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Les Jacobson: Two-Track America - Evanston RoundTable

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Les Jacobson: Two-Track America - Evanston RoundTable

Notes from the Lake Shore Limited, which leaves 3:30 in the afternoon three days a week from Penn Station in New York and arrives at Union Station in Chicago 20 hours later. A version of this iconic train has been operating between New York and Chicago since the 1890s.

End of the line: Amtrak train 49, the Lake Shore Limited, in Union Station at the end of its two-day run from New York City. (Photo from Les Jacobson)

When Train # 49 pulls out of New York City mid-afternoon on June 7 what we quickly notice is a different America, different from the view 35,000 feet up, mostly clouds, different from the view at highway level, mostly concrete. From the train, rolling north along the Hudson River toward Albany, we see the real America, America in full living color versus the gray of clouds and highways, the America of steep poverty and vast wealth, small towns and lush forests, crumbling bridges and terraced hills; the air dappled with occasional rain; the walls dabbed with frequent graffiti; the vacant, hollowed-out factories; the luxury homes on bluffs; algae-encrusted lakes; soccer fields and ball fields; rail trestles and tracks lying in heaps along the sidings; backyards strewn with junk.

America’s backyard.

So much to see, streaking by at 70 miles per hour, a fine speed to engage the eye and mind moment by moment, image by image. There’s a small lake dotted with rowboats tied to docks below modest homes. Ruined, empty, ancient cottages – shacks really.

We ride north on the east bank of the Hudson River, near fabled towns like Tarrytown, West Point, Hyde Park. On the other side is Highway 9, which runs alongside for a stretch, then rises up into the hills. We pass one-street towns like Stuyvesant, pop. 2,000. I know the name and population thanks to the vast encyclopedia I carry around in my pocket. What my phone can’t tell me is what it’s like to live there. An alien existence for a city kid like me. For a moment I consider the prospect of living in Small Town America. After all, every locale has something special to fill a life.

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