Today, my wife and I drove to nearby Elkhart, Indiana, and toured the "New York Central National Museum", which is crowded into land around the old freight station - across the tracks from the passenger station. It's a good thing my K-30's aperture control was working correctly - the widest I can go using lenses with aperture rings is 28mm, and I was wider than that most of the day. We saw two "historically significant" vehicles there.
NYC 4085 led the last eastbound "Twentieth Century Ltd". I don't know why the 'Goshen' sign is planted there .... that is the next town eastbound.
I don't know why this locomotive is there at all. This GG-1 was constructed by the Pennsylvania RR {arch enemy of the NYC}, then used successively by the PRR, Penn Central, Conrail, and New Jersey Transit - certainly not by NYC.