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New York, Ontario and Western Railway

The New York, Ontario and Western Railway, more commonly known as the O&W or NYO&W, was a regional railroad with origins in 1868, lasting until March 29, 1957 (the last train ran from Norwich to Middletown, NY on this date), after which it was ordered liquidated by a US bankruptcy judge. It was the first notable U.S. railroad with its mainline entirely abandoned.[1][better source needed]

New York, Ontario and Western Railway
A pocket calendar image of New York, Ontario and Western Railway diesel locomotive built for freight service in 1947
Overview
HeadquartersNew York City, New York
Reporting markNYOW
LocaleNorth Jersey, Upstate New York and Northeastern Pennsylvania
Dates of operation1884–1957
Technical
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Length541 mi (871 km)
New York, Ontario & Western

The railroad began life as the New York and Oswego Midland Railroad, organized by Dewitt C. Littlejohn of Oswego, NY in 1868. Its mainline extended from Weehawken, New Jersey, across the Hudson River from New York City, to Oswego, New York, a port city on Lake Ontario. It had branch lines to Kingston, Port Jervis, Monticello, Delhi, Utica and Rome, New York and Scranton, Pennsylvania. The part south of Cornwall, New York, was operated over the New York Central Railroad's West Shore Railroad via trackage rights.

History

 
An O&W passenger train at Weehawken Terminal, N.J.
 
O&W Engine 201 crossing Cadosia Trestle


In 1866, the New York and Oswego Midland Railroad was chartered under the direction of Dewitt C. Littlejohn, who envisioned a railroad serving a direct connection from the docks opposite New York City to Lake Ontario at Oswego. Construction on the line north of Middletown began in 1868 and was completed in 1873. Branches were also constructed to Ellenville, Delhi and New Berlin, New York; a branch was begun to Auburn from Norwich, but it only was constructed to Scipio Center before being sold to the Utica, Ithaca and Elmira Railroad in 1876.[2] Access to New York City was provided by the Middletown, Unionville and Water Gap Railroad and the New Jersey Midland Railway beginning in 1872. On September 3, 1869, the NY&OM began using the Pennsylvania Railroad's station at Exchange Place in Jersey City, New Jersey, which provided its passengers with ferry access to the Cortlandt Street Ferry Depot in lower Manhattan and the Desbrosses Street Ferry.[3] With the Panic of 1873, the company began to fold, and it severed its ties with the NJM and the MU&WG.

In 1880, the O&W inherited the New York & Oswego Midland's lines. The O&W improved the main line by providing a new route to the New York City area from Middletown, New York which extended to Cornwall on the Hudson River and then to Weehawken Terminal. This development was made possible by negotiating trackage-rights from the New York, West Shore & Buffalo Railway,[4] later part of the New York Central system.

In 1886, the O&W acquired the operations of both the Utica, Clinton & Binghamton and the Rome & Clinton railroads from the Delaware & Hudson Canal Company. By acquisition of these assets and construction of a new line to Sylvan Beach on the east shore of Lake Oneida, the O&W extended its operations into new market areas, and the Sylvan Beach Loop became a seasonally-significant corridor by providing transportation to central New York's recreational resort area. By 1889, the O&W added two new branches, New Berlin to Edmeston, and Port Jervis to Monticello, connecting to the main line at Summitville, New York.

The most significant addition occurred in 1890, when the O&W constructed a 54-mile branch from Cadosia, New York, to Scranton, Pennsylvania, through the rich anthracite coal reserves in Pennsylvania's Lackawanna Valley. Revenues from this new Scranton Division strengthened O&W's revenues and provided the means for future improvements to the railroad. The railroad's W-in-O logo first appeared in 1892.[5]

Revenue freight traffic, in millions of net ton-miles.
Year Traffic
1925 688
1933 830
1944 957
1956 353
Source: ICC annual reports
 
O&W Engine 405
 
Share of the New York, Ontario and Western Railway, issued 7 October 1921

During the ill-fated "Morganization" of the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad (NH), the railroad acquired control of the O&W and installed NH president Charles Sanger Mellen as president for a year. Regulatory difficulties frustrated Mellen's plans to barter the O&W to the New York Central Railroad for concessions elsewhere.

The 1940s saw a receding of passenger service. In the early years of the 1940s, the Summitville-Kingston branch was reduced to a Sundays and holidays, summer-only service.[6] Improved highways ended the O&W's passenger service to the resort areas of the lower Catskill Mountains (the "Borscht Belt") and lightly populated portions of Upstate New York, with the last train from Walton, New York to Weehawken operating in the summer of 1948. The O&W's Walton-Delhi branch service, all in Delaware County, was also eliminated in this period.[7] The last passenger train (from Roscoe, New York just north of Livingston Manor, to Weehawken Terminal) operated on September 10, 1953.[8]

Bankruptcy

The O&W began bankruptcy proceedings, from which it would never emerge, as early as 1937. Apart from total dieselization by 1948, it became antiquated. (It was known to locals as the "Old & Weary", "Old & Wobbly" or "Old Woman.")[1] The decrease of coal as a heating fuel for other than major power plants damaged its primary freight business, as did the end of rail transport of high-priority dairy products from Upstate New York to the Metro New York City area. The New Haven offered to purchase the company in 1952, but later withdrew its offer, citing its own financial problems.[9] Abandonment was loudly-protested by towns along the line, which considered unpaid back taxes as an investment in the railroad. The New York State legislature approved a $1 million aid bill, citing the O&W as essential for civil defense, but the state civil defense commission rejected it.[9]

The bankruptcy court finally ordered complete abandonment, and the last freight train ran from Norwich to Middletown on March 29, 1957. Liquidation proceeded shortly thereafter. Three large scrap dealers bought the entire right-of-way from the bankruptcy court soon afterward, and removed nearly all of the rails and bridges in 1958 and 1959. All O&W assets were auctioned. The diesel locomotives found new owners, but most of the other, antiquated rolling stock and equipment was scrapped.[9] Certain sections of track serving shippers, many of which were industrial factories, were transferred by the bankruptcy court to other railroads, allowing continued rail access to the plants. The Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad received track from Utica to New Hartford, New York, and track in Norwich, New York and Scranton, Pennsylvania. The New York Central took over sections of O&W New York track between Fulton and Oswego, as well as track in Rome, Oneida and Kingston. These transfers were approved before operations ceased at midnight on March 29, and the transfer of other sections to the Erie Railroad was approved later.[10] A section of the track in New Hartford was still in operation in 2018 by the Northern Division of the New York, Susquehanna and Western Railway.

Legacy

 
New York, Ontario and Western Railway 104, a General Electric 44-ton switcher preserved at the Southeastern Railway Museum, Duluth, Georgia

Rail historian George Drury later commented that the O&W "had always been sickly and should not have been built" at just "541 miles".[9]

Parts of the Summitville - Kingston division,[11] ending at Kingston, have become a rail trail. Some of the stations have been converted into residences, including the Alligerville station in High Falls, New York, owned by Gerry Leonard since 2001 and used as a recording studio.[12]

The "Flying Diesel Corps"

On September 27, 1955, a 50-car O&W train in Hamilton, New York traveling on a mainline approached a switch set for a siding which led to a coal trestle. Although the engineer fully-applied the brakes, the train continued up the siding at more than 30 miles per hour (48 km/h) and through the trestle. It was learned that the 213-ton EMD FT diesel locomotive at the head of the train "flew" a distance of 150 feet (46 m) beyond the coal trestle from an elevation of 15 feet (4.6 m). Two of the crew were seriously injured, but no crewmen were killed in the wreck.

An investigation by New York state police as to why the switch had been thrown resulted in no arrests. A dinner was later given in honor of the crew, who each received a plaque proclaiming them to be members of the O&W's new "Flying Diesel Corps." Each plaque was topped with a cast presentation model of their F-unit locomotive; the castings were provided by EMD.

One of the freight cars involved in the accident was loaded with chocolate bars from the Nestlé plant in nearby Fulton, New York. It was said that when the younger residents of Hamilton learned of the spilled candy, they raced to collect what they could, and that as a result candy sales in the town were for some time afterward very low.[13]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b kodtrak.railfan.net
  2. ^ "An Old Time Excursion Over the Midland's Auburn Branch by Richard Palmer". nyow.org. Retrieved 2022-06-05.
  3. ^ Railroad Ferries of the Hudson: And Stories of a Deckhand, by, Raymond J. Baxter, Arthur G. Adams, pg. 69 ,1999, Fordham University Press, 978-0823219544
  4. ^ "Light On Railroad Methods.; Asking An Investigation Of The Old New-York And Oswego Midland" (PDF). The New York Times. May 13, 1882.
  5. ^ Early 1890s O&W Annual Passes[permanent dead link]
  6. ^ "New York, Ontario and Western Railway, Table 5". Official Guide of the Railways. National Railway Publication Company. 74 (1). June 1941.
  7. ^ "New York, Ontario and Western Railway, Table 2 -freight only". Official Guide of the Railways. National Railway Publication Company. 82 (3). August 1949.
  8. ^ American Rails, 'New York, Ontario and Western Railway' https://www.american-rails.com/nyow.html
  9. ^ a b c d Drury, George H. (1994). The Historical Guide to North American Railroads: Histories, Figures, and Features of more than 160 Railroads Abandoned or Merged since 1930. Waukesha, Wisconsin: Kalmbach Publishing. pp. 91, 229–231. ISBN 0-89024-072-8.
  10. ^ "Trackage is Assigned Lackawanna and N.Y. Central Named to Serve Shippers". New York Times. March 29, 1957. p. 33.
  11. ^ "New York, Ontario and Western Railway, Table 1". Official Guide of the Railways. National Railway Publication Company. 64 (9). February 1932.
  12. ^ "Legendary Rock Producer Lists His Converted Train Station in the Woods". Realtor.com. September 26, 2018 – via San Francisco Chronicle.
  13. ^ O&W history at www.nyow.org

External links

  • Ontario and Western at Abandoned Rails
  • Ontario and Western Railway Historical Society
  • O&W Rail Trail - New York

york, ontario, western, railway, more, commonly, known, regional, railroad, with, origins, 1868, lasting, until, march, 1957, last, train, from, norwich, middletown, this, date, after, which, ordered, liquidated, bankruptcy, judge, first, notable, railroad, wi. The New York Ontario and Western Railway more commonly known as the O amp W or NYO amp W was a regional railroad with origins in 1868 lasting until March 29 1957 the last train ran from Norwich to Middletown NY on this date after which it was ordered liquidated by a US bankruptcy judge It was the first notable U S railroad with its mainline entirely abandoned 1 better source needed New York Ontario and Western RailwayA pocket calendar image of New York Ontario and Western Railway diesel locomotive built for freight service in 1947OverviewHeadquartersNew York City New YorkReporting markNYOWLocaleNorth Jersey Upstate New York and Northeastern PennsylvaniaDates of operation1884 1957TechnicalTrack gauge4 ft 8 1 2 in 1 435 mm standard gaugeLength541 mi 871 km vteNew York Ontario amp WesternLegendOswegoCentral SquareOneidaRomeUticaClintonRandallsvilleNorwichSidneyDelhiWaltonCadosiaHancockNew YorkPennsylvaniaCarbondaleMayfield YardScrantonSibleyLivingston ManorFerndaleFallsburghMonticelloValley JunctionPort JervisSummitvilleKingstonMiddletownCampbell HallMaybrook NH CornwallNew YorkNew JerseyWeehawken Terminal NYC Runningrights Owner The railroad began life as the New York and Oswego Midland Railroad organized by Dewitt C Littlejohn of Oswego NY in 1868 Its mainline extended from Weehawken New Jersey across the Hudson River from New York City to Oswego New York a port city on Lake Ontario It had branch lines to Kingston Port Jervis Monticello Delhi Utica and Rome New York and Scranton Pennsylvania The part south of Cornwall New York was operated over the New York Central Railroad s West Shore Railroad via trackage rights Contents 1 History 1 1 Bankruptcy 2 Legacy 3 The Flying Diesel Corps 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksHistory Edit An O amp W passenger train at Weehawken Terminal N J O amp W Engine 201 crossing Cadosia Trestle See also Northern Division route diagram and Southern Scranton and Kingston Port Jervis and Monticello Divisions route diagram In 1866 the New York and Oswego Midland Railroad was chartered under the direction of Dewitt C Littlejohn who envisioned a railroad serving a direct connection from the docks opposite New York City to Lake Ontario at Oswego Construction on the line north of Middletown began in 1868 and was completed in 1873 Branches were also constructed to Ellenville Delhi and New Berlin New York a branch was begun to Auburn from Norwich but it only was constructed to Scipio Center before being sold to the Utica Ithaca and Elmira Railroad in 1876 2 Access to New York City was provided by the Middletown Unionville and Water Gap Railroad and the New Jersey Midland Railway beginning in 1872 On September 3 1869 the NY amp OM began using the Pennsylvania Railroad s station at Exchange Place in Jersey City New Jersey which provided its passengers with ferry access to the Cortlandt Street Ferry Depot in lower Manhattan and the Desbrosses Street Ferry 3 With the Panic of 1873 the company began to fold and it severed its ties with the NJM and the MU amp WG In 1880 the O amp W inherited the New York amp Oswego Midland s lines The O amp W improved the main line by providing a new route to the New York City area from Middletown New York which extended to Cornwall on the Hudson River and then to Weehawken Terminal This development was made possible by negotiating trackage rights from the New York West Shore amp Buffalo Railway 4 later part of the New York Central system In 1886 the O amp W acquired the operations of both the Utica Clinton amp Binghamton and the Rome amp Clinton railroads from the Delaware amp Hudson Canal Company By acquisition of these assets and construction of a new line to Sylvan Beach on the east shore of Lake Oneida the O amp W extended its operations into new market areas and the Sylvan Beach Loop became a seasonally significant corridor by providing transportation to central New York s recreational resort area By 1889 the O amp W added two new branches New Berlin to Edmeston and Port Jervis to Monticello connecting to the main line at Summitville New York The most significant addition occurred in 1890 when the O amp W constructed a 54 mile branch from Cadosia New York to Scranton Pennsylvania through the rich anthracite coal reserves in Pennsylvania s Lackawanna Valley Revenues from this new Scranton Division strengthened O amp W s revenues and provided the means for future improvements to the railroad The railroad s W in O logo first appeared in 1892 5 Revenue freight traffic in millions of net ton miles Year Traffic1925 6881933 8301944 9571956 353Source ICC annual reports O amp W Engine 405 Share of the New York Ontario and Western Railway issued 7 October 1921 During the ill fated Morganization of the New York New Haven and Hartford Railroad NH the railroad acquired control of the O amp W and installed NH president Charles Sanger Mellen as president for a year Regulatory difficulties frustrated Mellen s plans to barter the O amp W to the New York Central Railroad for concessions elsewhere The 1940s saw a receding of passenger service In the early years of the 1940s the Summitville Kingston branch was reduced to a Sundays and holidays summer only service 6 Improved highways ended the O amp W s passenger service to the resort areas of the lower Catskill Mountains the Borscht Belt and lightly populated portions of Upstate New York with the last train from Walton New York to Weehawken operating in the summer of 1948 The O amp W s Walton Delhi branch service all in Delaware County was also eliminated in this period 7 The last passenger train from Roscoe New York just north of Livingston Manor to Weehawken Terminal operated on September 10 1953 8 Bankruptcy Edit The O amp W began bankruptcy proceedings from which it would never emerge as early as 1937 Apart from total dieselization by 1948 it became antiquated It was known to locals as the Old amp Weary Old amp Wobbly or Old Woman 1 The decrease of coal as a heating fuel for other than major power plants damaged its primary freight business as did the end of rail transport of high priority dairy products from Upstate New York to the Metro New York City area The New Haven offered to purchase the company in 1952 but later withdrew its offer citing its own financial problems 9 Abandonment was loudly protested by towns along the line which considered unpaid back taxes as an investment in the railroad The New York State legislature approved a 1 million aid bill citing the O amp W as essential for civil defense but the state civil defense commission rejected it 9 The bankruptcy court finally ordered complete abandonment and the last freight train ran from Norwich to Middletown on March 29 1957 Liquidation proceeded shortly thereafter Three large scrap dealers bought the entire right of way from the bankruptcy court soon afterward and removed nearly all of the rails and bridges in 1958 and 1959 All O amp W assets were auctioned The diesel locomotives found new owners but most of the other antiquated rolling stock and equipment was scrapped 9 Certain sections of track serving shippers many of which were industrial factories were transferred by the bankruptcy court to other railroads allowing continued rail access to the plants The Delaware Lackawanna and Western Railroad received track from Utica to New Hartford New York and track in Norwich New York and Scranton Pennsylvania The New York Central took over sections of O amp W New York track between Fulton and Oswego as well as track in Rome Oneida and Kingston These transfers were approved before operations ceased at midnight on March 29 and the transfer of other sections to the Erie Railroad was approved later 10 A section of the track in New Hartford was still in operation in 2018 by the Northern Division of the New York Susquehanna and Western Railway Legacy Edit New York Ontario and Western Railway 104 a General Electric 44 ton switcher preserved at the Southeastern Railway Museum Duluth Georgia Rail historian George Drury later commented that the O amp W had always been sickly and should not have been built at just 541 miles 9 Parts of the Summitville Kingston division 11 ending at Kingston have become a rail trail Some of the stations have been converted into residences including the Alligerville station in High Falls New York owned by Gerry Leonard since 2001 and used as a recording studio 12 The Flying Diesel Corps EditOn September 27 1955 a 50 car O amp W train in Hamilton New York traveling on a mainline approached a switch set for a siding which led to a coal trestle Although the engineer fully applied the brakes the train continued up the siding at more than 30 miles per hour 48 km h and through the trestle It was learned that the 213 ton EMD FT diesel locomotive at the head of the train flew a distance of 150 feet 46 m beyond the coal trestle from an elevation of 15 feet 4 6 m Two of the crew were seriously injured but no crewmen were killed in the wreck An investigation by New York state police as to why the switch had been thrown resulted in no arrests A dinner was later given in honor of the crew who each received a plaque proclaiming them to be members of the O amp W s new Flying Diesel Corps Each plaque was topped with a cast presentation model of their F unit locomotive the castings were provided by EMD One of the freight cars involved in the accident was loaded with chocolate bars from the Nestle plant in nearby Fulton New York It was said that when the younger residents of Hamilton learned of the spilled candy they raced to collect what they could and that as a result candy sales in the town were for some time afterward very low 13 See also EditO amp W Railroad Station at Port BenReferences Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to New York Ontario and Western Railway a b kodtrak railfan net An Old Time Excursion Over the Midland s Auburn Branch by Richard Palmer nyow org Retrieved 2022 06 05 Railroad Ferries of the Hudson And Stories of a Deckhand by Raymond J Baxter Arthur G Adams pg 69 1999 Fordham University Press 978 0823219544 Light On Railroad Methods Asking An Investigation Of The Old New York And Oswego Midland PDF The New York Times May 13 1882 Early 1890s O amp W Annual Passes permanent dead link New York Ontario and Western Railway Table 5 Official Guide of the Railways National Railway Publication Company 74 1 June 1941 New York Ontario and Western Railway Table 2 freight only Official Guide of the Railways National Railway Publication Company 82 3 August 1949 American Rails New York Ontario and Western Railway https www american rails com nyow html a b c d Drury George H 1994 The Historical Guide to North American Railroads Histories Figures and Features of more than 160 Railroads Abandoned or Merged since 1930 Waukesha Wisconsin Kalmbach Publishing pp 91 229 231 ISBN 0 89024 072 8 Trackage is Assigned Lackawanna and N Y Central Named to Serve Shippers New York Times March 29 1957 p 33 New York Ontario and Western Railway Table 1 Official Guide of the Railways National Railway Publication Company 64 9 February 1932 Legendary Rock Producer Lists His Converted Train Station in the Woods Realtor com September 26 2018 via San Francisco Chronicle O amp W history at www nyow orgExternal links EditOntario and Western at Abandoned Rails Ontario and Western Railway Historical Society O amp W Rail Trail New York NYO amp W Timetables and maps Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title New York Ontario and Western Railway amp oldid 1114454697, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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