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Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Alexandria's Triple Play

In the early 1900s, five East Coast railroads merged to form the Richmond-Washington Co., which would manage rail traffic in the region. The company also would manage Union Station in Alexandria, Va., and the city's switching yard — known as the Potomac Yard, or Pot Yard. Soon after it opened in 1906, the Pot Yard became one of the busiest railroad yards in the eastern United States, interchanging thousands of rail cars each day, so many that it reached capacity by 1937. Over the next 50 years, however, the need for the rail yard eventually ...

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