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Newburgh, Dutchess and Connecticut Railroad

The Newburgh, Dutchess and Connecticut Railroad was a railroad in Dutchess County, New York, United States. Its line ran 58.9 miles (94.8 km) northeast from the Hudson River in Fishkill to the Connecticut state line near Millerton. The Dutchess and Columbia Railroad (D&C), was chartered in 1866 to link rural villages with the Hudson River Railroad and New York and Harlem Railroad. The under-construction line was leased by the Boston, Hartford and Erie Railroad (BH&E) in 1868. The first segment opened in July 1869, and it reached Pine Plains the following February.

Newburgh, Dutchess and Connecticut Railroad
The former company headquarters at Matteawan in 2012
Overview
LocaleDutchess County, New York
History
OpenedJuly 21, 1869 as Dutchess and Columbia Railroad
CompletedJuly 24, 1871
ReorganizedJanuary 15, 1877 as Newburgh, Dutchess and Connecticut Railroad
Merged1907 into Central New England Railway
ClosedAugust 1, 1938 (one portion still operated by Metro-North Railroad)
Technical
Line length58.9 mi (94.8 km)
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Route map

The BH&E failed in March 1870, and the D&C officers took back the railroad in an overnight escapade. The final segment to the state line opened in 1871. In the mid-1870s, the railroad became part of the New York, Boston and Montreal Railway. That railroad's failure resulted in the D&C being sold at foreclosure in August 1876. It was reorganized in January 1877 as the Newburgh, Dutchess and Connecticut Railroad (ND&C). In 1881, BH&E successor New York and New England Railroad (NY&NE) began using the southwestern portion of the ND&C. It built a short new branch to reach Fishkill Landing on the Hudson River. The connecting Clove Branch Railroad, built in 1869 and extended in 1877, was closed in 1897.

The ND&C was bought by the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad (NYNH&H) in 1905. It was assigned to NYNH&H subsidiary Central New England Railway in 1907. Passenger service ended on parts of the line in 1921 and 1925, and on the rest of the line in 1933. Most of the former ND&C was abandoned in sections between 1925 and 1938. The remaining section between Beacon and Hopewell Junction was retained for freight use. After passing through several owners, it is now part of the Beacon Line, used by Metro-North Railroad for equipment transfers.

History edit

Beginnings edit

The Dutchess and Columbia Railroad (D&C) was chartered September 4, 1866.[1]: 14  It was to run from Plumb Point in Fishkill northeast to meet the New York and Harlem Railroad at Hillsdale station in Craryville.[2]: 19  Despite the connection with the Harlem, it was not intended to be a bridge line; instead, it was expected to carry lead and iron ore from the Ancram area westbound, and coal from the Coal Region of Pennsylvania eastbound.[3]: 7  Columbia County townships proved reluctant to fund the northern portion of the line, so it was rerouted eastward from Pine Plains to meet the Harlem at Millerton.[1]: 15  This missed most of the Ancram mines, but would allow connection with the Connecticut Western Railroad then building west from Hartford, Connecticut – thus making the railroad a bridge line after all.[3]: 8  Construction began from Plumb Point in 1868.[2]: 21 

In November 1868, the D&C was leased by the Boston, Hartford and Erie Railroad (BH&E).[note 1][5]: 23  The BH&E had completed lines from Waterbury, Connecticut, to Boston and Providence by 1855, but had struggled building through the hills of western Connecticut.[6] Intending to bypass New York City and compete with the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad (New Haven) for New England business, the Erie Railroad (which controlled the BH&E) planned to ship coal across the Hudson River from Newburgh.[3]: 7  The BH&E constructed a steamship terminal at Denning's Point at the mouth of Fishkill Creek and built a trestle from the D&C to the point.[2]: 21 

Service began on the D&C line between Dutchess Junction (Plumb Point) and Hopewell Junction (the planned junction with the BH&E) on June 21, 1869.[5]: 20 [3]: 9 [7] The BH&E supplied all rolling stock for the line.[5]: 23  For a short time before the Dutchess Junction station was completed, trains ran over the Hudson River Railroad between Fishkill Landing and Dutchess Junction.[2]: 21  Later in 1869, the associated Clove Branch Railroad opened its 4.25-mile (6.84 km) line from Clove Branch Junction (north of Hopewell Junction) to the mines at Sylvan Lake.[5]: 25 [8] The D&C line reached Millbrook by October 1869 and Pine Plains in February 1870.[9][5]: 29 

Expansion edit

The overextended BH&E failed in March 1870. Rather than submit to the receivers appointed for the BH&E, the D&C officers decided to take back their railroad. In the early morning hours of March 22, the president and secretary led what a local historical society later called a "dramatic midnight train run".[5]: 23  Beginning at Pine Plains, they tore up tracks at the engine house, woke up a conductor to operate a train, and took possession of the stations along the line.[2]: 24 [5]: 23 [10] Regular service on the line resumed by March 25 using a purchased locomotive and coaches rented from the Hudson River Railroad. After a multiple-month court battle, the BH&E abandoned its claim to the line.[5]: 24 

The D&C extended its line through Millerton, meeting the Connecticut Western at the state line on July 24, 1871.[11] Through service began soon after. Millerton became the connection point between the two railroads; the Connecticut Western leased the D&C between State Line and Millerton later in 1871.[12][13][14] The Poughkeepsie and Eastern Railroad (P&E) opened from Poughkeepsie, New York to a junction with the D&C at Stissing on January 24, 1871.[15] It opened a second section of its line from Pine Plains to State Line on October 1, 1872. Between Stissing Junction and Pine Plains, it used trackage rights on the D&C.[16][1]: 17 

In 1870, the Harlem Extension Railroad was formed by a merger of the Lebanon Springs Railroad and the Bennington and Rutland Railroad, forming a Chatham, New YorkRutland, Vermont line.[17] Late in 1872, the D&C was merged with the New York and Boston Railroad , the unbuilt Putnam and Dutchess Railroad, and the Clove Branch to form the New York, Boston and Northern Railway.[18][19] In 1873, it joined with the Harlem Extension and the unbuilt Pine Plains and Albany Railroad to form the New York, Boston and Montreal Railway (NYB&M).[1]: 15 [20] The Clove Branch and the D&C between Clove Branch Junction and Pine Plains were to become part of its New York–Rutland mainline.[21]

Newburgh, Dutchess and Connecticut edit

The Rhinebeck and Connecticut Railroad opened in 1875 with a shorter and flatter route to the Hudson than the D&C, which allowed it to charge lower rates. The Rhinebeck and Connecticut replaced the D&C as the C&W's primary western connection for through traffic, hurting revenues of the D&C.[3]: 15  The Panic of 1873 stopped the construction of the two new segments by 1875; the NYB&M went bankrupt, followed by the D&C.[1]: 15  The Clove Branch again became independent.[5]: 25  The D&C was sold at foreclosure in August 1876.[1]: 15  It was reorganized January 15, 1877, as the Newburgh, Dutchess and Connecticut Railroad.[1]: 15 [22] Company headquarters were at Matteawan.[23] In 1877, the Clove Branch was extended by 4.01 miles (6.45 km) to Clove Valley, where an iron works was located. The extension was partially built on right-of-way that had been graded for the NYB&M.[8][24]

 
Fishkill Landing in the early 20th century

The New York and New England Railroad (NY&NE), successor to the BH&E, opened its extension from Danbury, Connecticut to Brewster, New York in July 1881.[25] That December, the NY&NE opened a further extension to Hopewell Junction. As had been planned in 1868, the ND&C was used to reach the Hudson, albeit with trackage rights rather than ownership. The NY&NE built a short branch from the ND&C to reach Fishkill Landing.[26] Passenger service between Fishkill Landing and Boston began on December 12, 1881.[27][28] Train ferry service across the Hudson, connecting with the Erie Railroad, also began that day; the first freight car carried 800 turkeys from Livonia, New York, bound for Providence.[29] Within weeks, the NY&NE was carrying more freight than all other railroads in Dutchess County combined.[3]: 18 

The Poughkeepsie Bridge opened in 1889, along with connecting lines west to the Erie Railroad and northeast to Silvernails, as part of the Central New England and Western (successor of the Connecticut Western).[3]: 19  The Dutchess County Railroad from the bridge to Hopewell Junction was completed in 1892.[1]: 3  These through lines vastly decreased the demand for the ferry at Fishkill Landing.[3]: 19  The ND&C thereafter handled primarily local traffic; much of its income was local coal delivery within Dutchess County.[3]: 22  The NY&NE fell under control of its archrival New Haven in 1895 and was merged into it in 1899.[3]: 24  The Clove Branch, leased by the ND&C, ended service in 1897 as the iron mines ran out and was torn up in 1898.[3]: 25 [30][31]

Central New England Railway edit

The Central New England and Western was consolidated with the Poughkeepsie Bridge and Railroad Company in 1892 as the Philadelphia, Reading and New England Railroad, under control of the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad. It was succeeded in 1899 by the Central New England Railway (CNE), still controlled by the Reading.[1]: 13–14  The New Haven obtained control of the CNE in 1904, primarily to obtain the Poughkeepsie Bridge.[1]: 14 [3]: 26  Although subsidiary to the New Haven, the CNE operated largely independently.[3]: 27  The New Haven also transferred the ex-NY&NE Fishkill Landing branch to the CNE.[1]: 14 

 
Hopewell Junction station, the former crossing of the ND&C and the Maybrook Line

By 1905, daily passenger service on the ND&C included two Fishkill Landing–Pine Plains round trips and two Fishkill Landing–Millerton round trips, plus a Millerton–State Line round trip connecting with a CNE train.[3]: 29  The New Haven agreed in July 1905 to purchase the ND&C – primarily to obtain control of the segment between Wicopee Junction and Hopewell Junction, and to prevent the New York Central Railroad from obtaining the line. [32][33] The transfer took place on September 14, 1905, after which the ND&C was operated as part of the CNE. Some service was rerouted to Poughkeepsie rather than Fishkill Junction.[34][35] The ND&C, the Poughkeepsie and Eastern, the Dutchess County, and the Poughkeepsie Bridge were formally merged into the CNE in 1907.[1]: 14 

The CNE soon began to consolidate its duplicative lines crossing rural Dutchess County. On October 2, 1909, the railroad abandoned the former Poughkeepsie and Connecticut Railroad between West Pine Plains and West Salt Point. Trains were rerouted over the parallel ex-Poughkeepsie and Eastern, including the portion of the ex-ND&C between Pine Plains and Stissing Junction.[36][37] By 1912, the line had two daily Fishkill Landing–Millerton round trips and one daily Fishkill Landing–Pine Plains round trip, all operating via Dutchess Junction. Two daily round trips on the ex-NY&NE used the line between Fishkill Landing and Hopewell Junction; three daily CNE round trips used the line only between Stissing Junction and Pine Plains.[38]

By 1915, the line had 1+12 daily Beacon (formerly Fishkill Landing)–Pine Plains round trips, a daily southbound trip from Pine Plains to Hopewell Junction, and one daily Beacon–Millerton round trip. One daily CNE round trip used the line between Millerton and Stissing Junction, and two between Pine Plains and Stissing Junction; two daily ex-NY&NE round trips used the line west of Hopewell Junction.[39] The 1.03 miles (1.66 km) between Wicopee Junction and Dutchess Junction was abandoned in 1916, leaving only the connection to Beacon (formerly Fishkill Landing) at its south end.[40][41]

Abandonment edit

The CNE ended passenger service between Shekomeko and Millerton on December 18, 1921.[42][43] That 7.73-mile (12.44 km) section of track was generally disused for freight until January 21, 1925, when the Interstate Commerce Commission authorized abandonment. Passenger service between Millerton and Pine Plains via Boston Corners (using the ex-ND&C between Millerton and State Line) also ended at that time.[43][44][45]: 6  The CNE began using a gasoline railcar between Beacon and Pine Plains in October 1923.[46] The single daily round trip between Pine Plains and Shekomeko was discontinued in 1927.[47] The final service east of Millerton on the ex-ND&C was cut back to Canaan, Connecticut in December 1927, shortly before all CNE passenger service ended in Connecticut.[48][49]

The CNE was merged into the New Haven in 1927.[6] By 1932, the only remaining passenger service on the ex-CNE was operated by a single gasoline railcar: one Beacon–Pine Plains round trip on the ex-ND&C, plus one Poughkeepsie–Copake round trip that used the line between Pine Plains and Stissing Junction. These trips were discontinued on September 9, 1933.[45]: 11 [50] The 5.1 miles (8.2 km) between Pine Plains and Shekomeko was abandoned in late 1935.[45]: 6 [51] On July 1, 1936, the New Haven discontinued freight service between Stissing Junction and Millbrook because two trestles were in poor condition.[45]: 11 [52]

 
The Beacon Line in the Matteawan section of Beacon in 2010

In April 1938, the Interstate Commerce Commission allowed the New Haven to abandon most of the remaining ex-CNE lines in New York.[45]: 4  This included the former ND&C between Hopewell Junction and Pine Plains.[45]: 5 [53] Abandonment of the long-unprofitable lines took place on August 1, 1938. The New Haven continued operating the Maybrook Line as a major freight route over the Poughkeepsie Bridge. The Beacon–Hopewell Junction portion of the ex-ND&C was also retained for freight service.[1]: 19 

The New Haven was merged into Penn Central in 1969, which in turn merged into Conrail in 1976. The Poughkeepsie Bridge was damaged by fire in 1974, cutting off the Maybrook Line from west-of-Hudson connections. This left the ex-ND&C spur to Beacon as the only western connection for the line; Conrail soon upgraded it to handle additional freight traffic.[54][55] However, in 1981, Conrail applied to abandon the segment along with the Maybrook Line between Poughkeepsie and Hopewell Junction (the former Dutchess County Railroad). The latter segment was abandoned in 1982, but the Beacon–Hopewell Junction segment remained in use.[56][57]

Maybrook Properties, a subsidiary of the Housatonic Railroad, purchased the remaining Maybrook Line (Beacon–Hopewell Junction–Derby) from Conrail in 1992.[58]: 2 [59] The Metro-North Railroad purchased the New York portion of the line from Maybrook Properties in January 1995 as the Beacon Line.[60][61][62] Metro-North filed for federal permission for adverse abandonment of the line in 2021; the Housatonic, which retained freight rights on the line; opposed.[58] In early 2023, Metro-North filed for federal permission to acquire the Housatonic's freight rights and to discontinue the New York portion of the Beacon Line, which would be converted to a rail trail. The Housatonic indicated that it had not operated any trains on the line in two years and did not object to abandonment.[58] However, in July 2023, the Surface Transportation Board denied Metro-North's request on procedural grounds.[63] Metro-North again filed for abandonment in December 2023.[64] The filing was approved and took effect in February 2024.[65][66]

Route edit

 
Map of Central New England Railway lines in the Upper Hudson Valley, with the Newburgh, Dutchess and Connecticut Railroad and the Clove Branch in purple ( )

The Newburgh, Dutchess and Connecticut Railroad ran about 58.9 miles (94.8 km) diagonally across Dutchess County, New York, from the Hudson River to the Connecticut state line.[39][67][68] Its southwest end was at Dutchess Junction in Fishkill, where it connected with the Hudson River Railroad. The line followed the Fishkill Creek valley northeast to Hopewell Junction, where it crossed the New York and New England Railroad and Dutchess County Railroad.[2]: 19  From there the line gradually turned northward into steeper terrain, with a difficult grade from Moore's Mills to Verbank then a curving route around Oak Summit into Millbrook.[2]: 20 [3]: 11 

The Poughkeepsie and Eastern Railway joined the ND&C at Stissing Junction, with trackage rights on the ND&C up to a split just south of Pine Plains. (After 1910, the connector to the CNE mainline also split at the latter junction.)[1]: 17  The ND&C turned east at Pine Plains, with an average grade of nearly 1% for the next 10 miles (16 km) to Winchells. This included sections of 2.8% near Shekomeko and 1.9% approaching Winchells. Some 3.5 miles (5.6 km) of 1.5% downgrade followed as the line approached Millerton, where it crossed the New York and Harlem Railroad.[3]: 11  At the state line, the line met the Hartford and Connecticut Western Railroad and the Poughkeepsie and Eastern Railroad.[67] The maximum speed allowed between State Line and Pine Plains for passenger trains was just 23 miles per hour (37 km/h) due to the steep grades.[69]: 18 

A short branch at the southwest end, originally constructed by the NY&NE, split at Wicopee Junction west of Matteawan. It ran northwest, crossing over the Hudson River Railroad and terminating at the ferry landing at Fishkill Landing (now Beacon). The Clove Branch Railroad, always closely associated with the ND&C, ran 8 miles (13 km) east from Clove Branch to Clove Valley.[67]

Station listing edit

Most stations on the line were simple square structures with flat roofs.[69]: 21 

Miles (km)[39] Municipality Station Connections and notes
Beacon Beacon On 1881-built spur. Connection with Hudson River Railroad.
0.0 (0.0) Fishkill (town) Dutchess Junction Connection with Hudson River Railroad
1.0 (1.6) Beacon Wickopee Junction – junction with Beacon spur
1.8 (2.9) Matteawan
3.8 (6.1) Fishkill (town) Glenham
5.9 (9.5) Fishkill (village) Fishkill
7.7 (12.4) Fishkill (town) Brinckerhoff
12.3 (19.7) East Fishkill Hopewell Junction Junction with New York and New England Railroad and Dutchess County Railroad
13.4 (21.5) Clove Branch Junction with Clove Branch Railroad
15.7 (25.3) Arthursburg
17.3 (27.9) LaGrange Lagrange
18.8 (30.3) Billings
21.4 (34.4) Moores Mills
23.5 (37.8) Union Vale Verbank Village
24.4 (39.2) Verbank
27.2 (43.8) Washington Oak Summit
29.1 (46.9) Millbrook Millbrook
32.7 (52.7) Washington Shunpike
34.5 (55.5) Stanford Anson's Crossing
36.3 (58.4) Bangall
38.7 (62.3) Stissing Junction Junction with Poughkeepsie and Eastern Railroad
40.5 (65.1) Attlebury
42.7 (68.7) Pine Plains Briarcliff Farms
43.6 (70.2) Junction with Poughkeepsie and Eastern Railroad and Poughkeepsie and Connecticut Railroad
43.9 (70.6) Pine Plains
46.1 (74.2) Bethel
49.1 (79.1) North East Shekomeko
51.8 (83.3) Pine Plains Husted
53.5 (86.0) Winchells
57.3 (92.2) North East Junction with New York and Harlem Railroad
57.8 (93.1) Millerton
58.9 (94.7) State Line Junction with Hartford and Connecticut Western Railroad and Poughkeepsie and Eastern Railroad

Notes edit

  1. ^ In the years shortly after the American Civil War, this was a common arrangement: a railroad contemplating building an extension, but reluctant to finance construction itself, would lease another railroad, even an unbuilt one. Some railroads were chartered for the purpose of being leased. The leased line was frequently operated as if it was an integral part of the "parent" company.[4]: 630–631 

References edit

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  2. ^ a b c d e f g Stuart, Inglis (May 1834). "The Dutchess & Columbia R. R. and Its Associates". The Railway and Locomotive Historical Society Bulletin. 34 (34). The Railway and Locomotive Historical Society: 19–27. JSTOR 43519662.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p D. W. McLaughlin, D.W. (October 1968). "Poughkeepsie Gateway". The Railway and Locomotive Historical Society Bulletin. 119 (119). The Railway and Locomotive Historical Society: 6–33. JSTOR 43518289.
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  69. ^ a b Ashman, Robert; Milmine, Charles (1972). The Central New England Railroad 1867–1967. The Salisbury Association. OCLC 596590.

newburgh, dutchess, connecticut, railroad, railroad, dutchess, county, york, united, states, line, miles, northeast, from, hudson, river, fishkill, connecticut, state, line, near, millerton, dutchess, columbia, railroad, chartered, 1866, link, rural, villages,. The Newburgh Dutchess and Connecticut Railroad was a railroad in Dutchess County New York United States Its line ran 58 9 miles 94 8 km northeast from the Hudson River in Fishkill to the Connecticut state line near Millerton The Dutchess and Columbia Railroad D amp C was chartered in 1866 to link rural villages with the Hudson River Railroad and New York and Harlem Railroad The under construction line was leased by the Boston Hartford and Erie Railroad BH amp E in 1868 The first segment opened in July 1869 and it reached Pine Plains the following February Newburgh Dutchess and Connecticut RailroadThe former company headquarters at Matteawan in 2012OverviewLocaleDutchess County New YorkHistoryOpenedJuly 21 1869 as Dutchess and Columbia RailroadCompletedJuly 24 1871ReorganizedJanuary 15 1877 as Newburgh Dutchess and Connecticut RailroadMerged1907 into Central New England RailwayClosedAugust 1 1938 one portion still operated by Metro North Railroad TechnicalLine length58 9 mi 94 8 km Track gauge4 ft 8 1 2 in 1 435 mm standard gaugeRoute map The BH amp E failed in March 1870 and the D amp C officers took back the railroad in an overnight escapade The final segment to the state line opened in 1871 In the mid 1870s the railroad became part of the New York Boston and Montreal Railway That railroad s failure resulted in the D amp C being sold at foreclosure in August 1876 It was reorganized in January 1877 as the Newburgh Dutchess and Connecticut Railroad ND amp C In 1881 BH amp E successor New York and New England Railroad NY amp NE began using the southwestern portion of the ND amp C It built a short new branch to reach Fishkill Landing on the Hudson River The connecting Clove Branch Railroad built in 1869 and extended in 1877 was closed in 1897 The ND amp C was bought by the New York New Haven and Hartford Railroad NYNH amp H in 1905 It was assigned to NYNH amp H subsidiary Central New England Railway in 1907 Passenger service ended on parts of the line in 1921 and 1925 and on the rest of the line in 1933 Most of the former ND amp C was abandoned in sections between 1925 and 1938 The remaining section between Beacon and Hopewell Junction was retained for freight use After passing through several owners it is now part of the Beacon Line used by Metro North Railroad for equipment transfers Contents 1 History 1 1 Beginnings 1 2 Expansion 1 3 Newburgh Dutchess and Connecticut 1 4 Central New England Railway 1 5 Abandonment 2 Route 2 1 Station listing 3 Notes 4 ReferencesHistory editBeginnings edit The Dutchess and Columbia Railroad D amp C was chartered September 4 1866 1 14 It was to run from Plumb Point in Fishkill northeast to meet the New York and Harlem Railroad at Hillsdale station in Craryville 2 19 Despite the connection with the Harlem it was not intended to be a bridge line instead it was expected to carry lead and iron ore from the Ancram area westbound and coal from the Coal Region of Pennsylvania eastbound 3 7 Columbia County townships proved reluctant to fund the northern portion of the line so it was rerouted eastward from Pine Plains to meet the Harlem at Millerton 1 15 This missed most of the Ancram mines but would allow connection with the Connecticut Western Railroad then building west from Hartford Connecticut thus making the railroad a bridge line after all 3 8 Construction began from Plumb Point in 1868 2 21 In November 1868 the D amp C was leased by the Boston Hartford and Erie Railroad BH amp E note 1 5 23 The BH amp E had completed lines from Waterbury Connecticut to Boston and Providence by 1855 but had struggled building through the hills of western Connecticut 6 Intending to bypass New York City and compete with the New York New Haven and Hartford Railroad New Haven for New England business the Erie Railroad which controlled the BH amp E planned to ship coal across the Hudson River from Newburgh 3 7 The BH amp E constructed a steamship terminal at Denning s Point at the mouth of Fishkill Creek and built a trestle from the D amp C to the point 2 21 Service began on the D amp C line between Dutchess Junction Plumb Point and Hopewell Junction the planned junction with the BH amp E on June 21 1869 5 20 3 9 7 The BH amp E supplied all rolling stock for the line 5 23 For a short time before the Dutchess Junction station was completed trains ran over the Hudson River Railroad between Fishkill Landing and Dutchess Junction 2 21 Later in 1869 the associated Clove Branch Railroad opened its 4 25 mile 6 84 km line from Clove Branch Junction north of Hopewell Junction to the mines at Sylvan Lake 5 25 8 The D amp C line reached Millbrook by October 1869 and Pine Plains in February 1870 9 5 29 Expansion edit The overextended BH amp E failed in March 1870 Rather than submit to the receivers appointed for the BH amp E the D amp C officers decided to take back their railroad In the early morning hours of March 22 the president and secretary led what a local historical society later called a dramatic midnight train run 5 23 Beginning at Pine Plains they tore up tracks at the engine house woke up a conductor to operate a train and took possession of the stations along the line 2 24 5 23 10 Regular service on the line resumed by March 25 using a purchased locomotive and coaches rented from the Hudson River Railroad After a multiple month court battle the BH amp E abandoned its claim to the line 5 24 The D amp C extended its line through Millerton meeting the Connecticut Western at the state line on July 24 1871 11 Through service began soon after Millerton became the connection point between the two railroads the Connecticut Western leased the D amp C between State Line and Millerton later in 1871 12 13 14 The Poughkeepsie and Eastern Railroad P amp E opened from Poughkeepsie New York to a junction with the D amp C at Stissing on January 24 1871 15 It opened a second section of its line from Pine Plains to State Line on October 1 1872 Between Stissing Junction and Pine Plains it used trackage rights on the D amp C 16 1 17 In 1870 the Harlem Extension Railroad was formed by a merger of the Lebanon Springs Railroad and the Bennington and Rutland Railroad forming a Chatham New York Rutland Vermont line 17 Late in 1872 the D amp C was merged with the New York and Boston Railroad the unbuilt Putnam and Dutchess Railroad and the Clove Branch to form the New York Boston and Northern Railway 18 19 In 1873 it joined with the Harlem Extension and the unbuilt Pine Plains and Albany Railroad to form the New York Boston and Montreal Railway NYB amp M 1 15 20 The Clove Branch and the D amp C between Clove Branch Junction and Pine Plains were to become part of its New York Rutland mainline 21 Newburgh Dutchess and Connecticut edit The Rhinebeck and Connecticut Railroad opened in 1875 with a shorter and flatter route to the Hudson than the D amp C which allowed it to charge lower rates The Rhinebeck and Connecticut replaced the D amp C as the C amp W s primary western connection for through traffic hurting revenues of the D amp C 3 15 The Panic of 1873 stopped the construction of the two new segments by 1875 the NYB amp M went bankrupt followed by the D amp C 1 15 The Clove Branch again became independent 5 25 The D amp C was sold at foreclosure in August 1876 1 15 It was reorganized January 15 1877 as the Newburgh Dutchess and Connecticut Railroad 1 15 22 Company headquarters were at Matteawan 23 In 1877 the Clove Branch was extended by 4 01 miles 6 45 km to Clove Valley where an iron works was located The extension was partially built on right of way that had been graded for the NYB amp M 8 24 nbsp Fishkill Landing in the early 20th century The New York and New England Railroad NY amp NE successor to the BH amp E opened its extension from Danbury Connecticut to Brewster New York in July 1881 25 That December the NY amp NE opened a further extension to Hopewell Junction As had been planned in 1868 the ND amp C was used to reach the Hudson albeit with trackage rights rather than ownership The NY amp NE built a short branch from the ND amp C to reach Fishkill Landing 26 Passenger service between Fishkill Landing and Boston began on December 12 1881 27 28 Train ferry service across the Hudson connecting with the Erie Railroad also began that day the first freight car carried 800 turkeys from Livonia New York bound for Providence 29 Within weeks the NY amp NE was carrying more freight than all other railroads in Dutchess County combined 3 18 The Poughkeepsie Bridge opened in 1889 along with connecting lines west to the Erie Railroad and northeast to Silvernails as part of the Central New England and Western successor of the Connecticut Western 3 19 The Dutchess County Railroad from the bridge to Hopewell Junction was completed in 1892 1 3 These through lines vastly decreased the demand for the ferry at Fishkill Landing 3 19 The ND amp C thereafter handled primarily local traffic much of its income was local coal delivery within Dutchess County 3 22 The NY amp NE fell under control of its archrival New Haven in 1895 and was merged into it in 1899 3 24 The Clove Branch leased by the ND amp C ended service in 1897 as the iron mines ran out and was torn up in 1898 3 25 30 31 Central New England Railway edit The Central New England and Western was consolidated with the Poughkeepsie Bridge and Railroad Company in 1892 as the Philadelphia Reading and New England Railroad under control of the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad It was succeeded in 1899 by the Central New England Railway CNE still controlled by the Reading 1 13 14 The New Haven obtained control of the CNE in 1904 primarily to obtain the Poughkeepsie Bridge 1 14 3 26 Although subsidiary to the New Haven the CNE operated largely independently 3 27 The New Haven also transferred the ex NY amp NE Fishkill Landing branch to the CNE 1 14 nbsp Hopewell Junction station the former crossing of the ND amp C and the Maybrook Line By 1905 daily passenger service on the ND amp C included two Fishkill Landing Pine Plains round trips and two Fishkill Landing Millerton round trips plus a Millerton State Line round trip connecting with a CNE train 3 29 The New Haven agreed in July 1905 to purchase the ND amp C primarily to obtain control of the segment between Wicopee Junction and Hopewell Junction and to prevent the New York Central Railroad from obtaining the line 32 33 The transfer took place on September 14 1905 after which the ND amp C was operated as part of the CNE Some service was rerouted to Poughkeepsie rather than Fishkill Junction 34 35 The ND amp C the Poughkeepsie and Eastern the Dutchess County and the Poughkeepsie Bridge were formally merged into the CNE in 1907 1 14 The CNE soon began to consolidate its duplicative lines crossing rural Dutchess County On October 2 1909 the railroad abandoned the former Poughkeepsie and Connecticut Railroad between West Pine Plains and West Salt Point Trains were rerouted over the parallel ex Poughkeepsie and Eastern including the portion of the ex ND amp C between Pine Plains and Stissing Junction 36 37 By 1912 the line had two daily Fishkill Landing Millerton round trips and one daily Fishkill Landing Pine Plains round trip all operating via Dutchess Junction Two daily round trips on the ex NY amp NE used the line between Fishkill Landing and Hopewell Junction three daily CNE round trips used the line only between Stissing Junction and Pine Plains 38 By 1915 the line had 1 1 2 daily Beacon formerly Fishkill Landing Pine Plains round trips a daily southbound trip from Pine Plains to Hopewell Junction and one daily Beacon Millerton round trip One daily CNE round trip used the line between Millerton and Stissing Junction and two between Pine Plains and Stissing Junction two daily ex NY amp NE round trips used the line west of Hopewell Junction 39 The 1 03 miles 1 66 km between Wicopee Junction and Dutchess Junction was abandoned in 1916 leaving only the connection to Beacon formerly Fishkill Landing at its south end 40 41 Abandonment edit The CNE ended passenger service between Shekomeko and Millerton on December 18 1921 42 43 That 7 73 mile 12 44 km section of track was generally disused for freight until January 21 1925 when the Interstate Commerce Commission authorized abandonment Passenger service between Millerton and Pine Plains via Boston Corners using the ex ND amp C between Millerton and State Line also ended at that time 43 44 45 6 The CNE began using a gasoline railcar between Beacon and Pine Plains in October 1923 46 The single daily round trip between Pine Plains and Shekomeko was discontinued in 1927 47 The final service east of Millerton on the ex ND amp C was cut back to Canaan Connecticut in December 1927 shortly before all CNE passenger service ended in Connecticut 48 49 The CNE was merged into the New Haven in 1927 6 By 1932 the only remaining passenger service on the ex CNE was operated by a single gasoline railcar one Beacon Pine Plains round trip on the ex ND amp C plus one Poughkeepsie Copake round trip that used the line between Pine Plains and Stissing Junction These trips were discontinued on September 9 1933 45 11 50 The 5 1 miles 8 2 km between Pine Plains and Shekomeko was abandoned in late 1935 45 6 51 On July 1 1936 the New Haven discontinued freight service between Stissing Junction and Millbrook because two trestles were in poor condition 45 11 52 nbsp The Beacon Line in the Matteawan section of Beacon in 2010 In April 1938 the Interstate Commerce Commission allowed the New Haven to abandon most of the remaining ex CNE lines in New York 45 4 This included the former ND amp C between Hopewell Junction and Pine Plains 45 5 53 Abandonment of the long unprofitable lines took place on August 1 1938 The New Haven continued operating the Maybrook Line as a major freight route over the Poughkeepsie Bridge The Beacon Hopewell Junction portion of the ex ND amp C was also retained for freight service 1 19 The New Haven was merged into Penn Central in 1969 which in turn merged into Conrail in 1976 The Poughkeepsie Bridge was damaged by fire in 1974 cutting off the Maybrook Line from west of Hudson connections This left the ex ND amp C spur to Beacon as the only western connection for the line Conrail soon upgraded it to handle additional freight traffic 54 55 However in 1981 Conrail applied to abandon the segment along with the Maybrook Line between Poughkeepsie and Hopewell Junction the former Dutchess County Railroad The latter segment was abandoned in 1982 but the Beacon Hopewell Junction segment remained in use 56 57 Maybrook Properties a subsidiary of the Housatonic Railroad purchased the remaining Maybrook Line Beacon Hopewell Junction Derby from Conrail in 1992 58 2 59 The Metro North Railroad purchased the New York portion of the line from Maybrook Properties in January 1995 as the Beacon Line 60 61 62 Metro North filed for federal permission for adverse abandonment of the line in 2021 the Housatonic which retained freight rights on the line opposed 58 In early 2023 Metro North filed for federal permission to acquire the Housatonic s freight rights and to discontinue the New York portion of the Beacon Line which would be converted to a rail trail The Housatonic indicated that it had not operated any trains on the line in two years and did not object to abandonment 58 However in July 2023 the Surface Transportation Board denied Metro North s request on procedural grounds 63 Metro North again filed for abandonment in December 2023 64 The filing was approved and took effect in February 2024 65 66 Route edit nbsp Map of Central New England Railway lines in the Upper Hudson Valley with the Newburgh Dutchess and Connecticut Railroad and the Clove Branch in purple The Newburgh Dutchess and Connecticut Railroad ran about 58 9 miles 94 8 km diagonally across Dutchess County New York from the Hudson River to the Connecticut state line 39 67 68 Its southwest end was at Dutchess Junction in Fishkill where it connected with the Hudson River Railroad The line followed the Fishkill Creek valley northeast to Hopewell Junction where it crossed the New York and New England Railroad and Dutchess County Railroad 2 19 From there the line gradually turned northward into steeper terrain with a difficult grade from Moore s Mills to Verbank then a curving route around Oak Summit into Millbrook 2 20 3 11 The Poughkeepsie and Eastern Railway joined the ND amp C at Stissing Junction with trackage rights on the ND amp C up to a split just south of Pine Plains After 1910 the connector to the CNE mainline also split at the latter junction 1 17 The ND amp C turned east at Pine Plains with an average grade of nearly 1 for the next 10 miles 16 km to Winchells This included sections of 2 8 near Shekomeko and 1 9 approaching Winchells Some 3 5 miles 5 6 km of 1 5 downgrade followed as the line approached Millerton where it crossed the New York and Harlem Railroad 3 11 At the state line the line met the Hartford and Connecticut Western Railroad and the Poughkeepsie and Eastern Railroad 67 The maximum speed allowed between State Line and Pine Plains for passenger trains was just 23 miles per hour 37 km h due to the steep grades 69 18 A short branch at the southwest end originally constructed by the NY amp NE split at Wicopee Junction west of Matteawan It ran northwest crossing over the Hudson River Railroad and terminating at the ferry landing at Fishkill Landing now Beacon The Clove Branch Railroad always closely associated with the ND amp C ran 8 miles 13 km east from Clove Branch to Clove Valley 67 Station listing edit Most stations on the line were simple square structures with flat roofs 69 21 Miles km 39 Municipality Station Connections and notes Beacon Beacon On 1881 built spur Connection with Hudson River Railroad 0 0 0 0 Fishkill town Dutchess Junction Connection with Hudson River Railroad 1 0 1 6 Beacon Wickopee Junction junction with Beacon spur 1 8 2 9 Matteawan 3 8 6 1 Fishkill town Glenham 5 9 9 5 Fishkill village Fishkill 7 7 12 4 Fishkill town Brinckerhoff 12 3 19 7 East Fishkill Hopewell Junction Junction with New York and New England Railroad and Dutchess County Railroad 13 4 21 5 Clove Branch Junction with Clove Branch Railroad 15 7 25 3 Arthursburg 17 3 27 9 LaGrange Lagrange 18 8 30 3 Billings 21 4 34 4 Moores Mills 23 5 37 8 Union Vale Verbank Village 24 4 39 2 Verbank 27 2 43 8 Washington Oak Summit 29 1 46 9 Millbrook Millbrook 32 7 52 7 Washington Shunpike 34 5 55 5 Stanford Anson s Crossing 36 3 58 4 Bangall 38 7 62 3 Stissing Junction Junction with Poughkeepsie and Eastern Railroad 40 5 65 1 Attlebury 42 7 68 7 Pine Plains Briarcliff Farms 43 6 70 2 Junction with Poughkeepsie and Eastern Railroad and Poughkeepsie and Connecticut Railroad 43 9 70 6 Pine Plains 46 1 74 2 Bethel 49 1 79 1 North East Shekomeko 51 8 83 3 Pine Plains Husted 53 5 86 0 Winchells 57 3 92 2 North East Junction with New York and Harlem Railroad 57 8 93 1 Millerton 58 9 94 7 State Line Junction with Hartford and Connecticut Western Railroad and Poughkeepsie and Eastern RailroadNotes edit In the years shortly after the American Civil War this was a common arrangement a railroad contemplating building an extension but reluctant to finance construction itself would lease another railroad even an unbuilt one Some railroads were chartered for the purpose of being leased The leased line was frequently operated as if it was an integral part of the parent company 4 630 631 References edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Robinson Winfield W October 1939 Locomotives of the New Haven Railroad Central New England Railway The Railway and Locomotive Historical Society Bulletin 50 The Railway and Locomotive Historical Society 7 27 JSTOR 43517255 a b c d e f g Stuart Inglis May 1834 The Dutchess amp Columbia R R and Its Associates The Railway and Locomotive Historical Society Bulletin 34 34 The Railway and Locomotive Historical Society 19 27 JSTOR 43519662 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p D W McLaughlin D W October 1968 Poughkeepsie Gateway The Railway and Locomotive Historical Society Bulletin 119 119 The Railway and Locomotive Historical Society 6 33 JSTOR 43518289 Meck John F Jr Masten John E 1940 Railroad Leases and Reorganization I Yale Law Journal 49 626 659 hdl 20 500 13051 3578 a b c d e f g h i McDermott William P 1996 Dutchess County Railroads Clinton Historical Society a b Karr Ronald Dale 2017 The Rail Lines of Southern New England 2 ed Branch Line Press pp 94 100 134 140 ISBN 9780942147124 Fishkill New York Herald June 22 1869 p 6 via Newspapers com a b Hasbrouck Frank 1909 The history of Dutchess County New York Samuel A Matthieu p 268 Hudson River The New York Times January 30 1870 p 8 via Newspapers com The Troubles of the Boston Hartford and Erie Railroad Company in Dutchess County N Y Hartford Courant March 26 1870 p 2 via Newspapers com Home News Connecticut Western News July 28 1871 p 2 via Newspapers com Brief Mention Hartford Courant August 4 1871 p 2 via Newspapers com Millerton Connecticut Western News October 27 1871 p 2 via Newspapers com Haight Lyndon A 1976 The Dutchess and Columbia Railroad Pine Plains and the Railroads The Record Vol 4 Little Nine Partners Historical Society Despatches In Brief Boston Evening Transcript January 25 1871 p 4 via Newspapers com The News The Buffalo Commercial October 5 1872 p 2 via Newspapers com The Harlem Extension Railroad Rutland Independent March 12 1870 p 4 via Newspapers com Railroads Consolidated New York Daily Herald December 21 1872 p 8 via Newspapers com Railroad Matters The Boston Globe December 23 1872 p 5 via Newspapers com The New Trunk Line Rutland Weekly Herald January 30 1873 p 1 via Newspapers com Local Intelligence The Manchester Journal December 26 1872 p 3 via Newspapers com Sale of the Dutchess and Columbia Road The Philadelphia Inquirer August 11 1876 p 1 via Newspapers com Matteawan Poughkeepsie Eagle News January 18 1889 p 8 via Newspapers com Railroad Extension Poughkeepsie Eagle News March 24 1877 p 3 via Newspapers com A New Line To New York Boston Globe July 27 1881 p 3 via Newspapers com The New Railroad Across Dutchess County Poughkeepsie Eagle News October 22 1881 p 3 via Newspapers com Local Summary Boston Post December 9 1881 p 4 via Newspapers com Local Lines The Boston Globe December 9 1881 p 2 via Newspapers com Notes Buffalo Morning Express December 13 1881 p 4 via Newspapers com Sylvan Lake and Clove Poughkeepsie Eagle News April 7 1899 p 6 via Newspapers com Railroad Election Poughkeepsie Eagle News October 29 1897 p 6 via Newspapers com N Y N H amp H To Buy Newburg and Dutchess Hartford Courant July 19 1905 p 1 via Newspapers com The Brooklyn Daily Eagle New Haven Road s Coup July 18 1905 p 1 via Newspapers com Formal Transfer Poughkeepsie Eagle News September 15 1905 p 5 via Newspapers com Will Benefit City Of Poughkeepsie Poughkeepsie Eagle News September 28 1905 p 5 via Newspapers com Paying Railroad Abandoned The New York Times October 1 1909 p 11 via Newspapers com Will Abandon Railroad North Bay Nugget October 6 1909 p 7 via Newspapers com Summer Schedule Lines West of New London and Willimantic New York New Haven and Hartford Railroad August 17 1912 pp 55 58 via Wikimedia Commons a b c Summer Schedule Lines West of New London and Willimantic New York New Haven and Hartford Railroad June 6 1915 p 23 via Wikimedia Commons Station Discontinued Poughkeepsie Eagle News February 3 1916 p 8 via Newspapers com Valuation Docket No 332 Central New England Railway Company Et Al Reports and Decisions of the Interstate Commerce Commission of the United States Volume 97 February July 1925 Interstate Commerce Commission 1926 p 801 C N E Discontinues Millerton Shekomeko Poughkeepsie Eagle News December 19 1921 p 7 via Newspapers com a b C N E Railroad Abandons Track The Kingston Daily Freeman January 22 1925 p 8 via Newspapers com Abandonment Of Rail Spurs Is Authorized Poughkeepsie Eagle News January 22 1925 p 1 via Newspapers com a b c d e f Finance Docket No 11578 New York New Haven amp Hartford Et Al Trustees Abandonment Reports and Decisions of the Interstate Commerce Commission of the United States Finance Reports Volume 228 April November 1938 Interstate Commerce Commission 1939 pp 4 24 To Run Gasoline Cars New Britain Herald October 9 1923 p 6 via Newspapers com C N E To Alter Train Schedule Poughkeepsie Eagle News April 20 1927 p 5 via Newspapers com Canaan Millerton Bus Line Changes Owners Hartford Courant November 26 1927 p 2 via Newspapers com Buses Supplant Trains On Winsted Hartford Line New Britain Herald December 15 1927 p 10 via Newspapers com Poughkeepsie Trains Discontinued By P S C Poughkeepsie Eagle News August 26 1933 p 7 via Newspapers com New Haven Drops Five Mile Stretch Daily News October 31 1935 Brooklyn Section 10 via Newspapers com Old Railroad s Receivers Act Poughkeepsie Eagle News August 4 1936 p 2 via Newspapers com Track Scrapping Plan Postponed For Time Poughkeepsie Eagle News June 4 1938 p 18 via Newspapers com Dykeman Nathan January 3 1977 Project improves Conrail Poughkeepsie Journal p 8 via Newspapers com Lombardi Kate Stone February 5 1995 The Maybrook Line And Its Rise and Fall The New York Times Archived from the original on October 28 2018 Conrail to drop Maybrook line Poughkeepsie Journal February 26 1982 p 13 via Newspapers com Some area tracks off abandonment list Poughkeepsie Journal December 5 1981 p 3 via Newspapers com a b c Housatonic Railroad Company January 3 2023 Verified Notice of Exemption 49 C F R 1152 50 PDF Surface Transportation Board Archived from the original PDF on July 13 2023 Bowen Douglas John August 2 2013 Connecticut urged to aid Housatonic rail route Railway Age Retrieved July 12 2023 Metro North plans wisely for future Mount Vernon Argus November 20 1994 p 16 via Newspapers com Metro North to buy east west rail line Putnam Reporter Dispatch November 16 1994 pp 1 2 via Newspapers com Lombardi Kate Stone February 5 1995 Metro North Buys A Line for Future The New York Times Archived from the original on June 15 2018 Surface Transportation Board Decision Docket No AB 733 Sub No 1X PDF Surface Transportation Board July 13 2023 Archived from the original PDF on July 21 2023 Metro North Commuter Railroad Company Abandonment Exemption In Dutchess and Putnam Counties New York STB AB 1311 Sub No 1X PDF Surface Transportation Board December 21 2023 Archived from the original PDF on December 27 2023 Surface Transportation Board January 10 2024 Metro North Commuter Railroad Company Abandonment Exemption in Dutchess and Putnam Counties N Y Federal Register 89 7 1622 1623 89 FR 1622 Corrected Decision Decision and Notice of Interim Trail Use or Abandonment Docket No AB 1311 Sub No 1X PDF Surface Transportation Board February 8 2024 Archived from the original PDF on February 12 2024 a b c Bien Joseph Rudolf 1895 Dutchess County Map 1 158 400 Julius Bien amp Co Newburgh Dutchess and Connecticut Railroad Company Poor s Manual of Railroads Vol 27 H V amp H W Poor 1894 p 45 a b Ashman Robert Milmine Charles 1972 The Central New England Railroad 1867 1967 The Salisbury Association OCLC 596590 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Newburgh Dutchess and Connecticut Railroad amp oldid 1206453983, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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