I'm not 100% sure this is the right subforum for this question - so if a moderator wishes to move, certainly no offense taken.
I was doing bored late night Wikipedia browsing last night, which led to the article on Werner Doehner, the last survivor of the Hindenburg disaster.
He was a child at the time, travelling with his expat family. The article mentions that after landing in New Jersey, they had planned on continuing on to Mexico City (where they lived, and his father worked in engineering), by train.
In 1937, what would a rail journey from New Jersey to Mexico City have looked like? I'm especially wondering about the border "connection" - where it would have likely occurred, what the Mexican rail network was like then, etc.
I was doing bored late night Wikipedia browsing last night, which led to the article on Werner Doehner, the last survivor of the Hindenburg disaster.
He was a child at the time, travelling with his expat family. The article mentions that after landing in New Jersey, they had planned on continuing on to Mexico City (where they lived, and his father worked in engineering), by train.
In 1937, what would a rail journey from New Jersey to Mexico City have looked like? I'm especially wondering about the border "connection" - where it would have likely occurred, what the Mexican rail network was like then, etc.