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Boston and Albany Railroad

The Boston and Albany Railroad (reporting mark B&A)[1] was a railroad connecting Boston, Massachusetts to Albany, New York, later becoming part of the New York Central Railroad system, Conrail, and CSX Transportation. The line is currently used by CSX for freight. Passenger service is provided on the line by Amtrak, as part of their Lake Shore Limited service, and by the MBTA Commuter Rail system, which owns the section east of Worcester and operates it as its Framingham/Worcester Line.

For the railroad in the U.S. state of Georgia, see Boston and Albany Railroad (Georgia).

Overview

Massachusetts and eastern New York

1867–1961

4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge

Boston-Albany-Buffalo-Cleveland-Indianapolis-St. Louis

Empire State Express

The Mohawk, Boston-Albany-Buffalo-Cleveland-Chicago with connection at Cleveland for Indianapolis and St. Louis

Boston-Albany-Buffalo-Cleveland-Indianapolis-St. Louis with connection at Cleveland for Cincinnati

Ohio State Limited

Boston-Albany-Buffalo-Chicago with connection at Buffalo for Ashtabula, Youngstown, thence via Pittsburgh & Lake Erie to Pittsburgh

New England States

Boston-Albany-Buffalo-Niagara Falls-London (Ont.)-Detroit-Ann Arbor-Chicago

The Wolverine

Boston-Albany-Buffalo-Cleveland-Chicago

Lake Shore Limited

Boston-Albany-Buffalo-Cleveland-Indianapolis-St. Louis with connection at Cleveland for Cincinnati

Southwestern Limited

Cleveland Limited, Boston-Albany-Buffalo-Cleveland

The Niagara, Boston-Albany-Buffalo-Niagara Falls-London (Ont.)-Detroit-Ann Arbor-Chicago with connection to Cleveland and Cincinnati at Buffalo

Boston-Albany-Buffalo-Cleveland-Chicago

The Iroquois

South Shore Express, Boston-Albany-Buffalo-Cleveland-Chicago with connection to Chicago via Detroit at Buffalo and to Cincinnati, Indianapolis, and St. Louis at Cleveland

Station and landscape design program[edit]

The B&A undertook a significant program of improvement and beautification in the 1880s and 1890s. The B&A hired architect Alexander Rice Esty who designed the Boston passenger station which was completed in 1881, the year of Esty's death.[12][13] That same year, the B&A hired architect Henry Hobson Richardson to design a series of passenger stations. Over the next five years, Richardson was responsible for nine B&A stations (Auburndale, Chestnut Hill, Elliot, Waban, and Woodland (Newton, MA), Wellesley Hills, Brighton, South Framingham, and Palmer), as well as a dairy building; he also provided designs for passenger cars. At the same time, the B&A hired landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted to design the grounds of several stations and to work with the railroad to establish a landscape beautification program for other stations. After Richardson's death, the B&A commissioned his successors, Shepley, Rutan and Coolidge, to design 23 additional stations between 1886 and 1894. The B&A's innovative program of well-designed stations and landscape served as a model for several other railroads around the turn of the 20th century.

(PDF)

Changes to Transit Service in the MBTA district

Railroad History Database

Mileposts from

B&A Track Charts

Industrial history of the United States, Albert Sidney Bolles, 1889. p. 648 ff, available online at books.google.com

Boston and Albany Railroad Company Records at Baker Library Historical Collections, Harvard Business School

Boston Athenæum: Boston and Albany Railroad Company and South Station. Digital Collection. Photographs.

Fisher, Chas. E. (May 1947). "Whistler's Railroad: The Western Railroad of Massachusetts". . 69 (69): 1–2, 8–100. JSTOR 43504556.

Railway and Locomotive Historical Society Bulletin

Guild, William (1847). . Boston, Mass.

A Chart and Description of the Boston and Worcester and Western Railroads

(June 1988). "Architecture for the Boston & Albany Railroad". Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians. 47: 109–131. doi:10.2307/990324. JSTOR 990324.

Ochsner, Jeffrey Karl

(1987). H. H. Richardson: Architectural Forms for an American Society. Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press. pp. 113–126.

O'Gorman, James F.

(1983). Metropolitan Corridor: Railroads and the American Scene. New Haven and London: Yale University Press. pp. 223–243.

Stilgoe, John R.