Railroad Atlas of the United States in 1946: : Volume 1: The Mid-Atlantic States (POD) - Richard C. Carpenter

Railroad Atlas of the United States in 1946:

Volume 1: The Mid-Atlantic States (POD)

By: Richard C. Carpenter

Hardcover | 7 August 2003

At a Glance

Hardcover


$158.80

or 4 interest-free payments of $39.70 with

 or 

Aims to ship in 10 to 15 business days

A pair of gleaming rails embedded in a farmhouse driveway. A wooded cycling trail that traces an oddly level path through suburban hills. An abandoned high fill that briefly parallels the interstate. Today, little remains of the vast network of passenger and freight railroad lines that once crisscrossed much of eastern and midwestern America. But in 1946, the steam locomotive was king, the automobile was just beginning to emerge from wartime restrictions, passenger trains still made stops in nearly every town, and freight trains carried most of the nation's intercity commerce.

In A Railroad Atlas of the United States in 1946, Richard C. Carpenter provides a unique record of this not-so-distant time, when traveling out of town meant, for most Americans, taking the train. The first volume of this multivolume series covers the mid-Atlantic states and includes detailed maps of every passenger railroad line in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Delaware, Maryland, Virginia, West Virginia, and the District of Columbia. When completed, the series will provide a comprehensive atlas of the U.S. railroad system at its post-World War II high point -- a transportation network that many considered the finest railroad passenger system in the world.

Meticulously crafted and rich in detail, these hand-drawn color maps reveal with skilled precision -- at a scale of 1 inch to 4 miles (or 1:250,000) -- the various main and branch railroad passenger and freight lines that served thousands of American towns. The maps also include such features as long-since-demolished steam locomotive and manual signal tower installations, towns that functioned solely as places where crews changed over, track pans, coaling stations, and other rail-specific sites.

Currently, there exists no comprehensive, historic railroad atlas for the U.S. This volume, with its 202 full-scale and detail maps, is sure to remain the standard reference work for years to come, as will the others to follow in the series.

Industry Reviews

""Carpenter knows railfans, and his multi-color atlas of rail lines as they stood in 1946 will keep them up into the wee hours... So extensive is Carpenter's work that the 276 maps and drawings included in this 360-page Volume 3 covers only Indiana, Lower Michigan and Ohio.""

More in General Studies

Introducing Forensic and Criminal Investigation - Jane Monckton-Smith
Migration, Diaspora, Exile : Narratives of Affiliation and Escape - Daniel Stein
Anatomy of the Honey Bee : Comstock Book - R. E. Snodgrass

RRP $79.25

$75.35

Who Is to Blame? : A Novel in Two Parts - Alexander Herzen

BLACK FRIDAY

RRP $55.00

$13.75

75%
OFF
Academic Writing and Grammar for Students 2/e : Sage Study Skills - Alex Osmond
Policing and Criminology : Policing Matters - Craig Paterson

RRP $70.50

$54.90

22%
OFF
Forest School for All - Sara Knight

RRP $264.00

$183.35

31%
OFF
Teaching Secondary Music - Jayne Price

RRP $295.25

$179.95

39%
OFF
Aesthetic Labour - Chris Warhurst

RRP $88.00

$64.90

26%
OFF
Sport and Exercise Science : Active Learning in Sport - Joanne Thatcher
Unruly Bodies : Life Writing by Women with Disabilities - Susannah B. Mintz
An Introduction to Gestalt - Charlotte Sills

RRP $77.00

$66.95

13%
OFF
Key Concepts in Urban Studies : SAGE Key Concepts series - Mark D. Gottdiener