A 143-year tradition came to an end a year ago this week as No. 481 marked the last of the Durango & Silverton's steam locomotives that the company converted from coal burning to oil.
As Denver7 highlights one videographer's shoot of the last coal-burning train on the Durango-Silverton railroad, we were inspired to reflect on the role railways have played in Colorado's history.
Watch the incredible sights and sounds, captured by Philadelphia-area photographer Joe Fusco, of the last coal-burning engine on Colorado's Durango & Silverton Narrow Gauge Railroad. Fusco traveled ...
A 143-year tradition came to an end a year ago this week as No. 481 marked the last of the Durango & Silverton's steam ...
The mechanics working tirelessly behind the scenes of the Durango & Silverton Narrow Gauge Railroad finally have ... The clatter of mechanics working on noisy steam-powered locomotives in the ...
The passenger alerted the conductor to the injured hiker, who went missing and spent two nights in the wilderness after a fall Brenton Blanchet is a writer-reporter at PEOPLE. He has been working ...
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The Times (Shreveport) on MSNThrough My Mother’s Eyes: Traveling via Train in Southern ColoradoJust like Stevie Nicks did in 1973, my mother, too, embarked upon a journey to Colorado 50 years ago. While she wasn’t ...
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