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New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad

The New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad (reporting mark NH), commonly known as The Consolidated, or simply as the New Haven, was a railroad that operated principally in the New England region of the United States from 1872 to December 31, 1968. Founded by the merger of the New York and New Haven and Hartford and New Haven railroads, the company had near-total dominance of railroad traffic in Southern New England for the first half of the 20th century.

Overview

July 24, 1872–December 31, 1968

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

2,133 miles (3,433 kilometers)

Beginning in the 1890s and accelerating in 1903, New York banker J. P. Morgan sought to monopolize New England transportation by arranging the NH's acquisition of 50 companies, including other railroads and steamship lines, and building a network of electrified trolley lines that provided interurban transportation for all of southern New England. By 1912, the New Haven operated more than 2,000 miles (3,200 km) of track, with 120,000 employees, and practically monopolized traffic in a wide swath from Boston to New York City.


This quest for monopoly angered Progressive Era reformers, alienated public opinion, raised the cost of acquiring other companies and increased the railroad's construction costs. The company's debt soared from $14 million in 1903 to $242 million in 1913, while the advent of automobiles, trucks and buses reduced its profits. Also in 1913, the federal government filed an antitrust lawsuit that forced the NH to divest its trolley systems.[1]


The line became bankrupt in 1935. It emerged from bankruptcy, albeit reduced in scope, in 1947, only to go bankrupt again in 1961. In 1969, its rail assets were merged with the Penn Central system,[2] formed a year earlier by the merger of the New York Central Railroad and Pennsylvania Railroad. Already a poorly conceived merger, Penn Central went bankrupt in 1970, becoming the largest U.S. bankruptcy until the Enron Corporation superseded it in 2001. The remnants of the system now comprise Metro-North Railroad's New Haven Line, much of the northern leg of Amtrak's Northeast Corridor, Connecticut's Shore Line East and Hartford Line, parts of the MBTA, and numerous freight operators such as CSX and the Providence and Worcester Railroad. The majority of the surviving system is now owned publicly by the states of Connecticut, Rhode Island, and Massachusetts, with other surviving segments owned by freight railroads; many abandoned lines have been converted into rail trails.

Passenger trains ran between Grand Central Terminal and Boston's South Station via , Springfield or Willimantic.[25]

Providence

Several passenger trains a day, including the overnight Federal, ran between and New York (Penn Station) via PRR and on to Boston.

Washington, D.C.

Passenger service operated from Grand Central Terminal to , Springfield and beyond.

Hartford

The premier New York–Boston passenger service was the , leaving Grand Central and South Station simultaneously at 5 PM. Also prominent was the Yankee Clipper,[26] with 1 PM departures. For many years these trains carried no coaches, only parlor cars, dining and lounge cars.

Merchants Limited

– a dual-power electro-diesel locomotive

EMD FL9

EP-5 electric locomotive

– a streamlined locomotive

FM P-12-42

Joy Steamship Company

List of New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad precursors

Appleton, Edward (1871). .

History of the Railways of Massachusetts

Blakeslee, Philip C. (1953). .

A Brief History Lines West Of The New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad Co

Doughty, Geoffrey H. (2013). "What to do with the New Haven Railroad?". Railroad History. Vol. 20, no. 9. pp. 10–27. Covers the railroad's history from 1951 to 1995.

Foster, George H. (1989). . Potentials. ISBN 9780962467400. Details the company's passenger boats

Splendor sailed the Sound: The New Haven Railroad and the Fall River Line

Karr, Ronald Dale (1989). . Branch Line Press. ISBN 0-942147-04-9.

Lost Railroads of New England

Kirkland, Edward Chase (1948). Men, Cities and Transportation, A Study of New England History 1820-1900. Vol. 2. pp. 72–110, 288–306.

Middleton, William D.; Smerk, George M.; Diehl, Roberta L. (2007). Encyclopedia of North American Railroads. pp. 742–45.

Swanberg, J.W. (1988). New Haven Power 1838–1968: Steam, Diesel, Electric, Mu's, Trolleys, Motor Cars, Buses, & Boats. Medina: Alvin F. Staufer.  1-112-89975-8.

ISBN

Weller, John L. (1969). . New York, Hastings House. ISBN 9780803850170.

The New Haven Railroad: its rise and fall

New Haven Railroad Historical and Technical Association

(complete listing by branch)

New York New Haven And Hartford Railroad Company Stations

Historic American Engineering Record

New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad, Automatic Signalization System, Long Island Sound shoreline between Stamford & New Haven, Stamford, Fairfield County, CT

at Thomas J. Dodd Research Center, University of Connecticut Library

University Railroad Collection: New York, New Haven, and Hartford Railroad

at Baker Library Special Collections, Harvard Business School.

New York, New Haven, and Hartford Railroad Company records

(1942 documentary on New York New Haven and Hartford Railroad Company)

A Great Railroad at Work