Item is a photograph of QCR train with passenger cars at Newington.
Railways
554 Archival description results for Railways
Item is a photograph of railway passenger cars, the ex-Lang Island Commuter coaches #2732 at Sherbrooke.
Item is a photograph of railway passenger cars, the ex-Lang Island Commuter coaches #2732-2722 at Sherbrooke.
Item is a photograph of locomotive JMG1.
Item is a photograph of locomotives JM1 and QC502.
Item is a photograph of locomotives JM1 and QC502.
The series contains 119 photographs of Quebec Central Railway (QCR) in Eastern Townships and a few in Vallée-Jonction from 1998 to 2006. It consists mainly of railway photos including QCR freight and passenger trains, locomotives, rail cars and a few from Trains Touristiques de Chaudière-Appalaches (TTCA) which was running on the QCR track to Sherbrooke.
Item is a letter dated 30 November 1965 from C.W. Rump, Secretary for the Board of Transport Commissioners for Canada, to Mr. C.S. Douglas of Sutton, acknowledging the receipt of a letter regarding the termination of passenger train services.
Item is a letter dated 2 November 1965 to Mr. Heward Grafftey, Member of Parliament for Brome-Missisquoi, from C.S. Douglas of Sutton, arguing that the C.P.R. had obligations to the taxpayers of rural areas which contributed to the building of the railways to sustain railway service to those areas.
Item is a letter to the Ministry of Transport dated October 30 1965 protesting the termination of passenger train service by the C.P.R. on behalf of the people of Sutton, QC.
Item is a description of the evolution of the South Eastern Railway Company from 1866 to 1931.
Item is a photograph of a train locomotive on a railway bridge with people standing on and beside it, probably taken in the 1800s. The caption reads: S.E.R. No. 16, A.B. Chaffee.
Item is a photograph of a train locomotive on a railway bridge with people standing on and beside it, probably taken in the 1800s.
The item is a photograph of a train derailment (Canadian Pacific Railway) in Bury in 1911. Photographer: G.E. Smyth (Bury).