Transition from "In <location name>" from "at <location name>

NW Modeling List nw-modeling-list at nwhs.org
Wed May 31 07:50:55 EDT 2023


Matt
Good question. Never have given it a thought before. Maybe because a location would be AT a certain milepost or a specific point. The crossing frog AT Chillicothe is a known spot to a railroader. Using IN might be taken as a more generic location.I'm thinking that all the train orders I've copied or issued used AT.Have to ponder all this.
Jim Kehn 


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Subject: Transition from "In <location name>" from "at <location name>

My father has a fat library of literature and magazines from bygone days. I’ve noticed that railroaders at that time typically used “at” to reference cities / towns the railroad passed through - as in this example:
The eastbound crossing frog at Chillicothe with the Chillicothe Street Railway has been taken out and straight rails put in. 
If I wrote that sentence today, I would say “in Chillicothe”. 
When / why did that change? Or is that type of structure still used today on the railroads?
Matt GoodmanColumbus, Ohio, US________________________________________
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