...that when oshiyas, an informal Japanese term for a worker who stands on the platform of a railway station during the morning and evening rush hours to push people onto the train, were first brought in at Shinjuku station, they were called "passenger arrangement staff" (旅客整理係, ryokaku seiri gakari), and were largely made up of students working part-time?
Union Line #6699, an insulated wood boxcar built in 1895
...that the 110 m (360 ft) tall Veresk Bridge in Iran, constructed during the reign of Reza Shah, was known as the Pol-e-Piroozi, or the bridge of victory, during World War II?
A Šargan Eight train approaching the line's longest bridge in 2003
...that the 760 mm (2 ft 5+15⁄16 in) gaugeŠargan Eight railway, which closed to regular traffic in 1974, was rebuilt between 1999 and 2003 by the Serbian Ministry of Tourism and the Yugoslav Railways (JŽ) to be operated as a heritage railway?
The Barentin Viaduct shortly after it was rebuilt in 1846
...that shortly after it was completed near Rouen, France, the 100-foot (30 m) tall, 600-yard (550 m) long Barentin Viaduct collapsed following heavy rains on January 10, 1846, but was rebuilt with funds supplied by Thomas Brassey, the bridge's contractor, and still stands today?
Interior of the John Street Roundhouse undergoing restoration in May 2008
...that for several holiday seasons the Indian Pacific has operated a Christmas Train with stops at several locations across Australia to entertain the locals and thank them for their support of the train?
A baby health clinic car at Baradine in 1936
...that the Royal Far West Children's Health Scheme operated a number of railway carriages in regular passenger and goods trains for movement between stations in the western regions of New South Wales, Australia, as Baby Health Clinics from 1931 until 1975?
Lm 23, one of Nærumbanen's RegioSprinter trains, just before departure from Jægersborg station
...that the Nærumbanen, a short passenger railway in the northern suburbs of Copenhagen, originally opened as the Lyngby-Vedbæk railway in 1900 to serve as a freight carrier for industries in the Mølleå valley?
...that iron ore trains on the Mauritania Railway can extend up to 2.5 kilometres (1.6 mi) in length, making them among the longest and heaviest in the world?
Sibirjak express departing from Berlin Zoologischer Garten station
USAX 1811 preserved in the Army Transportation Museum, Fort Eustis, VA
...that although the EMD MRS-1 locomotives failed to earn the US Army contract that went to ALCO for its MRS-1, they did prompt NMBS/SNCB to order EMD-licensed locomotives from NOHAB after the demonstrator locomotives made test runs on their lines?
Diagram of the Lansdowne Bridge
...that the Lansdowne Bridge near Rohri in present day Pakistan was the 'longest "rigid" girder bridge in the world' when it was opened in 1887?
A bridge of the Ferrocarril Central Andino near Matucana