... that the Delaware Railroad was sued in 1863 because it did not have enough freight cars to transport a bumper crop of peaches?
... that the 3.5 miles (5.6km) separating the New York City Subway's JFK Airport and Broad Channel stations is the longest distance between two consecutive stations in the system?
... that scrap metal from demolition work during construction of the Capitol Hill station was sold to fund meals for the homeless?
... that several freight cars of the Disneyland Railroad(locomotive pictured) originally had no seats because Walt Disney wanted passengers to feel like cattle riding in a real cattle train?
... that Science Express, a scientific exhibition for children mounted on a train, is included in the Limca Book of Records for being the largest, the longest running and the most visited mobile exhibition?
... that the Downtown Seattle Transit Tunnel is the only tunnel with stations shared between trains and buses in the United States?
... that the Train Track Park, containing 7 kilometres (4.3mi) of walking and biking trails, was built over the century-old route of the Jaffa–Jerusalem railway?
... that the pendulum car was an experimental forerunner of the tilting train, but was not widely adopted on American railroads?
... that the Whitehorse Trail uses a railroad that was abandoned after major floods in 1990?
... that within a year of implementing express service(train pictured), San Francisco Bay Area commuter rail system Caltrain experienced a 12 percent increase in ridership?
... that federal funding for the project to electrify Bay Area commuter railroad Caltrain was pulled days before construction was scheduled to begin?
... that despite the Reich Ministry of Transport running trains to extermination camps during the Holocaust, the US later ruled some of their personnel only had "lukewarm" connections to the Nazi Party?
... that the walls of the Woodhaven Boulevard subway station in New York City still prominently display the name of a plaza that was demolished in the 1950s?