Great American Railroad Journeys — Season 1, Episode 10: Wilmington to Havre de Grace
Documentary • 29 min • 4 seasons, 75 episodes • ★ 8.3/10
Episode synopsis
Michael reaches a milestone on his American journey: the boundary between the northern and southern states, known as the Mason-Dixon line. He discovers the origins of what became for black Americans the border between slavery and freedom, in an 18th-century English dispute over land. On the Wilmington and Western Railroad, Michael meets the passenger train Phoebe Snow, created by the railroads at the turn of the 20th century to reassure passengers that clean burning coal wouldn't make their clothes dirty. Michael uncovers the explosive history of gunpowder production in Delaware, begun by a Frenchman, whose chateau still stands. He then takes a boat trip up the Susquehanna River following the route taken by one of the first English settlers, John Smith.
About Great American Railroad Journeys
Michael Portillo crosses the Atlantic to ride the railroads of America, armed with Appleton's General Guide to the United States, published in 1879.
More episodes from Season 1
- E1Manhattan: Grand Central to Broadway
- E2Manhattan: Lower East Side to World Trade Center
- E3Brooklyn to Montauk
- E4New York City to Garrison
- E5Poughkeepsie to Albany
- E6Schenectady to Rochester
- E7Buffalo to Niagara Falls
- E8Philadelphia to Atlantic City
- E9Lancaster to Gettysburg
- E11Baltimore to Fort McHenry
- E12Washington DC
- E13Georgetown to Mount Vernon