North American Passenger Trains - SIX BOOK Hardcover Bundle
$ 229.95 $ 389.70
Canadian Passenger Trains 1967-1983 In Color — Bob Schmidt
Featuring Newfoundland to Vancouver Island, with a special emphasis on CN & CP transcontinental trains and "Corridor" services. Includes locals & mixed trains to locales such as Labrador and remote Manitoba, and over roads such as the Algoma Central & Northern Alberta!
Mexican Passenger Trains In Color — Bob Schmidt & Michael Caramanna
From the Pacific Ocean and Gulf of California in the West to the Gulf of Mexico in the East, and from the U.S. Border in the North to the Yucatan Peninsula in the South, this title features the passenger services of Mexico. Major express trains such as the AZTEC EAGLE and connecting lines such as the Coahuila and Zacatecas narrow gauge railroad are included.
Penn Central Through Passenger Service — Geoffrey H. Doughty
While Penn Central came into being in February 1968, it still operated a substantial long distance passenger service in the several years before Amtrak. Struggling to create a new image when bankruptcy struck, the three year story is illustrated in nearly 250 color photos.
Illinois Central Through Passenger Service In Color — Greg Stout
Illinois Central's premiere passenger trains connected Chicago with vacation destinations in Florida and New Orleans. Meanwhile, its more workaday trains offered service to St. Louis and points in Iowa, Kentucky, Tennessee and Mississippi. Here is an all-color review of one of the finest passenger operations to be found on any U.S. railroad.
Seaboard Coast Line Through Passenger Service In Color — Greg Stout
An in-depth dive into the great trains of the Atlantic Coast Line, Seaboard Air Line, and merged Seaboard Coast Line, which moved passengers between Chicago, the Northeast, and sunny Florida!
Southern Pacific Through Passenger Service In Color — Greg Stout
A railroad that spared no expense to attract passengers, and then spared no effort to drive them away. A look at Southern Pacific's passenger service from the postwar period to the Amtrak era.

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