Transportation Transportation > trains
Across America on an Emigrant Train
This nonfiction account of Robert Louis Stevenson's train trip from New York to California combines Stevenson's words from his letters and diary, a factual description of the railroad industry and the 19th-century U.S. West, and amazing old photographs an
Author: Murphy, Jim |
HSE Descriptors:
social studies
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Full Steam Ahead: The Race to Build a Transcontinental Railroad
The Pacific Railroad Act of 1862 granted a company in California the right to lay railroad tracks east and another to lay tracks west beginning at the Mississippi River. Payment for the work, in land and money, was based on the number of miles covered. T
Author: Blumberg, Rhoda |
HSE Descriptors:
social studies
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Ghost Train
Choon-yi is a painter. Her father leaves China for North America to find work. He asks her to join him, but when she arrives, she discovers that he has been killed on the job. As Choon-yi tries to paint the train, a ghostly presence beckons her.
Gratefully Yours
Orphaned by a New York tenement fire in 1920, Hattie rides an orphan train to Nebraska where she joins the Jansen household, Henry and his wife Elizabeth. The story relates the loss and healing process that both Hattie and Elizabeth experience. The stor
Author: Buchanan, Jane |
HSE Descriptors:
social studies
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Hand in Hand
The collection of poems is organized by American historical themes rather than by chronology. There are many poems that are familiar patriotic songs.
Author: Hopkins, Lee (Ed.) |
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I Dream of Trains
This is the story of an African-American boy who lives in the South before the Great Migration, who loves trains, and who stands in awe of Casey Jones.
Author: Johnson, Angela |
HSE Descriptors:
social studies
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Kate Shelley: Bound for Legend
This is the story of a 15-year-old girl who helped prevent a train disaster in 1881.
Author: San Souci, Robert D. |
HSE Descriptors:
social studies
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Orphan Train Rider: One Boy's True Story
Between 1859 and 1929, more than 200,000 children were sent "west" on Orphan Trains. The chapters in this book alternate between telling the larger history of this event and telling the individual story of one Orphan Train Rider, Lee Nailling.
Author: Warren, Andrea |
HSE Descriptors:
social studies
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She's Been Working on the Railroad
Women began working on the railroads in the mid-1800s and still do so today. This is their story. The text is illustrated with photographs, and a variety of textual aids (e.g., glossary, index) are also included.
Author: Levinson, Nancy Smiler |
HSE Descriptors:
social studies
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Steam, Steel, and Stars
In 1955, the photographer O.W. Link captured the last steam railroad on its last runs in Virginia, West Virginia, Kentucky, and Ohio.
Author: Link, O. W. and Hensley, F. |
HSE Descriptors:
social studies
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Those Building Men
The author pays tribute to an older generation of construction workers who built the first railroads, canals, bridges, and skyscrapers in American. The simple prose uses beautiful language to describe work.
Author: Johnson, Angela |
HSE Descriptors:
social studies
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Train to Somewhere
Marianne heads west with 14 other children on an Orphan Train, certain that her mother will be waiting for her at one of the stops. No one shows interest in adopting Marianne until the train arrives at a place called Somewhere, where Marianne meets her n
Author: Bunting, Eve |
HSE Descriptors:
social studies
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