In this illustrated collection, H. Roger Grant, one of America's
leading railroad historians, brings together a rich assortment of
personal accounts of train travel in the United States since the
dawn of railroading. The twenty-one accounts included here tell of
the excitement, the romance, the difficulties, and sometimes the
danger of traveling by train. Together they present a lively
picture of the great changes that have taken place since the 1830s.
Some describe wild rides on high-speed raceways, while others
recount arduous trips on rickety branch lines. Rail travel at its
most luxurious is recreated--the elegant Pullman sleeping berths,
the fine parlor and observation cars--as are some of the more grim
journeys of troops, itinerant workers, and prisoners of war in
squalid boxcars. Binding these accounts together is an enduring
fascination with the rails.
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