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whistle stop †
DCHP-1 (pre-1967)
Entry from the DCHP-1 (pre-1967)
This entry may contain outdated or offensive information, terms, and examples.
a small, unimportant town or village, so called because trains indicated by a whistle whether or not a stop was to be made.
Quotations
1957
The railway traveler sees only the dismal villages of the main line, the whistle stops around a wooden grain elevator, a skating rink, and a garage.
1958
At whistle stops in Nova Scotia's Annapolis Valley . . . she left her train to mingle with crowds on station platforms.
1964
At this whistle stop on the way to James Bay . . . they take the place of the family car. . . .
1966
Station agents at these whistle stops also came in for their share of chivvying and those who failed to accept the banter in good humor ran the risk of being shanghaied aboard the train and not released until hundreds of miles from home.