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 OUR MISSION 

 

The National Railroad Hall of Fame honors the men and women of American railroading –
visionaries, leaders, trendsetters, and ordinary people who made extraordinary contributions.
In telling their stories, we seek to educate and inspire the public on the role railroads play
in building the nation and shaping our future.

Spirit of the Railroaders

VISITOR CENTER

The National Railroad Hall of Fame celebrates the spirit of the railroaders. The ingenuity, vision and courage embodied in the lives of Hall of Fame inductees offer magnificent stories of national importance.

The railroaders transformed America; their stories have the power to inspire and transform all who discover them.

 

EDUCATIONAL RESOURCES

Bring the story of American railroading to life in the classroom through our growing collection of educational resources. Appropriate for students from kindergarten through 12th grade, our online materials include lesson plans, PowerPoint presentations, maps, games, an original readers theater play, and more. Each lesson includes a bibliography of supporting books and related websites.

  • Trunks Through Time explores the societal challenges and contributions of several under-represented groups of railroad travelers between 1880 and 1960.   Students will be inspired by stories of perseverance and triumph in the lives of a Pullman Porter, a Chinese Laborer on the Central Pacific, a Harvey Girl, and a Mexican boy in the Santa Fe boxcar camps.

 

  • The Building of the First Transcontinental Railroad chronicles the vision, ingenuity, and raw courage of the people who designed and built the nation’s first transcontinental railroad.  Learn how the Transcontinental Railroad transformed daily life in the United States and how it continues to form the backbone of our economy, delivering the goods and commodities Americans rely on every day.

 

  • Whistlestop Campaigning:  Rallies Along the Rails.  In 1900, Theodore Roosevelt’s whistlestop campaign fundamentally changed the way candidates interact with the electorate.   In 1948, Harry S. Truman’s extensive whistlestop campaign saved his presidency, and the practice has continued to entice candidates as recently as George W. Bush and Barack Obama.  Click here to learn about the origins of the whistlestop; explore an interactive map of Truman’s 1948 Midwestern rail tour, including photographs and speech recordings; and view a photo gallery of presidential whistlestop campaigns.

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