
Macon, Georgia 229,996 Last service was the Central of Georgia's Nancy Hanks II in 1971. Amtrak service between Atlanta and Savannah with a stop in Macon is proposed under the American Jobs Plan.[130]
Bay Minette – Daphne – Fairhope – Foley, Alabama 223,234 Last service was the Gulf Breeze in 1995. Amtrak's Sunset Limited made stops in nearby Atmore, Alabama, Mobile, Alabama and Pensacola, Florida until service was suspended in 2005 during Hurricane Katrina.
Rochester, Minnesota 221,921 Last service was the Chicago and North Western Railroad's Rochester 400 in 1963.
Medford, Oregon 220,944 Last service was the Southern Pacific's River Rogue in the 1950s.
Las Cruces, New Mexico 218,195 Last service was the Santa Fe's El Pasoan in 1968.
LimaVan WertCelina, Ohio 217,454[155] Last service was in 1991, when the Broadway Limited and the Capitol Limited were rerouted.
Athens, Georgia 213,750 Last service was the Seaboard Coast Line's Silver Comet in 1969.
Jacksonville, North Carolina 204,576 Last service was local connector service by the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad, ca. 1939.
Monroe, Louisiana 200,261 Last service was a Little Rock-Alexandria section of the Missouri Pacific's Texas Eagle in 1967; and the Southwestern Limited also in 1967.
Bend, Oregon 197,692 Last service was a regional mixed train run by the Spokane, Portland and Seattle Railway, in the late 1960s.
Spring Hill - Brooksville, Florida 194,515 Last service was local Jacksonville - St. Petersburg service in 1955 or 1956, run by the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad. Nearby Dade City had Amtrak service with the Palmetto until that train was truncated to Savannah in 2004.
Warner Robins, Georgia 191,614 Last service was the Southern Railway's Royal Palm in 1967.
Saginaw, Michigan 190,539 Last service was the New York Central's local service to the area in 1964.[156][citation needed]
PuntaPort CharlotteBoca Grande, Florida 188,910 Last service was a section of the Seaboard Coast Line Railroad's pre-Amtrak Champion in 1971.
Terre Haute, Indiana 186,367 Last service was the National Limited in 1979.
Billings, Montana 181,667 Last service was the North Coast Hiawatha in 1979.
Dover, Delaware 180,786 Last service was the Pennsylvania Railroad's Blue Diamond in 1965.
Joplin, Missouri 179,564 Last service was the Kansas City Southern's Southern Belle in 1969.
Bowling Green, Kentucky 179,240 Last service was the Floridian in 1979.
ElmiraCorning, New York 178,832[157] Last service was the Erie Lackawanna's Lake Cities in 1970.
Jackson, Tennessee 178,644 Last service the Illinois Central's City of Miami train in 1971.
St. George, Utah 177,556 Although no line (nor any railroad tracks) runs through, the city has Amtrak Thruway services.
Panama City, Florida 174,705 Last service was Atlanta and St. Andrews Bay Railroad passenger service in 1957.
Muskegon, Michigan 173,566 Last service was the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway's passenger service in 1971.
Iowa City, Iowa 173,105 Last service was a Rock Island unnamed successor (ending in c. 1970) to the Des Moines Rocket and Corn Belt Rocket, both ending in 1967. New service was possible around 2016, but did not work out.[158] Amtrak service is proposed under the American Jobs Plan.[130]
Abilene, Texas 172,060 Last service was the Missouri Pacific's West Texas Eagle in 1969.
East Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania 170,271 Last service was the Erie Lackawanna's Lake Cities in 1970.
Greenville - Winterville, North Carolina 170,243 Last service was on the first Norfolk Southern's Norfolk-Raleigh main line, ca. late 1940s.
Eau ClaireMenomonie, Wisconsin 169,304 Last service was the Chicago and North Western Railroad's Twin Cities 400 in 1963. Amtrak service is proposed under the American Jobs Plan.[130]
Bloomington, Indiana 169,230 Last service was the Floridian in 1979.
WaterlooCedar Falls, Iowa 168,522 Last service was the Illinois Central's Hawkeye in 1971.
Pueblo, Colorado 168,424 Last service was a Denver-La Junta connecting train operated by the Santa Fe Railway in 1971. New service planned as a new section of the Southwest Chief to Colorado Springs under study.[159] Amtrak service is also proposed under the American Jobs Plan.[130]
Blacksburg – Christiansburg, Virginia 167,531 Last service was the Hilltopper in 1979. New service being studied by VDOT.[160] Amtrak service is also proposed under the American Jobs Plan.[130]
Tupelo, Mississippi 166,379[161] Last service was the Frisco's Southland in 1967.
Coeur d'Alene, Idaho 165,697 Last service was by Great Northern Railway. However, Spokane, Washington, 34 miles to the west, has Amtrak service in the Empire Builder.
AuburnOpelika, Alabama 164,542 Last service was the Illinois Central Railroad's City of Miami serving Opelika, part of the Auburn MSA, which had its last run in 1971. Amtrak service is proposed under the American Jobs Plan.[130]
Janesville, Wisconsin 163,354 Last service was the Lake Country Limited in 2001.
Wausau – Marshfield, Wisconsin 163,285 Last service was the Soo Line's Laker in 1965
ChambersburgWaynesboro, Pennsylvania 155,027 Last service was the Pennsylvania Railroad's Nos. 638-645 (part of unnamed New York-Roanoke route via the Norfolk & Western's Shenandoah Route) in 1962.
Elizabethtown, Kentucky 153,928 Last service was the L&N's Pan-American in 1971.
Concord, New Hampshire 153,808 Last service was regional service in 1981, carried by the MBTA.[143]. Last interstate service was unnamed successor train to the Boston and Maine's Alouette in 1965. Amtrak service is proposed under the American Jobs Plan.[162]
Decatur, Alabama 152,603 Last service was the Floridian in 1979.
Bangor, Maine 152,148 Last service was the Boston and Maine's State of Maine Express and Bar Harbor Express in 1960. Extension of Downeaster service studied.
Alexandria, Louisiana 152,037 Last service was the Kansas City Southern's Southern Belle in 1969.
Idaho Falls, Idaho metropolitan area 151,530 The last long distance train was the Union Pacific's Butte Special in 1971.
Wichita Falls, Texas 151,254 Last service was the Burlington Route's Texas Zephyr in 1967.
Traverse City, Michigan 150,475[163] Last service was an unnamed successor C&O/B&O Railroad train to the Resort Special in 1967. New service under study.
Homosassa Springs, Florida 149,657 Last service was Atlantic Coast Line Railroad passenger service in 1957.
VinelandMillvilleBridgeton, New Jersey 149,527 Last service was Pennsylvania-Reading Seashore Lines commuter rail service in 1971.
ParkersburgVienna, West VirginiaMarietta, Ohio 149,469[164] Last service was the Shenandoah in 1981.
IthacaCortland, New York 149,381[165] Last service was the Lehigh Valley's Maple Leaf in 1961.
Dothan, Alabama 149,358 Last service was the Floridian in 1979.
Valdosta, Georgia 148,126 Last service was the Floridian in 1979.
FlorenceMuscle Shoals, Alabama 147,970 Last service was the Southern Railway's Tennessean in 1968.
Albany, Georgia 146,726 Last service was the Illinois Central's City of Miami in 1971.
Dalton, Georgia 144,724 Last service was the Louisville and Nashville's The Georgian in 1971. Amtrak service is proposed under the American Jobs Plan.[130]
Sioux City, Iowa 144,701 Last service was the Illinois Central's Hawkeye in 1971.
Rapid City, South Dakota 142,107 Last service was the Milwaukee Road's Sioux in 1951, when the run was truncated to Canton, South Dakota.
Sumter, South Carolina 140,466 Last service was a Florence, SC -- Augusta, GA section of the Seaboard Coast Line's Champion in 1970.
Morgantown, West Virginia 139,044 Last service was an unnamed Baltimore and Ohio Railroad train in 1953.
Wheeling, West Virginia 138,948 Last service was the Baltimore and Ohio's Chicago-West Virginia Night Express in 1961.
Napa, California 137,744 Last intercity service was an unnamed Southern Pacific train in 1929. Currently served by the Napa Valley Wine Train.
Morristown, Tennessee 137,612 Last service was the Southern Railway's Birmingham Special in 1970.
Eureka, California 135,839[166] Last service was a local Northwestern Pacific Railroad train in 1971.
Jonesboro, Arkansas 134,196 Last service was the Frisco Railway's Southland in 1967.
The Villages, Florida 132,420 Last service was the Palmetto in 2004, when Amtrak truncated the run to Savannah, Georgia.
Manhattan, Kansas 130,285 Last service was the Union Pacific's City of Kansas City in 1971.
Bismarck, North Dakota 128,949 Last service was the North Coast Hiawatha in 1979.
Jamestown – Dunkirk – Fredonia, New York 126,636[167] Last service was the Erie Lackawanna's Lake Cities in 1970. Amtrak's Lake Shore Limited passes through Dunkirk, but does not stop.
Lawton, Oklahoma 126,415 Last service was the Frisco's Meteor in 1967.
New Bern, North Carolina 124,284 Last service was the Atlantic and East Carolina Railway's regional service in 1950 or 1951.
Augusta – Waterville, Maine 122,241[168] Last service was the Boston and Maine's State of Maine Express and Bar Harbor Express in 1960.
St. Joseph, Missouri 121,467 Last service was the Burlington Northern's unnamed service between Kansas City and Omaha in 1971.
Mansfield, Ohio 121,154 Last service was the Penn Central's Manhattan Limited and Pennsylvania Limited, both in 1971.
Missoula, Montana 119,600 Last service was the North Coast Hiawatha in 1979.
Owensboro, Kentucky 119,440 Last service was an unnamed L&N train in 1958.
Brunswick, Georgia 118,779 Last service was the Southern Railway's Kansas City-Florida Special in 1964.
Sheboygan, Wisconsin 118,034 Last service was an unnamed Chicago and North Western train in 1971, having been previously served by the Peninsula 400.
Watertown, New York|WatertownFort Drum, New York 116, 721 Last service was the New York Central Railroad's regional service in 1964.
Temecula, California 114,761[169] Never had train service.
Bozeman, Montana 114,434 Last service was the North Coast Hiawatha in 1979.
Muncie, Indiana 114,135 Last service was the Cardinal in 1986, when Amtrak rerouted the train west.
Cleveland, Tennessee 113,358 Last service was the Southern Railway's Birmingham Special in 1970.
Williamsport, Pennsylvania 113,299 Last service was a Penn Central remnant of the Pennsylvania Railroad's Buffalo Day Express in 1971.
Lewiston – Auburn, Maine 111,139 Last direct service was the Boston and Maine Railroad's and Maine Central Railroad's The Gull in 1960. Grand Trunk Western summer service to nearby Danville Junction ended in 1967.
Lowell, Massachusetts 110,997[170] Last inter-city service was the Boston and Maine's State of Maine in 1960. Currently served by MBTA's Lowell Line
Mt. Pleasant, Michigan - Alma, Michigan 110,583 Last service was the Ann Arbor Railroad's Toledo - Frankfort service in 1950.
Fond du Lac, Wisconsin 104,154 Last service was an unnamed Chicago and North Western train in 1971, having been previously served by the CNW's Peninsula 400. At least part of the area could see proposed Amtrak service under the American Jobs Plan.[130]
Decatur, Illinois 103,998 Last service was the Illini in 1983, when the run was truncated to Champaign, Illinois.
Bay City, Michigan 103,856 Last service was the New York Central Railroad's regional service in 1964.
Gettysburg, Pennsylvania 103,852 Last service was Western Maryland Railway passenger service in 1942.
Cheyenne, Wyoming 100,512 Last service was the Pioneer in 1997. Amtrak service is proposed under the American Jobs Plan.[130]
Rome, Georgia 98,584 Last service was the Southern Railway's Royal Palm in 1970.


In addition, the following cities are not directly served by inter-city rail service, but have a rail station within 35 miles of the city.

City Metropolitan area population (2019 est.)[171] Notes
Phoenix, and Mesa, Arizona 4,948,203 Direct service ended in June 1996 after reroute of Amtrak's Sunset Limited. Service 30 miles to the south in Maricopa, Arizona, a nearby suburb. Amtrak service is proposed under the American Jobs Plan.[130]
Minneapolis, Minnesota 3,640,043 Lost direct service in 1978 when Amtrak shifted intercity service to St. Paul, Minnesota. Gained commuter service in 2009.
Albany, New York 880,381 Lost direct service in 1981 when intercity service was shifted to adjacent Rensselaer, New York.
Akron, Ohio 703,479 Direct service gained in 1990 with the rerouting of the Broadway Limited, then lost in 2005 with the discontinuance of the Three Rivers. Service on the Capitol Limited 24 miles to the southeast at Alliance, Ohio. Amtrak service is proposed under the American Jobs Plan.[130]
Ogden, Utah 683,864 Last direct inter-city service was the Pioneer in 1997. Currently directly served by the Utah Transit Authority's FrontRunner commuter rail. Amtrak service 30 miles to the south in Salt Lake City, Utah.
Winston–Salem, North Carolina 676,008 Last service was by Southern Railway in 1970. Service 16 miles to the Southeast in High Point, North Carolina.
Daytona Beach, Florida 668,365 Last had passenger service in 1968, when the Florida East Coast Railroad ended its operations. The last interstate trains were in 1963 when the East Coast Champion and City of Miami routes were moved inland from the Atlantic Coast. The Havana Special ended entirely that year. Amtrak trains stop at DeLand Station, 28 miles to the west.
Madison, Wisconsin 664,865 Last direct service was the Milwaukee Road's Varsity and Sioux in 1971. Service 28 miles to the northeast in Columbus, Wisconsin. New direct service between Madison and Chicago via Milwaukee was planned but Wisconsin governor Scott Walker rejected federal funding for the project.[172][173] Amtrak service is now proposed under the American Jobs Plan.[130]
Wichita, Kansas 640,218 Last direct service was the Lone Star in 1979. Service 25 miles to the north at Newton, Kansas. New direct service being studied with extension of Heartland Flyer to Kansas City or Newton.[174] The service is also supported under the American Jobs Plan.[130]
Visalia, California 466,195 Passenger service to the city ended in the 1950s or 1960s. However, Amtrak's San Joaquin trains stop by at Hanford 21 miles to the west.
Long Beach, California 462,628[175] Service 23 miles to the north at Los Angeles Union Station.
York, Pennsylvania 449,058 Service 24 miles to the east at Lancaster, Pennsylvania.
Fort Wayne, Indiana 413,263 Last direct service was in 1990, when the Broadway Limited rerouted through Nappanee, Indiana. Service 25 miles to the north at Waterloo, Indiana.
Reading, Pennsylvania 421,164 Last direct service was regional service in 1981, carried by SEPTA. Service 27 miles to the southwest at Lancaster, Pennsylvania, without a transit connection. Last interstate train was the Reading's Queen of the Valley in 1967. Amtrak service is proposed under the American Jobs Plan.[130]
Canton, Ohio 397,520 Last direct service was in 1990, when the Broadway Limited rerouted through Nappanee, Indiana. Service 23 miles to the northeast in Alliance, Ohio.
Tri-Valley, California 361,000 Service to the west in Hayward, California. Commuter rail provided by Altamont Corridor Express.
Boulder, Colorado 326,196 Last direct service was the Burlington Route's Shoshone in 1967. Service 25 miles to the southeast at Denver, Colorado. Service is proposed for the RTD B Line. Amtrak service is proposed under the American Jobs Plan.[130]
Deptford – Glassboro – Mantua – Woodbury, New Jersey 291,636 Last inter-city service was regional ex-Pennsylvania-Reading Seashore Lines service run by the Penn Central in 1971. NJ Transit has proposed the Glassboro–Camden Line to Glassboro. Regional NJ Transit and PATCO service is available at Lindenwold, New Jersey 11 miles to the east.
Hagerstown, Maryland 288,104 Service 23 miles southwest in Martinsburg, West Virginia.
Waterbury, Connecticut 287,768 Last inter-city service was an unnamed New Haven service in 1958. Currently served by Metro-North Railroad's Waterbury Branch. Service 18 miles to the east at Wallingford, Connecticut.
Chula Vista, California 274,942[176] Service 9 miles to the northwest at San Diego, California.
Waco, Texas 273,920 Service 16 miles to the southwest at McGregor, Texas.
Tyler, Texas 232,751 Last direct inter-city service was the St. Louis Southwestern Railway (Cotton Belt Route) service in 1956. Service 26 miles away at Mineola, Texas.
Burlington, Vermont 220,411 Last direct inter-city service was the Rutland Railroad's Green Mountain Flyer and Mount Royal in 1953. Service 7 miles away at Essex Junction, Vermont. Short-lived commuter rail service called the Champlain Flyer ran 2000-2003. New direct inter-city service planned as an extension of the Ethan Allen Express by 2022 and is supported under the American Jobs Plan.[130]
Fontana, California 214,547[177] Service 8 miles away at San Bernardino.
Moreno Valley, California 213,055[178] Service 15 miles away at San Bernardino.
Columbia, Missouri 208,173 Service 31 miles south at Jefferson City, Missouri.
Huntington Beach, California 199,223[179] Service 15 miles away at Santa Ana, California.
Elk Grove, California 174,775[180] Service 16 miles northwest at Sacramento, California.
State College, Pennsylvania 162,835 Service 30 miles to the southeast in Lewistown, Pennsylvania. Trains last went to proximate Lemont in the late 1940s.
Kansas City, Kansas 156,607 Last direct service was a section of the Rock Island's Rocky Mountain Rocket in 1966. Amtrak's Southwest Chief and Missouri River Runner continue to stop at Kansas City, Missouri's Union Station.
Escondido, California 151,625 Last direct service was mixed train service in the 1940s to Oceanside, 21 miles to the west. Pacific Surfliner service is available at Oceanside. Commuter rail service is provided by the SPRINTER.
Ottawa, Illinois 151,503[181] Last direct service was the Rock Island's Quad City Rocket and Peoria Rocket, both ending in 1978. Service 16 miles to the north at Mendota, Illinois.
Santa Fe, New Mexico 150,358 Inter-city service 14 miles to the southeast at Lamy, New Mexico. Commuter rail service provided by the New Mexico Rail Runner Express.
Bellevue, Washington 148,164 Service 10 miles to the west at Seattle, Washington
Torrance, California 143,592 Service 20 miles north in Los Angeles.
Lebanon, Pennsylvania 141,793 Service 25 miles to the south at Lancaster, Pennsylvania.
Kent, Washington 132,319 Service 17 miles to the southwest at Tacoma, Washington.
Visalia, California 129,529 Passenger service to the city ended in the 1950s or 1960s. However Amtrak's San Joaquin trains stop by at Hanford 21 miles to the west.
Concord, California 129,295 Service 9 miles to the northwest at Martinez, California.
Goldsboro, North Carolina 123,131 Last service 21 miles to the west in Selma, North Carolina.
Vallejo, California 121,692 Service 13 miles to the southeast at Martinez, California.
Santa Maria, California 107,263 Service 8 miles to the west at Guadalupe, California.
Sparks, Nevada 105,006 Bypassed by Amtrak in 2009. Service 4 miles to the east at Reno, Nevada.
Norwalk, California 103,949 Currently served by Metrolink. Service 12 miles to the east at Fullerton, California.
Gadsden, Alabama 102,371 Service 29 miles to the south in Anniston, Alabama.

Test

Test lol

Seasons

Series Episodes Originally aired
First aired Last aired
1 12 21 January 2019 (2019-01-21) 3 March 2019 (2019-03-03)
2 12 8 March 2019 (2019-03-08) 4 June 2019 (2019-06-04)
3 11 4 June 2019 (2019-06-04) 1 October 2019 (2019-10-01)

Episodes

Season 1 (2016-present)

No.
overall
No. in
season
TitleTimeOriginal air date
11"Caillou craps himself in class/grounded"3:06January 21, 2019 (2019-01-21)
Caillou farts multiple times, then craps himself in class. It disgusts the students nearby and gets sent home early by Principal Samir, where he is grounded by his father Boris.
11"Caillou insults Scott's mother/grounded"3:06January 21, 2019 (2019-01-21)
During the last day of school, everyone is cleaning their desks, and Ms. Jessica is going to do some last-minute work. Caillou insults Scott's mother by saying that the dead rat smells like her, Principal Samir Comes in, Scott reports Caillou to him, gets sent home early, and gets grounded.

Train deaths and other stuff

January

February

  • Brazil February 2 – The last Budd "A-Series" of the São Paulo Metro is retired.
  • United States February 4 – Amtrak's Hi-Levels are retired, citing safety concerns and rising maintenance costs.[182]

March

April

  • United States April 7 – The Saratoga and North Creek Railroad makes its final run, due to financial losses.

May

  • United Kingdom May 19 – Heathrow Connect is taken over by TfL Rail.
  • France May 25 – The SNCF Class X 2100 are retired.

June

  • FranceAustralia June – Unibail-Rodamco merges into Westfield Corporation.
  • June 1 – The Twiggy (then known as Red) and Blue Lines open as the first lines of the newly-created Robloxian automatic subway
  • United States June 10 – PATCO's unrebuilt cars make their final trips.
  • June 21
    • Canada – The MR-63s are retired from the Montreal Metro.
    • Sweden – Saga Rail ceases operation, having lost an appeal with the Swedish Competition Authority over SJ's refusal to sell its tickets on its website.
  • United Kingdom June 23 – National Express Midland Metro's operation of the West Midlands Metro is taken over by Transport for West Midlands.
  • United Kingdom June 24 – London North Eastern Railway takes over InterCity East Coast franchise from Virgin Trains East Coast.[183]

July

August

  • United States August 19 – The Staten Island express bus redesign takes effect.

September

  • United States September 28 – The Nippon Sharyo P865s are retired after 24 years of service, having been replaced by the Kinki Sharyo P3010s.

October

  • Portugal October – The CP Class 1930s are retired due to failure.
  • United Kingdom October 14 – KeolisAmey Wales take over operation of the Wales & Borders franchise from Arriva Trains Wales.[184]
  • United States October 17 – The Washington Metro 5000-Series is retired.
  • October 31Deltarune is released for macOS and Windows devices.

November

  • Germany November – The GTW 72 is taken out of service after suspension of the Wuppertal Schwebebahn.

December

  • United States December 1 – The EMD AEM-7 and ABB ALP-44 are given a farewell excursion by SEPTA.
  • France December 8 – The SNCF Class Z 5300 are given a farewell excursion.
  • Portugal December 14 – Metro de Mirandela closes down, and the CP Class 9500 are retired.
  • United States December 28 – The M2s of Metro North make their last runs, in anticipation of the installation of positive train control.

Fun stuff

Eastern Suburbs & Illawarra Line
Overview
TypeCommuter rail
LocaleSydney, New South Wales
TerminiCronulla/Waterfall
Bondi Junction
Stations33
Operation
Opened15 October 1884; 141 years ago (1884-10-15)
OwnerTransport Asset Holding Entity
Operator(s)Sydney Trains
Depot(s)Mortdale
Rolling stockT, H sets (peak hours only)
Technical
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in) standard gauge
Sydney Trains services
Metro North West
North Shore & Western
Inner West & Leppington
Bankstown
Eastern Suburbs & Illawarra
Cumberland
Olympic Park
Airport & South
Northern

Stuff again

"MJ" train symbol
Myrtle Avenue
Northern endMiddle Village–Metropolitan Avenue
Southern endBridge–Jay Streets
Stations16
Started serviceNovember 26, 1967; 58 years ago (1967-11-26)
DiscontinuedOctober 4, 1969; 56 years ago (1969-10-04)
Route map
MJ
Middle Village–Metropolitan Avenue
File:BSicon uhtHSTa.svg
Fresh Pond Road
Forest Avenue
Seneca Avenue
Myrtle–Wyckoff Avenues
Knickerbocker Avenue
Central Avenue
Broadway
Sumner Avenue
Tompkins Avenue
Nostrand Avenue
Franklin Avenue
Washington Avenue
Vanderbilt Avenue
Navy Street
Bridge–Jay Streets

Station layout test

P
Platform level
Southbound fast      Metropolitan line Fast/Semi-fast services do not stop here →
Southbound      Metropolitan line toward Aldgate (Preston Road)
Island platform, doors will open on the left Handicapped/disabled access
Northbound      Metropolitan line toward Watford or Uxbridge (Harrow-on-the-Hill)
Northbound      Metropolitan line Fast/Semi-fast services do not stop here
National Rail      Chiltern Railways services do not stop here
     Chiltern Railways services do not stop here →
G Ground level Entrance/exit, buses

References used in this sandbox

  1. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RrQBTvRj0s8
  2. @yrreb_xela (October 24, 2021). "Balloons!! 🎂 Today I turn the ripe old age of 24 👴" (Tweet). Retrieved November 26, 2021 – via Twitter.
  3. "Southend Pier Railway".
  4. Karslake, Colin. "Unofficial MailRail Website - Home". www.mailrail.co.uk. Retrieved 10 April 2018.
  5. "Mail Rail".
  6. London Underground (October 2014), New Tube for London - Feasibility Report (PDF), p. 26
  7. "BART System Facts". San Francisco Bay Area Rapid Transit District. Retrieved 2014-02-05.
  8. 8.0 8.1 8.2 8.3 8.4 8.5 8.6 8.7 8.8 Kenny, Hamill (1984). The Placenames of Maryland : their origin and meaning. Baltimore, Md.: Maryland Historical Society. ISBN 0-938420-28-3. Search this book on
  9. 9.000 9.001 9.002 9.003 9.004 9.005 9.006 9.007 9.008 9.009 9.010 9.011 9.012 9.013 9.014 9.015 9.016 9.017 9.018 9.019 9.020 9.021 9.022 9.023 9.024 9.025 9.026 9.027 9.028 9.029 9.030 9.031 9.032 9.033 9.034 9.035 9.036 9.037 9.038 9.039 9.040 9.041 9.042 9.043 9.044 9.045 9.046 9.047 9.048 9.049 9.050 9.051 9.052 9.053 9.054 9.055 9.056 9.057 9.058 9.059 9.060 9.061 9.062 9.063 9.064 9.065 9.066 9.067 9.068 9.069 9.070 9.071 9.072 9.073 9.074 9.075 9.076 9.077 9.078 9.079 9.080 9.081 9.082 9.083 9.084 9.085 9.086 9.087 9.088 9.089 9.090 9.091 9.092 9.093 9.094 9.095 9.096 9.097 9.098 9.099 9.100 9.101 9.102 9.103 9.104 9.105 9.106 9.107 9.108 9.109 9.110 9.111 9.112 9.113 9.114 9.115 9.116 9.117 9.118 9.119 9.120 9.121 9.122 9.123 9.124 9.125 9.126 9.127 9.128 9.129 9.130 9.131 Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named Gannett
  10. 10.00 10.01 10.02 10.03 10.04 10.05 10.06 10.07 10.08 10.09 10.10 10.11 10.12 10.13 10.14 10.15 10.16 Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named Stewart
  11. 11.0 11.1 11.2 11.3 Federal Writers' Project (1940). South Dakota place-names, v.1-3. University of South Dakota. hdl:2027/mdp.39015027015455. Search this book on
  12. "Battle, Maryland". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey.
  13. 13.0 13.1 13.2 13.3 13.4 Chadbourne, Ava Harriet (1955). Maine place names and the peopling of its towns. Portland, Maine: B. Wheelwright. hdl:2027/inu.39000005873737. ISBN 0870271121. Search this book on
  14. 14.00 14.01 14.02 14.03 14.04 14.05 14.06 14.07 14.08 14.09 Hutchinson, Viola L. (May 1945). The Origin of New Jersey Place Names (PDF). Trenton, New Jersey: New Jersey Public Library Commission. Search this book on
  15. "Beenham, New Mexico". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey.
  16. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named pnNM
  17. 17.0 17.1 Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named OTN
  18. 18.0 18.1 18.2 18.3 18.4 18.5 Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named NDpn
  19. 19.0 19.1 Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named RRhist
  20. 20.0 20.1 20.2 Rennick, Robert M. (2013). Kentucky Place Names. University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 9780813144016. Search this book on
  21. 21.0 21.1 Ramsay, Robert L. (1952). Our Storehouse of Missouri Place Names. University of Missouri Press. ISBN 9780826205865. Search this book on
  22. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named MOcts
  23. 23.0 23.1 23.2 23.3 Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named pnIll
  24. 24.0 24.1 24.2 24.3 24.4 24.5 24.6 24.7 24.8 Espenshade, A. Howry (1925). Pennsylvania place names. State College, PA: The Pennsylvania State College. hdl:2027/mdp.39015012934249. Search this book on
  25. 25.0 25.1 25.2 25.3 25.4 25.5 Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named VApn
  26. "Clifton, North Dakota". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey.
  27. 27.0 27.1 Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named UTpn
  28. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named INpn
  29. 29.0 29.1 29.2 29.3 Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named NYaz
  30. 30.0 30.1 Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named IApn
  31. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named GApn
  32. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named COpn
  33. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named WIpn
  34. Heck, L. W. (1966). Delaware Place Names. U.S. Government Printing Office. Search this book on
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  36. Shirk, George H (1987). Oklahoma Place Names. University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 0-8061-2028-2. Search this book on
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