Pan-American (passenger train)

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For other uses, see Pan-American.
Louisville and Nashville train No. 99, the Pan American, steams out of Cincinnati, Ohio on August 16, 1933.
Louisville and Nashville train No. 99, the Pan American, steams out of Cincinnati, Ohio on August 16, 1933.
"Drumhead" logos such as these often adorned the ends of observation cars on the Pan American.
"Drumhead" logos such as these often adorned the ends of observation cars on the Pan American.

The Pan-American was the Louisville and Nashville Railroad's state-of-the-art train linking the U.S. cities of Cincinnati, Ohio and New Orleans, Louisiana. Service started in 1921 and was discontinued in 1971.

The train was made famous by WSM Radio's nightly broadcast of the passing train's whistle. Some Pan-American passengers were lucky enough to sit in comfortable lounge chairs and hear the sound of their own train's whistle from a wood-cabinet table radio tuned to WSM in the observation car.

The Pan-American inspired several songs:

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