Springfield, Athol and North-eastern Railroad

The Springfield, Athol and North–eastern Railroad was a railroad that operated in the northeast United States in the 19th century.

Greenwich Village, one of the Athol Branch stations closed in the 1930s during the creation of the Quabbin Reservoir

History

The Athol and Enfield Railroad was chartered in 1869, and succeeded by the Springfield, Athol and North-eastern Railroad in 1873, opening in 1873 as a branch from Athol Junction in Springfield to the Vermont and Massachusetts Railroad in Athol. The Boston and Albany Railroad bought the line in 1880. The majority of the line was closed in the 1930s due to the formation of the Quabbin Reservoir.[1][2]


gollark: (or even, by multilaterating the position of the computer sending the GPS ping, break GPS for *specific locations*, to make them... possibly harder to target for some things, I don't know)
gollark: (which reminded me of some other evil idea someone came up with - the `gps` API sends your computer's ID with GPS pings, so in theory, if you controlled most GPS servers in one dimension, you could completely mess up or subtly offset certain people's GPS)
gollark: I also added a small note to https://wiki.computercraft.cc/Gps.locate about the results not always being reliable, since GPS is kind of vulnerable to spoofing.
gollark: It's more of a general guide-type thing explaining how to set up GPS hosts than information on how to use `gps host` itself.
gollark: Er, libraries.

References

Further reading

  • Greene, J.R. Quabbin's Railroad : The Rabbit - Vol. 1 : The Independent Years, 1869-1880. Branch Line Press. ISBN 1-884-132-07-3.
  • Greene, J.R. Quabbin's Railroad : The Rabbit - Vol. II: The Boston & Albany Years, 1880-1935. Branch Line Press. ISBN 1-884-132-08-1.


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