List of train ferries explained
This is a list of train ferries that are designed to carry railway vehicles. These include purpose-built train ferries that can be quickly loaded and unloaded by roll-on/roll-off, and car floats or rail barges which are barges that carry trains.
Current train ferries
Azerbaijan
Bolivia
Bulgaria
- The Varna-Odesa (Ukraine) train ferry line served by 4 boats (each, carrying 108 loaded railroad cars) opened in 1978, bypasses a break of gauge. Later, the service was extended to include lines to Poti and Batumi, Georgia. Boats can carry trucks and passengers as well.
Canada
China
- Guangdong–Hainan Railway: Part of this railway is the Yuehai (粤海, i.e. Guangdong-Hainan) Ferry which crosses the Qiongzhou Strait, between Zhanjiang, Guangdong and Haikou, Hainan. The line has operated since January 2003, carrying both freight and passenger trains, enabling direct train service between the mainland and the cities of Haikou and Sanya on Hainan Island.[8] As of the late 2010, two ferry boats were in operation; the third boat, Yuehai No. 3, was launched in Tianjin in September 2010, and was going to be delivered to the ferry company in December 2010.[9]
- Bohai Train Ferry: Yantai in Shandong Province to Dalian in Liaoning Province. This short-cut line, operated by Sinorail, has been running since November 2006. As of 2020, it only carries freight trains, but passengers can also be on board the ship.[10]
Germany
Georgia
Iran
A new train ferry link-span terminal is under construction at Amirabad Special Economic Zone, Mazandaran Province, Iran.
Italy
Both Sicily and Sardinia services are operated by Bluvia that is a subsidiary company of Rete Ferroviaria Italiana. At present the link between Mainland and Sicily has a regular and frequent activity, while the link between Mainland and Sardinia is less frequent and operated basically day by day on the basis of the actual traffic demand.
Kenya
A new and a refurbished train ferry between Kisumu, Kenya and Port Bell, Uganda across Lake Victoria.[12]
Mexico
New Zealand
Peru
- Link with Bolivia across Lake Titicaca. The car float Manco Capac has dual gauge tracks for both Peruvian and Bolivian . There are small stretches of dual gauge trackage at Puno in Peru and Guaqui in Bolivia. Car loading and unloading are done at docks. The British-built steamship Ollanta is no longer maintained, but PeruRail, in charge of the vessel, is trying to develop a tourist project soon.[14]
Russia
Sweden
Turkey
- Bosphorus: Train ferries used to connect the European railway network with main connections from Thessaloniki, Greece, and Bucharest, Romania terminating at the Sirkeci Terminal to the Asian network terminating at the Haydarpaşa Terminal. Closure of lines within Istanbul in both sides due to Marmaray project caused these ferry services to become useless since the beginning of 2012. Ferry service between Tekirdağ and Derince replaced this ferry service which started at the end of 2013.[16] The current Marmaray Tunnel project, which was completed in 2013, partially replaced the ferry connection with an underwater railway tunnel running between the two sides.
- Black Sea: Chornomorsk, Ukraine to Derince, Turkey, bypasses a break of gauge
- Black Sea:- Samsun, Turkey to Kavkaz, Russia: Launched in December 2010[17]
- Lake Van – Tatvan — Van. The Istanbul — Tehran "Trans-Asya-Ekspresi" operates and the Damascus–Tehran passenger train operated from each terminus to the ferry ports. Only the luggage van takes the ferry due to capacity restrictions, the passengers have to change at both ends. The Lake Van ferry is part of the planned Trans-Asian Railway, Istanbul — Singapore. A scheduled freight train runs from Istanbul to Kazakhstan. The train ferry was established to avoid an expensive railroad line along the mountainous southern shore and may be replaced when traffic increases sufficiently; there are reports of financing discussions between the governments of Turkey and Iran. The ferry route is 96km (60miles) long while a rail alternative on the north side would be 250km (160miles) long in mountainous terrain. There are four ferries each of 16 coach capacity capable of making three trips per day.[18] Other sources describe the ferries' capacity as 450 tons (9 to 14 railcars).[19]
- Tekirdağ-Derince Ferry: The ferry service had started at the end of 2013 connecting Europe to Asia by rail.[16] The service is given by TCDD where a maritime company is the subcontractor. The ferry is MF Erdeniz, which used to carry wagons between Eregli and Zonguldak ports. She is now carrying wagons between Tekirdağ Port and Derince Port, İzmit. Ferry has 5 lines which are in total, 800m (2,600feet) long. It can travel between Tekirdağ and Derince in 8 hours.
- Tekirdağ-Bandırma Ferry: TCDD is constructing another ferry ramp at Bandırma Port and is planning to give ferry service between Tekirdağ and Bandırma ports. This service will connect Agean Region of Turkey to Europe by rail.
Uganda
- A train ferry on Lake Victoria links the gauge network of the Uganda Railway at Port Bell with the gauge network of Tanzania at Mwanza. In June 2008, the Ugandan budget allocated $US8.5m for an additional train ferry for Lake Victoria to replace one that sank after a collision.[20] [12]
United States
- New York New Jersey Rail in New York City moves freight cars between Jersey City and Brooklyn. This car float operation provides a southern freight rail gateway to Brooklyn, Queens, and Long Island by avoiding the Selkirk Hurdle. The railroad carries a wide range of goods, including construction materials, food, and consumer products.[21]
- The Alaska Railroad is connected to the rest of the North American rail system only via train ferries. The Alaska Railroad runs its own ferries from Whittier, Alaska to Seattle.
- Central Gulf Railroad, connecting the Port of Mobile, Alabama and Coatzacoalcos, Veracruz, Mexico. It is served by the BNSF Railway, Canadian National Railway, CSX Transportation, Kansas City Southern Railway, and the Norfolk Southern Railway.
Former train ferries
Argentina
Nine train ferries were used between 1907 and 1990 to cross the Paraná river and join the Buenos Aires province (the main state in Argentina) and the Entre Rios province (the entrance to the Mesopotamian region), until new bridges were built over the rivers they crossed. They were Lucía Carbó (1907), María Parera (1908), Mercedes Lacroze (1909) (three ferries that operated between the ports of Zárate and Ibicuy (Entre Rios), crossing the Paraná River at the northwest of the Buenos Aires province). Then were added Roque Saenz Peña (1911) and Ezequiel Ramos Mejía (1913), paddle train ferries, at Posadas (crossing the Paraná River in the southwest of the Misiones province, at the north of the country, in the frontier with Paraguay).
Three other train ferries were added later: Dolores de Urquiza (1926), Delfina Mitre (1928) and Carmen Avellaneda (1929) to cover the service in the Zárate-Ibicuy crossing. María Parera had a collision with Lucía Carbó at km. 145 of the Paraná River, and it sank in less than 15 minutes on June 30, 1926. Two of the most modern still serve as floating piers in the Zárate region, and one of the first group was sunk during a storm at the Buenos Aires port in the 1980s. The two northern paddle ferries still remain at Posadas, and one of them holds a model railway museum inside. All the eight old ferries were built by the A & J Inglis, in Pointhouse, Glasgow, Scotland, for the Entre Rios Railways Co. in Argentina. The ninth ferry, Tabare, was built in Argentina by Astarsa in 1966 at Astillero Río Santiago Río Santiago Shipyard near to La Plata city. It was the largest train ferry that operated in Argentina, with a deck more than 100 meters long. Tabaré is still floating, but not operating, at the old south docks of Buenos Aires port, near the Puerto Madero zone.
Australia
Bangladesh
Belgium
Canada
- Car floats
- Prince Rupert, British Columbia – Whittier, Alaska (Aquatrain) Service ended in April 2021.[25]
- lakes of British Columbia Okanagan, Arrow, Kootenay lakes (Canadian National and Canadian Pacific)
- Port Maitland, Ontario – Ashtabula, Ohio (TH&B Navigation Company)
- Port Burwell, Ontario – Ashtabula, Ohio (CN)
- Cobourg, Ontario – Rochester, New York (Ontario Car Ferry Company) ran from 1905 to 1950
- Sarnia, Ontario – Port Huron, Michigan – rail-barge – (CN, until the opening of the Paul Tellier Tunnel)
- Windsor, Ontario – Detroit, Michigan (Grand Trunk, CN, CPR, Michigan Central, Wabash, until the 1980s)
- BC Rail. Until 1952, railcars were barged from North Vancouver to Squamish until the completion of the railway between North Vancouver and Squamish.
- A large number of isolated BC pulp mills had chemicals and freight moved by railbarge.
- At one time a car float came to Ogden Point. from the Victoria Harbour[26] [27]
- Train ferries
- Cape Tormentine, New Brunswick – Borden-Carleton, Prince Edward Island (Canadian Government Railways, CN, CN Marine, Marine Atlantic), using and . Service ended when rail service on Prince Edward Island was discontinued in 1989.
- Mulgrave, Nova Scotia – Point Tupper, Nova Scotia (Intercolonial, CN, until the opening of the Canso Causeway in 1955)
- North Sydney, Nova Scotia – Port aux Basques, Newfoundland (CN, CN Marine). Service commenced in 1965 carrying standard-gauge rolling stock. A dual-gauge yard in Port aux Basques was used for classification and rolling stock had trucks exchanged with narrow gauge trucks. Service ended when the Newfoundland section of Canadian National Railway was closed in 1988.
- Lake Superior, Thunder Bay – Superior, Wisconsin.
- Sarnia, Canada – Port Huron, Michigan, United States – replaced by tunnel under St. Clair River c. 1891.[28]
- Ashtabula a train ferry that traveled between Ashtabula, Ohio, on the south shore of Lake Erie, to Port Burwell, Ontario, on the north shore.[29] [30]
China
Cuba
Note: all auto and rail ferry services have been suspended between the United States and Cuba due to the ongoing United States embargo against Cuba.
Denmark
- Rødby – Puttgarden, Germany across Fehmarn Belt. 1963–2019, Vogelfluglinie.[33] To be replaced by Fehmarn Belt Fixed Link in 2028. Not used by freight trains since 1997; they go over the Great Belt Bridge instead. Night trains used the ferry until 1997.[34]
- Strib – Fredericia, 1872–1935, replaced by Little Belt Bridge
- Korsør – Nyborg, 1883–1997, replaced by the Great Belt Fixed Link
- Oddesund Syd – Oddesund Nord, 1883–1938, replaced by Oddesund Bridge
- Masnedø – Orehoved, 1884–1937, replaced by Storstrøm Bridge
- Glyngøre – Nykøbing Mors, 1889–1977
- Helsingør – Helsingborg, Sweden, 1892–2000, since then car ferry only
- Copenhagen Frihavn – Malmö, Sweden, 1895–1986
- Gedser – Warnemünde, Germany, 1903–1995, replaced by car ferry Gedser – Rostock, Germany
- Faaborg – Mommark, 1922–1962, freight only
- Assens – Aarøsund, 1923–1950, freight only, narrow gauge
- Svendborg – Rudkøbing, 1926–1962, freight only
- Hvalpsund – Sundsøre, 1927–1969, since then car ferry only
- Svendborg – Ærøskøbing, 1931–1994, freight only
- Gedser – Großenbrode Kai, Germany, 1951–1963, replaced by Rødby — Puttgarden Ferry
- Hirtshals – Kristiansand, Norway, 1958–1996, freight only
- Copenhagen Frihavn – Helsingborg, Sweden (Danlink) 1986–2000, freight only
- Frederikshavn – Gothenburg, Sweden, 1987–2015, freight only[35]
Finland
- Stockholm – Naantali (1967–75), on board, break of gauge to in Naantali, freight only
- Travemünde – Hanko (1975–98), on board, break of gauge to in Hanko, freight only
- Travemünde – Turku (1998–2007), on board, break of gauge to in Turku, freight only
- Hargshamn (Sweden) – Uusikaupunki (1989–96), on board, break of gauge to in Uusikaupunki, freight only
- Turku – Stockholm (-2012,), on board, break of gauge to in Turku, freight only
France
Germany
- Constance (Bodensee) (1869–1976)
- Grossenbrode – Fehmarnsund (1903–1963)
- Grossenbrode – Gedser (1951–1963)
- Elbe: Lauenburg–Hohnstorf (1864–1878)
- Elbe: Köhlbrand, Hamburg (1912–1974)
- Mukran – Klaipėda, Lithuania, break of gauge, broad gauge on board, freight only (1986–2013)
- Mukran (changed in 1988 from the old Sassnitz port to the new port nearby at Mukran) – Trelleborg, Sweden, freight plus one daily passenger night-train. (1909–2020[36])
- Mukran – Ust-Luga, Russia, break of gauge, broad gauge on board, freight only (2012–2016[37])
- Puttgarden – Rødby, Denmark (1963–2019) Not used by night and freight trains since 1997 (they go over the Great Belt Bridge instead). To be replaced by Fehmarn Belt Fixed Link in 2028.
- Rhine: Worms–Rosengarten (1870–1900)
- Rhine: Bingerbrück–Rüdesheim (1861–1900)
- Rhine: Bonn–Oberkassel (1870–1914)
- Rhine: Rheinhausen–Hochfeld (1866–1874)
- Rhine: Ruhrort–Homberg (1852–1912)
- Rhine: Spyck–Welle (1865–1912)
- Stralsund – Altefähr/Rügen replaced 1936 by the Rügendamm.
- Travemünde – Hanko (1975–1998), on board, break of gauge in Hanko, freight only
- Travemünde – Turku (1998–2007), on board, break of gauge in Turku, freight only
- Travemünde – Malmö
- Warnemünde – Gedser (1903–1995), replaced by car ferry Rostock – Gedser
- Wittow Fähre – Fährhof 1896–1968, operated by the Rügen Light Railway .
- Wolgast – Wolgaster Fähre (Usedom), 1945−1990 (only freight)
Hungary
- Between current Bogojevo, Serbia and Dalj, Croatia, over the Danube river 1871–1911.
Iraq
Train ferries were at one time used to cross the Euphrates River at Baghdad.
Italy
Japan
In Japanese, a train ferry is called "鉄道連絡船 tetsudō renrakusen", which means literally "railway connection ship". Such ships may or may not be able to carry railcars. A ferry service that is part of a railway schedule and its fare system is called "tetsudō renrakusen".
Japan Railways linked the four main Japanese islands with train ferries before these were replaced by bridges and tunnels.
There were three ferry services that carried trains. Through operations of passenger trains using train ferries were conducted between December 1948 and 11 May 1955. The passenger services was canceled after the disasters of Toya Maru (26 September 1954, killed 1,153) and the Shiun Maru (11 May 1955, killed 168) occurred, after which the Japanese National Railways (JNR) considered it dangerous to allow passengers to stay on trains aboard ship. These three lines have been replaced by tunnels and bridges.
The Seikan ferry connected Aomori Station and Hakodate Station crossing the Tsugaru Strait connecting Honshū and Hokkaidō. The first full-scale train ferry, Shōhō Maru, entered service in April, 1924. On 13 March 1988, the Seikan Tunnel was opened and the ferry ceased operation. The tunnel and the ferry line was operated simultaneously only on that day.
The Ukō ferry connected Uno station and Takamatsu station crossing the Seto Inland Sea connecting Honshū and Shikoku. The ferry service started carrying railcars on 10 October 1921. On 9 April 1988, the Great Seto Bridge was opened and the last train ferry operated on the previous day.
The Kammon ferry connected Shimonoseki Station and Mojikō Station crossing the Kanmon Strait connecting Honshū and Kyūshū. This was the first train ferry service in Japan starting operation on 1 October 1911. The train ferries used piers at Komorie station. After the completion of the Kanmon Tunnel on 1 July 1942, the service was discontinued and the ferries were transferred to the Ukō Ferry operation.
Lithuania
The Netherlands
From 1886 to 1936, train ferries sailed between Stavoren and Enkhuizen across the Zuiderzee. After completion of the Afsluitdijk in 1932, goods transportation went from train to road.
From 1914 to 1983 a ferry carried freight carriages from the Rietlanden shunting area to the Amsterdam-Noord railway network, which was not connected over land to the rest of the Dutch railway network.
Nigeria
- A temporary ferry was used at the crossing of the Niger River due to delays finding foundations for a bridge.[39]
- similarly at Makurdi on the River Benue, replaced by a road-rail bridge in 1932.
Norway
Paraguay
Encarnacion — Posadas[40]
Russia & former USSR
Sweden
- Gothenburg – Frederikshavn, Denmark (1987–2015)
- Helsingør, Denmark – Helsingborg (1892–2000)
- Copenhagen, Denmark – Helsingborg (1986–2000), freight only
- Copenhagen, Denmark – Malmö (1895–1986)
- Trelleborg – Gdansk, Poland (1946)
- Trelleborg – Gdynia, Poland (1947–1950)
- Trelleborg – Sassnitz (Mukran port), Germany, (1998–2020) operated by Stena Line
- Trelleborg – Świnoujście, Poland (1948–1953), was supposed to replace the Ystad – Świnoujście service in 2010 again, but that didn't happen
- Trelleborg – Warnemünde, the GDR (1948–1953)
- Ystad – Świnoujście, Poland (1974-2018), freight only
- Bergkvara – Mörbylånga, normal gauge between in Bergkvara and 891 mm in Mörbylånga (1953–1955)
- Kalmar – Färjestaden, narrow gauge 891 mm (1957–1962)
- Stockholm – Naantali, Finland (1967–1975), normal gauge on board, break-of-gauge in Naantali, freight only
- Malmö – Travemünde, Germany (from the mid-1980s until a few years after 2000)
- Hargshamn (Sweden) – Uusikaupunki (1989–96), normal gauge on board, break-of-gauge in Uusikaupunki, freight only
- Stockholm – Turku, Finland (SeaRail, ended 2012, normal gauge)
- Never opened
- Trelleborg – Travemünde, the ferries were built (Nils Dacke and Robin Hood 1988–89) but the service never opened, as the "Iron Curtain" fell. The ferries were supposed to offer an alternative, which was not going through East Germany, to the ferries from Rostock and Sassnitz, which were in East Germany. With reunification that aim became obsolete.
United Kingdom
United States
- Brooklyn Eastern District Terminal used car floats.
- Chesapeake Bay – New York, Philadelphia & Norfolk Railroad Ferry from Norfolk to Cape Charles, Virginia, to the early 1940s.[50]
- Chesapeake Bay – Virginia Ferry Corporation from Little Creek, Virginia to Cape Charles, Virginia.[51]
- Chesapeake Bay – Bay Coast Railroad from Norfolk to Cape Charles, Virginia. The shortline railroad had two ferries (25 & 15 cars each) that crossed the Chesapeake Bay about twice a week.
- Lake Michigan – Frankfort, Michigan, to Manitowoc, Kewaunee, Marinette, Wisconsin, or Manistique, Michigan, was the Ann Arbor Railroad's Lake Michigan car ferry service that discontinued in the 1980s. Ann Arbor operated Viking and Arthur K. Atkinson as the final ships on the fleet.
- Lake Michigan – Ludington, Michigan to Manitowoc, Kewaunee or Milwaukee, Wisconsin served by the Pere Marquette Railway and successor Chesapeake and Ohio or Chessie System with the ships of 1940, and, both built in 1953. Badger is now used as an automobile ferry between Manitowoc, Wisconsin, and Ludington, Michigan and represents one of the last large coal-burning passenger-carrying steamers in the world.
- Lake Michigan – Milwaukee, Wisconsin, to Muskegon or Grand Haven, Michigan, was the Lake Michigan car ferry service of the Grand Trunk Western Railroad which was run by its subsidiary company Grand Trunk Milwaukee Car Ferry Company. Its fleet included five ships including, built in 1931.[52]
- Straits of Mackinac: – Mackinaw City, Michigan, to St. Ignace, Michigan, performed by [53] at the Straits of Mackinac connecting Michigan's Upper and Lower Peninsulas.
- San Francisco Bay – The San Francisco Belt Railroad had slip at Pier 43 which allowed interchange with the Northwestern Pacific, the Western Pacific, and the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe railroads.
- Carquinez Strait – The Central Pacific Railroad operated two train ferries (later assumed by its affiliate the Southern Pacific) between Benicia and Port Costa, California from 1879 to 1930. Solano and Contra Costa were the largest train ferries ever built.
- Pittsburg, California San Francisco–Sacramento Railroad Sacramento Northern Railway – the trolley-wire-powered "South End" operated from Sacramento south through farmland, marshes, over river by its own ferry, to Pittsburg, through the Contra Costa County hills and tunnel to Oakland and the Key System ferry pier. In 1928 the San Francisco-Sacramento Railroad (formerly the Oakland, Antioch and Eastern Railway, and originally the Oakland and Antioch Railway) became the Southern Division of the SNRy.
- New York City – Havana, Cuba
- Detroit Train Ferry Yard – Google Maps Aerial Photo of the former yard[54]
- Mackinac Transportation Company
- Ashtabula a train ferry that traveled between Ashtabula, Ohio, on the south shore of Lake Erie, to Port Burwell, Ontario, on the north shore.[55] [56]
Proposed train ferries
The Trans-Asian Railway has proposed a few train ferries:
Notes and References
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- Web site: Ferry complex . NC Aktau Sea Commercial Port JSC . 1 January 2022.
- Web site: Strategic Action Plan for UIC Latin America Region . 1 January 2022 . International Union of Railways.
- Book: The statesman's year-book : statistical and historical annual of the states of the world for the year 1984-1985 . 1984 . Macmillan . London . 9780230271135 . 221 . 121st . 1 January 2022.
- https://www.seaspan.com/seaspan-ferries/ Seaspan Ferries
- https://www.flickr.com/photos/37908073@N04/3661243327 Greg George
- Trains February 2009 p9
- http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/china/2006-06/06/content_609278.htm "Train-ferry project making solid progress"
- http://www.bh.gov.cn/eng/system/2010/10/12/010064754.shtml Train Ferry across Qiongzhou Strait Launched at Tianjin Xingang Shipbuilding Heavy Industry Co., Ltd
- Web site: Train ferry firm on IPO route. chinadaily.com.cn. 4 May 2015. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20150923230341/http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/china/2007-09/07/content_6087730.htm. 23 September 2015.
- News: Russia/Georgia: Opening Of Ferry Link Expected To Impact Regional Trade . 2 January 2022 . Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty . 10 January 2005.
- https://www.railwaysafrica.com/news/kenyan-rail-ferries-to-boost-intermodal-transport-links-in-african-great-lakes-region A new and a refurbished train ferry
- Web site: Infrastructure . Mobile Area Chamber of Commerce . 2008-02-09 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20070717185947/http://www.mobilechamber.com/infrastructure.asp . July 17, 2007 .
- http://home.fuse.net/peruvianrails/peruvianrails/text/southern_peru_railroads.htm Southern Peru Railroads
- http://infojd.ru/11/sahjd.html Сахалинская узкоколейная железная дорога (The narrow-gauge railways of Sakhalin)
- Uysal, Onur. "Wagons On Board: Tekirdag Derince Ferry Departed", Rail Turkey, 11 November 2013
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- http://railwaysafrica.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=2801&Itemid=35 RailwaysAfrica
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- "Crossing the Clarence" Roundhouse July 1982 pages 4-23
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- Web site: The Last AquaTrain . 2021.
- https://www.jamesbaybeacon.com/home/2020/10/18/then-and-now-the-ogden-point-grain-elevator car float
- https://www.flickr.com/photos/37908073@N04/3661243327 Greg George
- News: ST. CLAIR RIVER RAILWAY TUNNEL. . . Tasmania . 31 December 1891 . 17 March 2013 . 3 . National Library of Australia.
- News: Ashtabula (Ferry), U203071, sunk by collision, 18 Sep 1958. Maritime History of the Great Lakes. 2011-11-14. Sunk in collision with steamer BEN MOREELL in harbor at Ashtabula, Ohio, September 18, 1958..
- News: The Water Front, Port Burwell, Canada. Maritime History of the Great Lakes. 2011-11-14. The Pennsylvania-Ontario Transportation Company railroad car ferry ASHTABULA lies in the harbour..
- (Chinese) "新长铁路轮渡日运送千余车皮 有效分流沪宁铁路运输压力" Xinhua September 9, 2009
- News: 2019-12-17. The Last Inland Waterway Railway Ferry in China-Jinjiang Railway Ferry Ended Service After 15 Years(in Chinese). Taizhou News Net. 2020-05-01.
- Book: Welbourn, Nigel . Lost Railways of the World . Pen and Sword Transport . 2023-02-16 . 978-1-3990-9620-1 . 24.
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- https://news.cision.com/se/stena-line/r/stena-scanrails-sista-resa,c9818860 Stena Scanrails sista resa
- Web site: Ex-Ostseefähre "Trelleborg" fährt jetzt für Karaneh Line als "Sunny" im Iran. 14 April 2017 .
- Web site: Три новых парома заменят устаревшие суда на линии Балтийск - Усть-Луга к 2020 году.
- Web site: Trasporto merci, FS dice addio. Dal 1° luglio Trenitalia Cargo chiuderà i battenti. Cisl: «È una beffa, il gruppo riceve contributi pubblici». 27 June 2009. filtabruzzo.it. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20221025234848/http://www.filtabruzzo.it/filt/_rassegna_dett.asp?ID_notizie=16131. 25 October 2022.
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- Web site: Hochgeschwindigkeitszüge fahren per Schiff nach Russland. Siemens AG. 9 July 2009. 13 November 2008.
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- Pennsylvania Railroad, Table 78a. Official Guide of the Railways . National Railway Publication Company . 74 . 1 . June 1941.
- Pennsylvania Railroad, Tables 78, 79. Official Guide of the Railways . National Railway Publication Company . 82 . 8 . January 1950.
- Web site: S.S. City of Milwaukee – Site of the S.S. City of Milwaukee and the Coast Guard Cutter Acacia. carferry.com. 4 May 2015. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20150315165654/http://carferry.com/. 15 March 2015.
- Web site: Chief Wawatam. carferries.com. 4 May 2015. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20150530235323/http://www.carferries.com/chief/. 30 May 2015.
- Web site: Google Maps. 4 May 2015. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20140525232703/https://maps.google.com/maps?f=q. 25 May 2014.
- News: Ashtabula (Ferry), U203071, sunk by collision, 18 Sep 1958. Maritime History of the Great Lakes. 2011-11-14. Sunk in collision with steamer BEN MOREELL in harbor at Ashtabula, Ohio, September 18, 1958..
- News: The Water Front, Port Burwell, Canada. Maritime History of the Great Lakes. 2011-11-14. The Pennsylvania-Ontario Transportation Company railroad car ferry ASHTABULA lies in the harbour..
- [Railway Gazette International]