Central Massachusetts Railroad
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Locale | across central Massachusetts |
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Dates of operation | 1881–1971 |
Track gauge | 4 ft 8 1⁄2 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge |
The Central Massachusetts Railroad was a railroad running west from Boston, Massachusetts, USA, as a parallel competitor to the Boston and Albany Railroad and Fitchburg Railroad. It later became part of the Boston and Maine Railroad system, and now all but a few miles are abandoned.
History
CENTRAL MASS BRANCH
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Overview | |||
Type | Commuter rail | ||
System | MBTA Commuter Rail | ||
Status | Abandoned | ||
Locale | Eastern and East-Central Massachusetts | ||
Termini | South Sudbury North Station |
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Stations | 14 | ||
Operation | |||
Opened | 1881 (Central Massachusetts Railroad) | ||
Closed | 1971 | ||
Owner | Boston and Maine Railroad | ||
Operator(s) | Boston and Maine Railroad | ||
Character | Surface-level | ||
Rolling stock | Budd RDCs | ||
Technical | |||
Line length | 19.6 miles | ||
Track gauge | 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 1⁄2 in) | ||
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The Massachusetts Central Railroad was chartered May 10, 1869 and organized September 2, 1869 to build a line from Boston west to Northampton and possibly beyond to the Hudson River across the middle of the state.[1] (The Wayland and Sudbury Branch Railroad had been chartered in 1868 as a shorter version of the Central Mass, running only from the Fitchburg Railroad in eastern Weston into Sudbury. In 1872, the South Mountain and Boston Rail Road was chartered as an extension southwest via the planned Poughkeepsie Bridge to Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.)
The first section, from the Boston and Lowell Railroad's Lexington and Arlington Branch at North Cambridge Junction west to Hudson, opened on October 1, 1881. A further extension to the Boston, Barre and Gardner Railroad in the Jefferson neighborhood of Holden opened in 1882, but the company failed, stopping all operations on May 4, 1883. On November 10, 1883 it was reorganized as the Central Massachusetts Railroad, and service began once again to Hudson on September 28, 1885, returning to Jefferson on December 14.
The stockholders voted on March 21, 1880 to lease the line to the Boston and Lowell Railroad, but this did not happen until December 7, 1886, after which it became part of the Boston and Maine Railroad system on April 7, 1887. The rest of the line opened on December 12, 1887 (with regular service beginning December 19), running west to the Connecticut River Railroad in Northampton (part of the B&M after 1893). In March 1901 the B&M acquired a majority of Central Mass stock.
Original plans called for the railroad to follow a more northerly course near its west end than was actually built. The line would have run through Hardwick and southern Dana, crossed the Springfield, Athol and North-eastern Railroad at Enfield, and crossed the Central Vermont Railroad just east of Amherst.[2] Some unused grading was built northwest from center Hardwick, now lying just east of the Quabbin Reservoir; this was never used by the railroad, as the alignment ultimately chosen to be built was further to the south.
In 1900 the B&M took over the Fitchburg Railroad, giving them a better route to the west. Prior to then, from 1890 to 1893, the Central Mass was part of the Poughkeepsie Bridge Route, a long-distance route via the Poughkeepsie Bridge.
The Wachusett Reservoir was built from 1897 to 1906, and flooded part of the Central Mass alignment in Boylston and West Boylston. A new alignment was built south of Clinton center, including a short tunnel. From Clinton to West Boylston, the new alignment used the Worcester, Nashua and Rochester Railroad, part of the B&M system, beginning in 1903.
The New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad gained control of the B&M from 1907 to 1914, again making the Central Mass part of a major through route. The Hampden Railroad was chartered in 1910 and leased to the B&M in 1911, as a route from the Central Mass east of Bondsville west-southwest to Springfield to connect to the NYNH&H's Hartford and Springfield Railroad. In 1914 the near-monopoly was broken up due to a legal campaign led by Louis D. Brandeis. The Hampden Railroad never opened, and was dismantled in 1921. Part of the right-of-way was later used for the Massachusetts Turnpike.
The New England Hurricane of 1938 destroyed part of the line at Barre Plains in Barre, and in 1939 the line was abandoned from Wheelwright in Hardwick (at the old Hardwick station) to Oakdale in West Boylston.
Passenger service was cut to one daily round trip in 1928, and only ran east of Clinton after 1932. In 1958, this was cut yet further to Hudson; by 1964 these trains used the Fitchburg Line east of a junction in eastern Waltham. When the MBTA started to subsidize commuter rail on January 18, 1965, the line was cut back to South Sudbury. The rest was discontinued November 26, 1971. The route from Waltham to Berlin was bought by the MBTA on December 27, 1976, but has not seen service restored.
A small part of the line in Palmer is now in use for freight by the Massachusetts Central Railroad, from the former Springfield, Athol and North-eastern Railroad at Forrest Lake Junction west to Bondsville. That company started operations in 1979.
Despite being unused for around three decades, the rails on the route between Waltham and Berlin are largely intact, and the line has never been formally abandoned. It has not been maintained, however, and in a number of places has been encroached upon by abutting properties.
Rail trail plan
A multi-use trail, the Mass Central Rail-Trail, has been proposed along the entire route west from Waltham; short sections in Waltham and Cambridge are currently in use (the latter as the Fitchburg Cutoff Path and part of the Cambridge Linear Park). The portion from Amherst to Northampton, including the bridge across the Connecticut River, currently is in use as the Norwottuck Branch Rail Trail.
Station listing
Milepost | City | Station | Opening date | Notes |
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Cambridge | North Cambridge Junction | splits from Boston and Lowell Railroad Lexington and Arlington Branch (B&M) | ||
at-grade crossing of the original Lexington and Arlington Railroad (B&M) | ||||
Belmont | Hills Crossing | paralleling Fitchburg Line | ||
Belmont Center | paralleling Fitchburg Line; closed 1958 | |||
Waverley | paralleling Fitchburg Line; closed 1958 | |||
8.30 [3] | Clematis Brook | track connection to the Fitchburg Line (B&M), moving to own right-of-way between this station and Linden St. | ||
9.77 [3] | Waltham | Waltham North | closed November 25, 1971 originally Waltham |
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10.35 [3] | Waltham Highlands | closed November 25, 1971 originally Hammond Street |
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Weston | bridge over the Fitchburg Line | |||
12.93 [3] | Weston | closed November 25, 1971 | ||
13.69 [3] | Cherry Brook | closed November 25, 1971 | ||
15.24 [3] | Wayland | Tower Hill | closed November 25, 1971 | |
16.50 [3] | Wayland | closed November 25, 1971 | ||
18.55 [3] | Sudbury | East Sudbury | closed November 25, 1971 | |
19.70 [3] | South Sudbury | closed November 25, 1971 junction with the Lowell and Framingham Railroad (NYNH&H) |
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Approx 21.96 | Wayside Inn | Flag stop. Burned by vandals sometime in the 1940s. [4] |
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23.84 [3] | Hudson | Ordway | closed January 17, 1965 | |
25.35 [3] | Gleasondale | closed January 17, 1965 originally Rockbottom. Renamed April 2, 1900.[5] |
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26.09 [3] | Gleason Junction | not a station bridge over and junction with the Lancaster and Sterling Railroad (B&M) |
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27.69 [3] | Hudson | closed January 17, 1965 at-grade crossing of the never-opened Lancaster Railroad (B&M) |
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Bolton | South Bolton | |||
31.42 [3] | Berlin | Berlin | ||
West Berlin | bridge over the Boston, Clinton, Fitchburg and New Bedford Railroad (NYNH&H) | |||
35.34 [3] | Clinton | Reservoir Switch | closed [?] | |
36.00 [3] | East Switch | closed [?] | ||
36.50 [3] | Clinton Junction | Northern junction with the Worcester, Nashua and Rochester Railroad (B&M) | ||
Boylston | South Clinton | closed ca. 1900 | ||
Boylston | closed ca. 1900 | |||
West Boylston | West Boylston | closed ca. 1900 | ||
Oakdale | junction with the Worcester, Nashua and Rochester Railroad (B&M) | |||
Holden | Quinapoxet | |||
Holden Junction | not a station junction with the Boston, Barre and Gardner Railroad (B&M) |
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Jefferson | ||||
Rutland | Muschopauge | |||
Rutland | ||||
West Rutland | ||||
Oakham | Coldbrook | |||
Barre | Barre | track connection to the Ware River Railroad (B&A) | ||
Barre Plains | ||||
Hardwick | Hardwick | |||
New Braintree | New Braintree | |||
Hardwick | track connection to and at-grade crossing of the Ware River Railroad (B&A) | |||
Gilbertville | ||||
Ware | Ware | track connection to the Ware River Railroad (B&A) | ||
Palmer | junction with the never-opened Hampden Railroad (B&M/NYNH&H) | |||
bridge under the never-opened Hampden Railroad (B&M/NYNH&H) | ||||
Bondville | ||||
Belchertown | bridge over the Springfield and North-Eastern Railroad (B&A) | |||
Canal Junction | not a station track connection to the New London Northern Railroad (CN) |
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Belchertown | at-grade crossing of and track connection to the New London Northern Railroad (CN) | |||
track connection to the New London Northern Railroad (CN) | ||||
Amherst | Amherst | station and freight sheds now used by Amherst Farmer's Supply | ||
Hadley | Hadley | Water tower remains, municipal water supply | ||
Northampton | Northampton | junction with the Connecticut River Railroad (B&M) |
See also
References
- Town of Wayland, Planning Study to Create a Railroad Interpretive Site, Chapter Four - Historic Railroad Context (PDF)
- Changes to Transit Service in the MBTA district (PDF)
- Railroad History Database
- Mileposts from FRA Highway-Rail Crossing Inventory Files
- ↑ See Boston & Maine Railroad Historical Society, "The Central Mass." (1975)(LOC 75-32208).
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ 3.00 3.01 3.02 3.03 3.04 3.05 3.06 3.07 3.08 3.09 3.10 3.11 3.12 3.13 3.14 3.15 3.16 B&M Employee Timetable 1957.
- ↑ A History of Longfellow's Wayside Inn, Brian E. Plumb.
- ↑ Errata and Addenda for The Central Mass. Published by the B&MRRHS.
External links
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Wikimedia Commons has media related to [[commons:Lua error in Module:WikidataIB at line 506: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value).|Lua error in Module:WikidataIB at line 506: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value).]]. |
- The Mass Central Rail-Trail
- The Boston end of the Mass Central Rail-Trail
- THE CENTRAL MASS. published by the Boston & Maine Railroad Historical Society
- Articles that mention track gauge 1435 mm
- Commons category link from Wikidata
- Defunct Massachusetts railroads
- History of Hampshire County, Massachusetts
- MBTA Commuter Rail
- Predecessors of the Boston and Maine Corporation
- Rail trails in Massachusetts
- Railway companies disestablished in 1902
- Railway companies established in 1883