News

CONCORD, N.H. - The Flying Yankee has been officially listed in the New Hampshire State Register of Historic Places, presented by the New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources (DHR).
Fans of the Flying Yankee, an eye-catching train that called Concord home for two decades before ending passenger service in 1955, have put in a bid to own the train and help decide its future.
Fundraising has begun to restore the historic Flying Yankee train, beginning with a plan to repair equipment known as the traction motors. This year is the 90th anniversary of the Flying Yankee ...
The Flying Yankee, known for its streamlined design and rounded nose and tail, is one of only three such trains built in the 1930s by the E.G. Budd Company of Philadelphia. Advertisement ...
LINCOLN — Sixty-five years after the Flying Yankee last carried passengers, a new nonprofit wants to get the train’s restoration back on track after another recent effort was derailed.
The New Hampshire Department of Transportation (NHDOT) has selected the winning bidder for the Flying Yankee, the diesel-electric streamliner built in late 1934 by the Budd Company for the Boston & ...
Thousands of people lined the tracks just to see it run through town. The Flying Yankee was smoother running and cooler looking than anything that had come before it. It sort of resembled a silver ...
Nashua, N.H.-based Flying Yankee Association (FYA) has launched a fundraiser to begin restoring the Flying Yankee, a diesel-electric streamliner built in 1935 by the Budd Company for the Boston & ...