The National Park Service joined the first-ever National Train Day May 10, with events at parks across the country and at Amtrak stations in Los Angeles, New York City, Chicago and Washington, D.C. “Children are going to have a lot of fun as they learn,” Bomar said.
“Youngsters will learn to run a steam locomotive, decode telegraph messages and
learn about national parks to solve train and national park mysteries.” Railroad Connections (http://www.nps.gov/webrangers/)
features videos made at Golden Spike National Historic Site and at Steamtown
National Historic Site in Pennsylvania. Since 1994, Amtrak and the National Park Service have promoted train travel
to national parks. The Trails & Rails Partnership Program places park
rangers and volunteers on trains to share park information and to point out
natural and cultural highlights on several regional Amtrak routes across the
country (http://www.nps.gov/trail&rails). The largest National Park Service presence was at Union Station in
Washington, D.C., with park rangers and volunteers from the National Park
Service Trails & Rails Program, as well as rangers from Greater Washington
National Parks. There was a special National Park Service booth for children
that included the world premiere launch and demonstration of Railroad
Connections on WebRangers, a program that the Best Buy Children’s
Foundation supports through the National Park Foundation. National Train Day highlights train travel as an energy efficient “green”
mode of transportation and promotes rail travel across American and has established a Web site for the campaign (http://www.nationaltrainday.com).
The following national park units took part in National Train Day
activities:
Amtrak selected May 10 as National Train Day to honor the completion of the Transcontinental Railroad at Promontory Summit, Utah Territory on May 10, 1869. Today, the National Park Service commemorates of the completion of the nation's first transcontinental railroad through the Service's Golden Spike National Historic Site. When the Union Pacific and Central Pacific joined tracks, they formed 1,776 miles of rail.
“National Train Day is the perfect time for us to launch ‘Railroad Connections’ on WebRangers, our very popular children’s Web site,” said National Park Service Director Bomar. “Many children have never been on a train so we developed ‘Railroad Connections’ to provide the stories of the growth of national parks and the development of railroads.”
For additional information, please contact Dave Barna, Jeffrey Olson or Wendy O’Sullivan, NPS, at (202) 208-6843.


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