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In the 1850s, Grand Trunk Railway, later Canadian National, was one of New England's and Canada's most important and heavily travelled railway lines. It linked Canada's metropolis, Montreal -- through Vermont and New Hampshire -- with the nearest ice-free port at Portland, Maine. Despite constant upgrading, accidents did occur, some of them catastrophic. With details about four dozen such tragedies, you'll learn what happened when people, vehicles, or nature decided to duel with a fully-loaded train. Discover the circumstances when a cattle train hit a mudslide... a passenger train toppled over the bank... two locomotives met in heavy fog that made it impossible to see... two trains, one fully-loaded with immigrants, came towards each other on ONE track ... the West Paris Bridge collapsed... two double-headed freight trains collided head-on ... a train hit a fuel tanker truck, with ensuing explosion and fire... a derailment toppled a chlorine tank car off a bridge onto the highway below. 196 pages, over 200 photographs, (5 color), 16 maps and diagrams to show where the accidents occurred.
Author Jeff Holt has covered four dozen New England tragedies on the Grand Trunk (later Canadian National) railway line, providing interesting anecdotes, myriad photos, and helpful maps with explanatory diagrams to assist readers in understanding the context of each situation. Dramatic and graphic photos, some in color, help draw the reader into each of the stories. People will want to pick up the book, to see details of how their community, or their railway line, was affected. Others will want to see how their friends, their families, their fellow railroaders, or their favourite railway, was impacted.