This article contains a list of named passenger trains in the United States, with names beginning A through B.[1]
A
B
Train name | Railroad | Train endpoints in a typical [year] | Operated |
---|---|---|---|
Badger | Amtrak | Chicago–Milwaukee [1985] | 1985–1989 |
Badger Express | Great Northern | St. Paul, Minnesota–Duluth, Minnesota [1943]; 1955-1971 just called 'Badger' | 1925–1971 |
Badger Limited | Chicago North Shore and Milwaukee Railroad | Chicago–Milwaukee [1930] | 1929–1933 |
Badger State Express | Chicago & North Western | Chicago–Minneapolis [1919] | 1892–1936 |
Baltimore Day Express | Pennsylvania | Buffalo, New York-Washington, D.C. [1962] | 1958-1968 |
Baltimore-Washington Night Express | Baltimore & Ohio, Central Railroad of New Jersey, Reading Company | Jersey City, New Jersey–Washington, D.C. [1941] | 1938–1946 |
Bankers | New Haven Penn Central (1969-1971) |
New York City–Springfield, Massachusetts [1945] | 1939–1971 |
Bankers | Amtrak | Washington, D.C.–Springfield, Massachusetts [1980] | 1976–1998 |
Banner Blue | Wabash | Chicago–St. Louis [1938] | 1894–1896; 1905–1967 |
Bar Harbor Express | Maine Central Boston and Maine New Haven |
Washington, D.C.–Ellsworth, Maine [1950] | 1902–1960 |
Barnacle Bill Special | Pennsylvania-Reading Seashore Lines | Philadelphia–Atlantic City, New Jersey [1939] | 1938–1941 |
Bat | Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad | Chicago–Minneapolis [1929] | 1929–1930 |
Bay Shore Special | Central of New Jersey | Washington, D.C.–Ellingsworth, Pennsylvania [1948] | 1940–1949 |
Bay State | New Haven Penn Central (1969–1971) Amtrak (from 1971) |
New York City–Boston [1985] | 1894–1917; 1925–1974; 1982–1994; 1997–1998 |
Bayonne Flyer | New Jersey Transit (Hudson–Bergen Light Rail) | Hoboken, New Jersey–Bayonne, New Jersey | 2011–present |
Beach Comber | Boston & Maine | Boston–Portland, Maine [1950] | 1950–1952 |
Beach Patrol | Pennsylvania-Reading Seashore Lines | Philadelphia–Atlantic City, New Jersey [1939] | 1938–1941 |
Beach Special | Boston & Maine | Boston–Portland, Maine [1952] | 1950–1952 |
Beachcomber | Long Island Rail Road | New York City–Montauk, New York [1964] | 1963–1966 |
Beacon Hill | Amtrak | Boston–New Haven, Connecticut [1979] | 1978–1981 |
Bear Mountain | Amtrak | New York City–Albany, New York [1985] | 1977; 1981–1995 |
Beaver | Southern Pacific | San Francisco–Portland, Oregon [1942] | 1940–1949 |
Beaver | New York Central | New York City–Cleveland–Toronto [1921] | 1913–1926 |
Benjamin Franklin | Amtrak | Boston–Philadelphia [1982] | 1977–1994 |
Berkshire | Boston & Albany, New York Central | Boston–Albany, New York [1948] | 1902–1931; 1952–1959 |
Berkshire | Boston & Maine | Boston–Troy, New York [1940] | c. 1932-1936 (Berkshire Flyer); c. 1937–1940 |
Berkshire | New Haven | New York City–Pittsfield, Massachusetts [1954] | c. 1931–1941 (Berkshire Express); c. 1946-1968 |
Berkshire Hills Express | New York Central | New York City–Chatham, New York--North Adams, Massachusetts [1924] | 1919–1934 |
Betsy Ross | Amtrak | New York City–Washington, D.C. [1980] | 1976–1981 |
Bicentennial | Amtrak | Boston–Philadelphia [1976] | 1976–1977 |
Big Apple | Amtrak | New York City–Harrisburg, Pennsylvania [1983] | 1980–1992; 1997–1998 |
Birmingham and Atlanta Owl | Seaboard Air Line Railroad | Birmingham, Alabama–Atlanta [1930] | 1927–1933 |
Birmingham Owl | Seaboard Air Line Railroad | Birmingham, Alabama–Atlanta [1935] | 1925–1926; 1934–1938 |
Birmingham Special[8] | Pennsylvania, then Penn Central (1969-1971) Norfolk & Western and Southern |
New York City–Birmingham, Alabama, with a Chattanooga, Tennessee–Memphis, Tennessee segment [1926] | 1909-1971 |
Biscayne | Florida East Coast Railway | Jacksonville, Florida–Miami [1930] | 1927–1931 |
Black Diamond | Lehigh Valley Reading |
Philadelphia–New York City–Buffalo, New York [1952] | 1896–1959 |
Black Gold | Frisco | Tulsa, Oklahoma–Fort Worth, Texas [1952] | 1938–1959 |
Black Hawk | Chicago, Burlington & Quincy (–1970) Burlington Northern (6 weeks in 1970) |
Chicago–Minneapolis [1945] | 1927–1970 |
Black Hawk | Amtrak | Chicago–Dubuque, Iowa [1976] | 1974–1981 |
Black Hills and Minnesota Express | Chicago & North Western | Chicago–Rapid City, South Dakota [1915] | 1914–1918 |
Blue Arrow | Nickel Plate | Cleveland–St. Louis [1958] | 1956–1959 |
Blue Bird[9] | Chicago Great Western | Minneapolis–Rochester, Minnesota [1930] | 1929–1931 |
Blue Bird | Wabash | Chicago–St. Louis [1943] | 1938–1968 |
Blue Comet | Central Railroad of New Jersey | Jersey City, New Jersey–Atlantic City, New Jersey [1934] | 1929–1941 |
Blue Dart | Nickel Plate | St. Louis–Cleveland [1958] | 1956–1959 |
Blue Grass Special | Pennsylvania | Chicago–Louisville, Kentucky [1955] | 1952–1957 |
Blue Ridge[10] | Amtrak, Marc after 1986 | Washington, D.C.–Martinsburg, West Virginia [1977] | 1973-1988 |
Blue Ridge Limited | Baltimore & Ohio | Chicago–Washington, D.C. [1945] | 1934–1949 |
Blue Water | Amtrak | Chicago–Port Huron, Michigan [2008] | 1975–1982 as the Blue Water Limited; 2004–present |
Bluebonnet | Frisco and Missouri–Kansas–Texas |
St. Louis–Fort Worth, Texas [1952] | 1928–1958 |
Bluegrass | Monon Railroad | Chicago–Louisville, Kentucky [1949] | 1948–1952 |
Boardwalk Flyer | Pennsylvania-Reading Seashore Lines | Philadelphia–Atlantic City, New Jersey [1940] | 1934–1935; 1939–1941 |
Bon-Air Special | Georgia & Florida | Augusta, Georgia–Jacksonville, Florida [1925] | 1924–1930 |
Booth Tarkington | New York Central | Chicago–Cincinnati [1958] | 1958 |
Border Limited | Southern Pacific | Houston–Corpus Christi, Texas [1952] | 1929–1930; 1934-1952 |
Boston Afternoon Express | Boston & Albany | Boston–Albany, New York [1925] | 1913–1927 |
Boston and Buffalo Special | New York Central | Boston–Chicago [1924] | 1906–1928 |
Boston and Chicago Special | New York Central | Boston–Chicago [1912] | 1892–1914 |
Boston and New York Express | New York Central | Boston–Chicago (with sleeping cars to many other points) [1912] | 1905–1914 |
Boston Day Express | Boston & Albany, New Haven | New York City–Boston [1930] | 1924–1931 |
Boston Evening Express | Boston & Albany | Boston-Albany, New York [1925] | 1925-1928 |
Boston Express | New York Central | Buffalo, New York–Boston [1930] | 1888–1948 |
Boston Express | Duluth, South Shore and Atlantic Railway | Duluth, Minnesota–Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan (with through trains to many eastern cities) [1908] | 1890–1916 |
Boston Express | Pennsylvania, New Haven | Washington, D.C.–Boston [1895] | 1892–1900 |
Boston Express | Minneapolis, St. Paul and Sault Ste. Marie, Canadian Pacific Railway | Minneapolis–Saint Paul–Montreal [1908] | 1898–1910 |
Boston Limited | Boston & Albany, New York Central Railroad | Boston–Chicago [1894] | 1894–1909 |
Boston Night Express | Boston & Albany | Boston–Albany, New York [1920] | 1913–1922 |
Boston Special | Boston & Albany, New York Central Railroad | Boston–Chicago [1892] | 1892–1909 |
Boston Special | New York Central | Boston–Chicago (with through trains to Toronto and Montreal) [1945] | 1942–1946 |
Boston–New York Express | New Haven New York Central |
New York City–Boston [1938] New York City–Springfield, Massachusetts |
1925–1951 |
Bostonian | New Haven (until 1968) Penn Central (1969-1971) Amtrak (since 1971) |
New York City–Boston [1953] | 1919–1977 |
Bowery | Amtrak | New York City–Washington, D.C. [1997] | 1997–1998 |
Brainerd and International Falls Express | Northern Pacific Railway | Saint Paul, Minnesota–International Falls, Minnesota [1928] | 1921–1946 |
Brazil and Mudlavia Express | Chicago, Indianapolis & Louisville | Chicago–Terre Haute, Indiana [1905] | 1902–1906 |
Broadway Limited | Pennsylvania (1912–1969) Penn Central (1969–1971) Amtrak (1971–1995) |
Chicago–Washington, D.C. [1930] Chicago–New York City |
1912–1995 |
Buckeye | Pennsylvania | Pittsburgh–Cleveland (Buckeye Limited 1916–1936) [1939] | 1916-1948 |
Buckeye | Pennsylvania Penn Central (1969–1971) |
Chicago–Cincinnati and Columbus, Ohio [1958] | 1957-1969 |
Buckeye | Pere Marquette Railway | Detroit–Columbus, Ohio [1930] | 1928–1931 |
Budd Highlander | Boston and Maine | Boston–Albany, New York [1955] | 1952-1958 |
Buffalo–Chicago Special | New York Central | Chicago–Buffalo, New York [1925] | 1921–1927 |
Buffalo–Cincinnati Express | New York Central | Buffalo, New York–Cincinnati (with through trains to the south) [1934] | 1934–1946 |
Buffalo - Pittsburgh - Detroit Special | New York Central | Buffalo, New York–Pittsburgh–Detroit [1925] | 1922–1934 |
Buffalo - Pittsburgh - Toledo Special | New York Central | Buffalo, New York–Pittsburgh–Toledo, Ohio [1938] | 1935–1940 |
Buffalo – Pittsburgh Express | New York Central and Pittsburgh and Lake Erie Railroad | Buffalo, New York–Pittsburgh [1942] (aka Buffalo and Pittsburgh Express) | 1904–1917; 1929–1930; 1935–1961 |
Buffalo–Toronto Express | New York Central, Canadian Pacific Railway | New York City–Toronto [1945] | 1943–1963 |
Buffalo and Chicago Express | Grand Trunk Western | New York, New York-Chicago, Illinois [1903] | 1900–1907 |
Buffalo and Chicago Special | Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway | Buffalo, New York–Chicago [1910] | 1906–1913 |
Buffalo and Chicago Special | Boston and Albany Railroad, New York Central Railroad | Boston–Chicago [1915] | 1913–1920 |
Buffalo Day Express | Pennsylvania | Washington, D.C.–Buffalo, New York [1933] | 1900–1968 |
Buffalo Express | Lehigh Valley Railroad, Grand Trunk Western Railroad | Toronto–Buffalo, New York [1905] | 1902–1914 |
Buffalo Express | New York Central | Chicago–Buffalo, New York [1933] | 1912–1943 |
Buffalo Limited | New York Central | New York, New York-Buffalo, New York [1903] | 1902-1906 |
Buffalo Limited | Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad | New York City–Buffalo, New York [1920] | 1919–1926 |
Buffalo Limited | Pittsburgh and Lake Erie Railroad | Pittsburgh–Buffalo, New York [1930] | 1919–1931 |
Buffalo Local | New York Central | Cincinnati–Buffalo, New York | ? |
Buffalo Mail | Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad | New York City–Buffalo, New York [1930] | 1919–1935 |
Buffalo Special | New York Central | New York City–Buffalo, New York [1908] | 1892–1893; 1902–1914; 1919–1925 |
Buffalo Special | Pennsylvania Railroad | Pittsburgh–Buffalo, New York [1911] | 1906–1916 |
Buffalo Train | Lehigh Valley Railroad, Grand Trunk Western Railroad | New York City–Chicago [1907] | 1902–1914 |
Buffalonian | West Shore Railroad | New York City–Buffalo, New York (with sleeping cars to Chicago, St. Louis, and Boston) [1915] | 1910–1925 |
Buffalonian | New York Central | New York City–Buffalo, New York [1924] | 1915–1932 |
Buffalonian | Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad | New York City–Buffalo, New York [1940] | 1936–1941 |
Bullet | Central Railroad of New Jersey | Jersey City, New Jersey-Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania [1930] | 1929–1931 |
Bullet | Pennsylvania Railroad | Wilmington, Delaware-Easton, Maryland [1938] | 1937-c.1946 |
Bunker Hill | New Haven (until 1946), Amtrak (since 1971) | New York City–Boston [1972] | 1940-1946; 1971-1975 |
Business Man's Special | Pere Marquette | Chicago–Grand Rapids, Michigan [1930] | 1928–1932 |
Butte and Portland Special | Union Pacific | Salt Lake City–Butte, Montana–Portland, Oregon [1915] | 1911–1920 |
Butte Express | Union Pacific | Salt Lake City–Butte, Montana–Boise, Idaho [1938] | 1894–1895; 1915–1931; 1935–1941 |
Butte Special | Union Pacific | Salt Lake City–Butte, Montana [1952] | 1921–1971 |
Butte - Northwest Express | Union Pacific | Salt Lake City–Butte, Montana–Spokane, Washington–Portland, Oregon [1935] | 1932–1941 |
Butte - Portland Express | Union Pacific | Salt Lake City–Butte, Montana–Portland, Oregon [1912] | 1911–1914 |
Notes
- ↑ The primary source for American passenger train names is the Official Guide of the Railways, which has been published since 1868, under the following titles: 1868-1869 Travelers’ Official Railway Guide of the United States and Canada. New York: National Railway Publication Co.; 1870-1896 Travelers' Official Guide of the Railways and Steam Navigation Lines in the United States and Canada. New York: National Railway Publication Co.; 1897-1900 Travelers’ Official Guide of the Railways and Steam Navigation Lines in the United States, Canada and Mexico. New York: National Railway Publication Co.; 1901-1973 The Official Guide of the Railways and Steam Navigation Lines of the United States, Porto Rico, Canada, Mexico, and Cuba. New York: National Railway Publication Co.; 1974-1989 The Official Railway Guide North American Passenger Travel Edition: United States, Canada and Mexico. New York: National Railway Publication Co.; 1989-2016 Amtrak National Train Timetables.
- ↑ Schafer (1997), 19–20; Schafer (2000), 58–59
- ↑ Goldberg, Bruce (1981). Amtrak--the first decade. Silver Spring, MD: Alan Books. OCLC 7925036.
- ↑ Solomon (1999), 66.
- ↑ "U.S. Transportation Secretary Slater celebrates inaugural run of Acela Express high-speed rail service". M2 Presswire. November 17, 2000. Retrieved 2009-11-07.
- ↑ Schafer (2000), 39.
- ↑ Yenne (2005), 47.
- ↑ Norfolk and Western Railway, October 27, 1957, timetable, pp. 5, 8.
- ↑ Dubin, Arthur D. 1974. More Classic Trains (Milwaukee: Kalmbach)
- ↑ Reynolds (2000), 126–127.
References
- Reynolds, Kirk; Oroszi, Dave (2000). Baltimore & Ohio Railroad. Osceola, WI: MBI. ISBN 0760307466. OCLC 42764520.
- Schafer, Mike; Welsh, Joe (1997). Classic American Streamliners. Osceola, Wisconsin: MotorBooks International. ISBN 978-0-7603-0377-1.
- Schafer, Mike (2000). More Classic American Railroads. Osceola, WI: MBI Publishing Co. ISBN 978-0-7603-0758-8. OCLC 44089438.
- Solomon, Brian (1999). Southern Pacific Railroad. MBI Publishing Co. ISBN 0-7603-0614-1.
- Yenne, Bill (2005). Santa Fe Chiefs. Saint Paul, Minnesota: MBI. ISBN 978-0-7603-1848-5.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.