Fitchburg Railroad
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The Fitchburg Railroad (AAR reporting mark FBRG) was a railroad across northern Massachusetts, USA, leading to and through the Hoosac Tunnel. The original line, from Boston to Fitchburg, is now the Fitchburg Line, a line of the MBTA Commuter Rail system.
History
The Charlestown Branch Railroad was incorporated April 4, 1835 as a short branch from the Boston and Lowell Railroad to Sweet's Wharf in Charlestown, opening in January 1840. The Fitchburg Railroad was incorporated March 3, 1842 to run from Boston to Fitchburg, and bought land next to the Charlestown Branch in May 1843. Construction began on May 20 and the first section to Waltham opened on December 20, 1843, operated by the Charlestown Branch until May 1, 1844. Further sections opened to Concord June 17, 1844, Acton October 1, 1844, Shirley December 30, 1844 and Fitchburg March 5, 1845. The new track next to the Charlestown Branch opened in August 1844; the Fitchburg Railroad leased the Charlestown Branch itself on September 1, 1845, and outright bought the branch on January 31, 1846. In 1848 a new bridge opened, carrying the line from Charlestown to downtown Boston.The original Charlestown terminal was southwest of City Square, west of the Warren Bridge (). The downtown Boston terminal was on the north side of Causeway Street between Haverhill Street and Beverly Street until the North Station union station opened in 1893.
The Boston and Maine Railroad leased the Fitchburg for 99 years from July 1, 1900 as its Fitchburg Division. The two companies merged to form a new B&M December 1, 1919. The MBTA bought the line from Boston to Fitchburg, along with many other lines, from the B&M on December 27, 1976. Guilford Transportation took over the former B&M in June 1983.
Passenger service ran only to Fitchburg after 1960. On January 18, 1965 service was cut back to West Concord, but was restored to Ayer on June 28, 1965. On March 1, 1975 it was cut back to South Acton, but was restored to Fitchburg and beyond to Gardner on January 13, 1980. Gardner service was ended on January 1, 1987 when Amtrak took over the MBTA contract, due to a dispute between Amtrak and Guilford; the MBTA only owned the trackage to Fitchburg.
The Fitchburg Line west of the old Stony Brook Railroad, which now junctions east of the old Ayer Junction, now serves as part of Guilford's main line between Mattawamkeag, Maine and Mechanicville, New York.
Branches
- Harvard
- Lexington
- Waltham and Watertown
- Marlborough
- Peterborough and Shirley
- Milford
Vermont and Massachusetts Railroad
The Vermont and Massachusetts Railroad was chartered in 1844 and immediately merged the Brattleborough and Fitchburg Railroad of Vermont into itself. The first section, from Fitchburg to Baldwinville, opened in 1847 and was operated by the Fitchburg Railroad until 1849. Further extensions opened to Athol and Miller's Falls in 1848, and to Brattleboro, Vermont in 1850. Later in 1850, a branch from Grout's Corner west to Greenfield, Massachusetts opened. A short branch to Turner's Falls opened in 1870 or 1871.The original main line north from Miller's Falls was leased to the Rutland Railroad in 1870, which leased itself to the Vermont Central Railroad in 1871, which became the Central Vermont Railroad in 1872. This was a continuation of the New London Northern Railroad, built south from Miller's Falls in 1867 and also leased to the Vermont Central in 1871.
In 1874 the Fitchburg Railroad leased the rest of the V&M, extending its line west to Greenfield (and beyond via the Troy and Greenfield Railroad - see below).
- Ashburnham
- Turners Falls
Cheshire
The Cheshire Railroad was chartered in New Hampshire in 1844, consolidating with the Winchendon Railroad of Massachusetts (chartered 1845) in 1845. The first section opened in 1847, from the Vermont and Massachusetts Railroad at South Ashburnham to Winchendon; an extension to Troy, New Hampshire also opened in 1847. Extensions to Keene and Bellows Falls, Vermont opened in 1848 and 1849, forming a connection between the Fitchburg Railroad and the Vermont Central Railroad (via trackage rights over the V&M east of South Ashburnham).The Cheshire Railroad was merged into the Fitchburg in 1890, becoming the Cheshire Branch.
- Monadnock
- Boston, Barre and Gardner
The BB&G leased the Monadnock Railroad in 1874, but reassigned the lease to the Cheshire in 1880. The BB&G was merged into the Fitchburg in 1885.
Troy and Greenfield
The Troy and Greenfield Railroad was incorporated and chartered in 1848, with a planned line from the Vermont border in Williamstown east through the Hoosac Tunnel to Greenfield. The first section opened from the state line to the west end of the tunnel at North Adams in 1859. The tunnel itself opened in 1875, before which the Troy and Boston Railroad leased the T&G. The T&G was consolidated into the Fitchburg Railroad in 1887.The Southern Vermont Railroad was chartered in 1848 to connect the T&G across the southwest corner of Vermont to the New York state line. It opened in 1859 and was leased by the Troy and Boston Railroad, but in 1860 the T&G bought it. The Fitchburg bought the Southern Vermont directly in 1891.
The Troy and Boston Railroad was chartered in 1849 to continue the line west to Troy, New York. It was consolidated into the Fitchburg in 1887. The Troy and Bennington Railroad was organized in 1851 to build a branch from the Troy and Boston at Hoosick Junction to the Vermont state line towards Bennington. It opened in 1852, continuing as the Western Vermont Railroad (leased by the Troy and Boston from 1857 until it was reorganized into the Bennington and Rutland Railway in 1865).
- Hoosac Tunnel and Wilmington
Boston, Hoosac Tunnel and Western
The Boston, Hoosac Tunnel and Western Railway was organized in 1877 and opened in 1879 on a line from the New York Central and Hudson River Railroad at Rotterdam Junction, west of Schenectady, east to Mechanicville and beyond, closely paralleling the Troy and Boston into southwestern Vermont. The Fitchburg bought the BHT&W in 1887.The Hoosac Tunnel and Saratoga Railway was chartered in 1880, and was leased by the BHT&W in 1882. In 1886 it merged with the Saratoga Lake Railway (also chartered 1880 and leased to the BHT&W in 1882) to form the Troy, Saratoga and Northern Railroad. The combined line was built in 1886 and 1887, [link] with a main line from Mechanicville (never built south to Troy) north and west to Saratoga Springs, and a branch east to Schuylerville. The Fitchburg Railroad leased it in 1887.
Accessibility
Only five of the stations, including both terminals, are wheelchair accessible (see below). See also MBTA accessibility.Station listing
| Milepost | City | Station | Opening date | Connections and notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Boston | Orange Line, Green Line and all north side Commuter Rail lines Amtrak Downeaster | |||
| Boston Engine Terminal | A flag stop with a wooden platform for MBTA employees only | |||
| MBTA Commuter Rail Lowell Line, Haverhill/Reading Line and Newburyport/Rockport Line split | ||||
| Somerville | Union Square | closed | ||
| Somerville | closed | |||
| Cambridge | Red Line, originally Porters | |||
| West Cambridge | closed | |||
| 5.52 | Belmont | Hill Crossing | closed | |
| 6.43 | Belmont Center | temporarily closed 1958, reopened March 4, 1974 | ||
| 7.39 | Waverley | 73 trackless trolley, temporarily closed 1958, reopened March 4, 1974 | ||
| 8.31 | Waltham | Clematis Brook | closed June 1978 | |
| 9.26 | Beaver Brook | closed June 1978 | ||
| 9.86 | Waltham | |||
| 10.55 | Riverview | closed January 17, 1965 | ||
| 11.49 | originally Roberts | |||
| 12.23 | Weston | Stony Brook | closed | |
| 13.16 | Kendal Green | |||
| 13.72 | Hastings | Service limited to five inbound trains and six outbound trains on weekdays only. | ||
| 14.71 | Silver Hill | Very limited service; two inbound trains and three outbound trains on weekdays only. | ||
| 16.66 | Lincoln | Lincoln | originally South Lincoln | |
| 17.76 | Baker Bridge | closed | ||
| 20.05 | Concord | Concord | ||
| 21.89 | ||||
| 25.06 | Acton | South Acton | Terminal station for some trains; temporarily closed January 17, 1965, reopened June 28, 1965 | |
| 26.77 | West Acton | temporarily closed January 17, 1965, reopened June 28, 1965, closed April 30, 1975 | ||
| 28.93 | Boxborough | Boxboro | closed | |
| 31.47 | Littleton | Littleton/Route 495 | originally Littleton temporarily closed January 17, 1965, reopened June 28, 1965, temporarily closed April 30, 1975, reopened January 13, 1980 (as relocated Littleton/Route 495) | |
| 33.72 313.77 | Ayer | Willows | closed | |
| 36.07 316.07 | Ayer | temporarily closed January 17, 1965, reopened June 28, 1965, temporarily closed April 30, 1975, reopened January 13, 1980 | ||
| 39.43 319.43 | Shirley | Shirley | temporarily closed January 17, 1965, reopened May 1981 | |
| 42.14 322.14 | Lunenburg | Lunenburg | closed | |
| 45.34 325.34 | Leominster | North Leominster | temporarily closed January 17, 1965, reopened January 13, 1980 | |
| 49.55 329.55 | Fitchburg | temporarily closed January 17, 1965, reopened January 13, 1980 |
[http://encycl.opentopia.com/ edit ] Boston and Maine Railroad subsidiaries
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| Eastern (1883) - Worcester, Nashua and Portland (1886) - Boston and Lowell (1887) - Passumpsic (1887) - Northern (1890) - Connecticut River (1893) - Concord and Montreal (1895) - Fitchburg (1900) |
External links
References
- [Changes to Transit Service in the MBTA district] (PDF)
- [Railroad History Database]
- Mileposts from [FRA Highway-Rail Crossing Inventory Files] and [Guilford District 3]
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