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This article is about the large system that started with the incorporation of the line between Boston and Plymouth in 1844. For the earlier Old Colony Railroad, incorporated in 1838, see New Bedford and Taunton Railroad, its name from 1839 to 1873.
{{Infobox SG rail|railroad_name=Old Colony Railroad|logo_filename=no image.png|logo_size=|marks=|locale=
Boston, Massachusetts to southeastern
Massachusetts and Providence, Rhode Island|start_year=1845 system, mainly covering southeastern [Massachusetts, USA. Old Colony trains ran from
Boston to points such as
Provincetown, Massachusetts, the tip of
Cape Cod, and Providence, Rhode Island via its Boston and Providence Railroad. Except to Providence, passenger service stopped in 1959, but it has since been partially restored by the
MBTA in the 1990s (on the
Plymouth/Kingston Line and Middleborough/Lakeville Line), and the controversial Greenbush Line is planned for opening in 2007. The term as it is used now does not typically include the Providence line.
The former Old Colony system is also used to haul trash from Cape Cod; the
Cape Cod Canal Railroad Bridge, a lift bridge over the
Cape Cod Canal, was recently refurbished and reopened in 2003. A tourist train (the Cape Cod Central Railroad) operates on the Cape and there have been proposals to restore passenger service to
Hyannis, Massachusetts to relieve severe traffic congestion at the two highway bridges over the canal.
The
Old Colony and Newport Scenic Railway operates on part of the line to
Newport, Rhode Island.
Some outlying portions of the Old Colony Right-of-way (railroad) on
Cape Cod have been converted to a
multi-use trail, and there are efforts to do the same with the branch to
Woods Hole, Massachusetts.
History
The earliest predecessor of the Old Colony system was the Granite Railway, in fact the first chartered railroad in Massachusetts (and one of the first railroads in the United States), incorporated in 1826 and opened soon after. This however did not become part of the Old Colony system until
1871, when the Old Colony and Newport Railroad bought it.
The first major part of the system was the Boston and Providence Railroad, incorporated in 1831 and opened in
1834 and
1835 between Boston, Massachusetts and Providence, Rhode Island. As with the Granite Railway, this line however did not fall under Old Colony control until rather late, when it was leased by the Old Colony in 1888.
The first railroad known as the Old Colony Railroad was incorporated April 13,
1838 to run from the end of the
Taunton Branch Railroad - which ran from the Boston and Providence to
Taunton, Massachusetts - to
New Bedford, Massachusetts. This however was renamed as the
New Bedford and Taunton Railroad on March 26,
1839, before construction began, and only became part of the Old Colony system in
1879, when the Old Colony leased the Boston, Clinton, Fitchburg and New Bedford Railroad into which it had been merged.
The true origin of the Old Colony system was the second
Old Colony Railroad, incorporated
March 16, 1844 and organized
June 25. Construction began immediately, and the main line from
South Boston, Massachusetts to Plymouth, Massachusetts opened on November 10, 1845.
The
Fall River Branch Railroad was incorporated
March 14,
1844, and construction began soon after, on a line from
Myricks, Massachusetts on the New Bedford and Taunton Railroad southwest to Fall River, Massachusetts. The
Randolph and Bridgewater Railroad was incorporated March 25,
1845 as a branch from the Old Colony at Braintree, Massachusetts via Randolph, Massachusetts to
Bridgewater, Massachusetts, and the
Middleborough Railroad was incorporated the next day to continue that line past Bridgewater through
Middleborough, Massachusetts to Myricks, to form a continuous line to Fall River. The three companies were consolidated
August 8, 1845 into the
Fall River Railroad (confirmed April 16, 1846 by the legislature), and the whole line was opened
December 16,
1846, having opened previously in
1845 between Myricks and Fall River.
The Old Colony Railroad and Fall River Railroad merged on March 25, 1854 (effected July 1), forming the
Old Colony and Fall River Railroad, which owned a two-pronged line from Boston to Plymouth and Fall River, splitting at Braintree.
The
Newport and Fall River Railroad was incorporated in May 1846, opening on February 25, 1864 as a continuation of the Fall River line to Newport, Rhode Island. Prior to its opening, it was merged into the Old Colony, forming the
Old Colony and Newport Railroad in July
1863. Additionally, a new shorter line to Fall River and Newport was completed by the
Dighton and Somerset Railroad in 1866.
The
Cape Cod Branch Railroad was incorporated
April 8, 1846 and organized in July as a branch of the Fall River Railroad at Middleborough, Massachusetts onto
Cape Cod, ending at
Hyannis, Massachusetts. The first section to Onset, Massachusetts opened
January 31,
1848, with the section to
Sandwich, Massachusetts opening in
May 29, and the rest to Hyannis in 1854 (with steamboat service to Nantucket, Massachusetts). The
Cape Cod Central Railroad was incorporated
May 28, 1861 as a branch of the Cape Cod Branch Railroad, running from
Yarmouth, Massachusetts east and northeast to
Orleans, Massachusetts, and opening in 1865. The two companies were consolidated May 1,
1868 into the
Cape Cod Railroad, and the line was later extended to
Provincetown, Massachusetts, at the tip of Cape Cod, opening
July 23,
1873.
The Old Colony and Newport Railroad bought the Cape Cod Railroad on May 1,
1872, and the two companies were consolidated on October 1, forming a new
Old Colony Railroad. This formed a system with three branches, the original two splitting at Braintree to Plymouth and Newport (extended from Fall River), and a third splitting from the Newport branch at Middleborough to Provincetown, with a branch via the original Cape Cod Branch Railroad to Hyannis. Numerous other branch lines were leased or owned by the company (see below).
In 1874, Old Colony founded the
Martha's Vineyard Railroad, built across nine miles of sand on the island of
Martha's Vineyard, running from the
Oak Bluffs steamer wharf to Mattakeeset Lodge in Katama, Edgartown. The locomotive
Active (later renamed the
South Beach) was the sole operating train. This branch existed until 1896.Hough, Henry Beetle.
Martha's Vineyard, Summer Resort, 1835-1935 (Tuttle Publishing Co., 1936.)
On
March 1, 1893 the
New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad leased the massive Old Colony system, which by then included the
Boston and Providence Railroad and everything substantially east of it, as well as long branches northwest to Fitchburg, Massachusetts and
Lowell, Massachusetts. Along with the lease of the
New England Railroad in 1898, this gave the New Haven a virtual monopoly on rail transport in
New England south of the Boston and Albany Railroad.
The NYNH&H merged into Penn Central in 1969, which was in turn merged into
Conrail in 1976.
Except on the Boston and Providence (which is not usually considered part of the Old Colony system), passenger service was eliminated in
1959. The Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority restored service on the
Plymouth/Kingston Line and Middleborough/Lakeville Line in the
1990s, and the
Greenbush Line (part of the
South Shore Railroad) is planned to open in 2007.
Lines and branches
mapThe three original trunk lines, as discussed above, ran from Boston, Massachusetts to
Plymouth, Massachusetts,
Provincetown, Massachusetts and Newport (RI). A dense network of branches filled the area between these.
Other main lines
New Fall River/Newport line
The
Easton Branch Railroad was chartered in 1852, incorporated in 1854 and opened in 1855, as a continuation of the Stoughton Branch Railroad from Stoughton, Massachusetts to
Easton, Massachusetts. It was at first operated by the Boston and Providence Railroad, the operator of the Stoughton Branch. In 1865 the Old Colony and Newport acquired the line, using it as part of their new route towards Fall River and Newport, incorporated in
1864 as the
Dighton and Somerset Railroad. This line split from the old line at
Braintree Highlands, Massachusetts and ran southwest to Stoughton Junction, where the Easton Branch Railroad was followed to Easton. From there, the line continued south via
Taunton, Massachusetts to merge with the old line at
Somerset Junction. The Old Colony and Newport acquired the Dighton and Somerset in
1865, opening it in
1866.
Boston and Providence
The
Boston and Providence Railroad was incorporated and chartered in
1831, opening a line from Boston, Massachusetts to
Providence (RI) in
1834 and 1835. Eventually it had branches to Dedham, Massachusetts,
Stoughton, Massachusetts, North Attleborough, Massachusetts and East Providence (RI); see its article for more details. The Old Colony leased the B&P in 1888.
Additionally, the B&P owned the
Providence, Warren and Bristol Railroad, running from East Providence to
Bristol (RI), and its branch to
Fall River, Massachusetts, the
Fall River, Warren and Providence Railroad. The Old Colony bought the latter directly in 1875, the year the bridge connecting it to the Newport line in Fall River opened; the former was directly leased to the Old Colony in 1891 (despite already being controlled through the B&P).
Boston, Clinton, Fitchburg and New Bedford
The Taunton Branch Railroad was incorporated in
1835 as a branch of the Boston and Providence Railroad from
Mansfield, Massachusetts to
Taunton, Massachusetts. It was built from
1835 to
1836, and operated at first by the B&P. The
New Bedford and Taunton Railroad was incorporated in
1838 at the Old Colony Railroad, changing its name in 1839 to the New Bedford and Taunton. Construction ran from
1839 into 1840, extending the line to
New Bedford, Massachusetts, at which time the Taunton Branch split from the B&P and ran concurrently with the NB&T. In Taunton was a short branch, known as the Weir Branch or Taunton River Branch, owned jointly by the two companies. In 1873 the two merged into one, forming the
New Bedford Railroad.
On the other end of the eventual route, the
Fitchburg and Worcester Railroad was chartered in
1846, organized in 1847, and built from
1848 to 1850, running from Fitchburg, Massachusetts south to
Sterling Junction on the
Worcester and Nashua Railroad. At the time it was owned by the same company as the Worcester and Nashua.
The
Boston and Worcester Railroad's Framingham Branch, running from
Framingham, Massachusetts on their main line northwest to Framingham Centre, Massachusetts, opened in 1849. The
Agricultural Branch Railroad was incorporated in 1847 and opened in 1855 from Framingham Centre to
Northborough, Massachusetts, and in
1866 the rest of the way to
Pratt's Junction on the Fitchburg and Worcester. The Boston and Worcester leased the line beginning in
1853. Branches were also built to
Marlborough, Massachusetts and Lancaster Mills, Massachusetts. The Agricultural Branch changed its name to the
Boston, Clinton and Fitchburg Railroad in
1867, taking over the Framingham Branch from the Boston and Worcester, and in 1869 it merged the Fitchburg and Worcester into itself.
The final section was incorporated in
1867 and opened in 1870 as the Mansfield and Framingham Railroad, connecting the Boston, Clinton and Fitchburg at Framingham, Massachusetts with the Taunton Branch at
Mansfield, Massachusetts. Since opening, the line was leased by the Boston, Clinton and Fitchburg, and in 1874 the newly-formed New Bedford Railroad was leased to the BC&F. In
1876 the BCF and New Bedford merged to form the Boston, Clinton, Fitchburg and New Bedford Railroad, though the Mansfield and Framingham remained separate but leased. In 1879 the Old Colony leased the combined company, merging it into itself in 1883.
The
Framingham and Lowell Railroad was chartered in
1870, and opened and leased to the Boston, Clinton and Fitchburg in
1871. It ran as a branch of the BCF at
Framingham Centre, Massachusetts north to Lowell, Massachusetts. In 1882 the line was reorganized as the Lowell and Framingham Railroad, merging into the Old Colony in 1886. Regular passenger traffic on the branch ceased in the mid 1930s although, the New Haven Railroad used it to route north bound ski trains through the 1950s. When the New Haven Railroad was absorbed into Conrail, this line was not, save a small portion in Framingham. The ownership of the line passed to the Commonwealth of Massachusetts who contracted with Conrail to provide service. During the 1980s the Framingham to Concord Section was abandon, and service was contracted to the Bay Colony RR to supply North Acton based lumber yards from West Concord (aka Concord Junction). Service stopped in the early 1990s. By late 2005, all grade crossing had been removed by Mass Highway. The line is slated to be converted to the Bruce Freeman Rail Trail.
Several branches were built from the south part of the BCF&NB. A branch from
Attleboro Junction, north of
Taunton, Massachusetts, west to the
Boston and Providence Railroad in
Attleboro, Massachusetts, opened in
1871 as a shortcut between Taunton and
Providence (RI). In 1882, a cutoff opened between the new Fall River/Newport line at Raynham, Massachusetts (north of Taunton) to the BCF&NB at Whittenton Junction, northwest of Taunton, allowing trains on the new line to stop in downtown Taunton, rathern than stopping in the eastern part of downtown.
The
Fall River Railroad was chartered in 1874 and opened in
1875, running from the BCF&NB in northern
New Bedford, Massachusetts west to the outskirts of downtown
Fall River, Massachusetts. The Old Colony leased it in 1882, and merged it in 1896.
Wrentham Branch
The first section of the Wrentham Branch was opened in 1890, connecting the Boston, Clinton, Fitchburg and New Bedford Railroad at Walpole Junction to the Attleborough Branch Railroad (a branch of the
Providence and Boston Railroad) at North Attleborough, Massachusetts. The next section opened in 1892, continuing northeast from Walpole Junction to Norwood, Massachusetts, ending at a junction with the New England Railroad. The rest of the branch opened in
1903, continuing south past North Attleborough to Adamsdale Junction on the Rhode Island and Massachusetts Railroad, after which the New Haven (now the owner of all these lines) gave up the Attleborough Branch, which became a
streetcar line.
Branches north of Braintree
In Braintree, Massachusetts, the
Plymouth, Massachusetts line split from the line to
Middleborough, Massachusetts (which split there towards Cape Cod and
Newport (RI)). South of that junction, the new line towards Newport split from the Middleborough line. Also in Braintree, north of the other junctions, the South Shore Railroad (see
#Plymouth line branches) split to the east. Branches north of Braintree served suburbs of
Boston, Massachusetts.
Milton and Shawmut
The
Dorchester and Milton Branch Railroad was incorporated and chartered in
1846, leased to the Old Colony in
1847 and opened in
1848, running from the Old Colony at
Neponset, Massachusetts west through southern
Dorchester, Massachusetts and northern Milton, Massachusetts to
Mattapan, Massachusetts. It was merged into the Old Colony in
1887.
The Shawmut Branch Railroad was incorporated in 1870 and built in
1872, running from the main line at
Harrison Square (Boston) southwest and south through
Dorchester, Massachusetts to the Dorchester and Milton Branch.
The Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority bought the whole Shawmut Branch and part of the Dorchester and Milton Branch in
1926, using the
Right-of-way (railroad) for their Dorchester Extension and Ashmont-Mattapan High Speed Line, now two parts of the Red Line (MBTA).
Granite
The Granite Railway was incorporated in
1826 and opened soon after, running from
granite quarries in
Quincy, Massachusetts north to the
Neponset River in
Milton, Massachusetts. The
Granite Branch Railroad was incorporated in 1870, and built a line from the Old Colony in
Braintree, Massachusetts north to and along the Granite Railway, then east back to the Old Colony at
Atlantic, Massachusetts. The Old Colony and Newport bought the line in 1871, along with the original Granite Railway.
Plymouth line branches
South Shore
The
South Shore Railroad (Massachusetts) was chartered in
1846 and built from 1847 to
1849, running from the Old Colony in Braintree, Massachusetts to Cohasset, Massachusetts. From opening until
1854 it was leased by the Old Colony; the Old Colony (as the Old Colony and Newport) again leased it in 1870, consolidating it in
1876.
The
Duxbury and Cohasset Railroad, chartered in
1870, extended the South Shore Railroad. It opened in 1871 to
Duxbury, Massachusetts and 1874 to
Kingston, Massachusetts on the Plymouth line. It was jointly operated by the South Shore and Old Colony, and merged into the Old Colony in
1878.
Nantasket
The Nantasket Beach Railroad was chartered and opened in
1880, running from
Nantasket Junction on the South Shore Railroad north to
Pemberton, Massachusetts. It was reorganized in
1884 and leased to the Old Colony in 1888.
Hanover
The
Hanover Branch Railroad (Massachusetts) was chartered in
1866 and opened in 1868, running from the Plymouth line at
North Abington, Massachusetts east to Hanover, Massachusetts. The Old Colony bought it in
1887.
Bridgewater
The
Bridgewater Branch Railroad, owned by the Old Colony and Newport, ran from Whitman, Massachusetts on the Plymouth line to
Bridgewater Junction in northern
Bridgewater, Massachusetts on the Middleborough line. A short connection, known as the Elmwood Branch, connected the branch to the Middleborough Line entirely within
East Bridgewater, Massachusetts, north of Bridgewater.
Braintree-Middleborough branches
Easton
The Easton Branch opened in 1888, running from the main line at Matfield, Massachusetts west to the new main line at
Easton, Massachusetts.
Plymouth and Middleborough
The
Plymouth and Middleborough Railroad was chartered in 1890 and opened in 1892, connecting the Newport/Cape Cod line at
Middleborough, Massachusetts to the Plymouth line at Plymouth, Massachusetts. The Old Colony leased it just before opening.
Middleborough and Taunton
The
Taunton and Middleborough Railroad was incorporated in
1848. It was reorganized in 1853 as the Middleborough and Taunton Railroad, opening in 1856 between the Old colony at Middleborough, Massachusetts and the Boston, Clinton, Fitchburg and New Bedford Railroad at Middleboro Junction south east of
Taunton, Massachusetts, and operated as an Old Colony branch. It was merged into the Old Colony in 1874.
Cape Cod line branches
Fairhaven
The
Fairhaven Branch Railroad ran from
West Wareham, Massachusetts on the Cape Cod main line southwest to
Fairhaven, Massachusetts, across the
Acushnet River from
New Bedford, Massachusetts. It was incorporated in 1849, chartered in 1851 and built from 1852 to
1854. The New Bedford and Taunton Railroad bought the line in 1861, with a ferry connection at New Bedford and Fairhaven. It was merged into the Old Colony Railroad in 1883, four years after the Old Colony leased the Boston, Clinton, Fitchburg and New Bedford Railroad (the successor of the New Bedford and Taunton).
Wareham
The Cape Cod Branch Railroad opened the Wareham Branch in early
1849, running a short distance to the
wharves at Wareham, Massachusetts.
Onset
Woods Hole
The
Vineyard Sound Railroad was incorporated in 1861, reorganized as the Plymouth and Vineyard Sound Railroad in
1868, and consolidated into the Old Colony in
1872. The Old Colony built the line, splitting from the main line at
Buzzards Bay, Massachusetts and running south to
Woods Hole, Massachusetts.
Hyannis
The Hyannis Branch was part of the original Cape Cod Branch Railroad, opened in 1854, but was bypassed by the later extensions. The branch ran from the main line at Yarmouth, Massachusetts to the wharf at Hyannis, Massachusetts.
Chatham
The Chatham Railroad (Massachusetts) was chartered in
1887 and opened later in the year, as a branch of the Cape Cod line from
Harwich, Massachusetts to
Chatham, Massachusetts. The Old Colony leased it in
1888.
Station listing
For stations on any branch besides the main trunk lines, see the article on that branch. For stations on the Plymouth line, see
Plymouth/Kingston Line. For stations on the trunk line north of Middleborough, see
Middleborough/Lakeville Line.
Fall River/Newport line
{| class="wikitable"!State!Milepost!City!Station!Opening date!Connections and notes|-|rowspan=7|
Massachusetts||Middleborough, Massachusetts|bgcolor=ffdfff|
Middleborough/Lakeville (MBTA station)||southern terminal of MBTA Commuter Rail
Middleborough/Lakeville Line (though relocated onto the Cape Cod line)
split with
#Cape Cod line and
Middleborough and Taunton Railroad (OCRR)]|
Lakeville (OCRR station)||-||Berkley, Massachusetts|Myricks (OCRR station)||junction with the
Boston, Clinton, Fitchburg and New Bedford Railroad (OCRR)]|
Assonet (OCRR station)||-||rowspan=3|Fall River, Massachusetts|
Somerset Junction (new OCRR Fall River line)|-||[Bowenville (OCRR station)||junction with the
Fall River, Warren and Providence Railroad (OCRR)]||-|rowspan=5|Rhode Island||Tiverton (RI)|
Tiverton (OCRR station)|||-||rowspan=3|
Portsmouth (RI)|
Bristol Ferry (OCRR station)|||-||
Coal Mines (OCRR station)|||-||Portsmouth Grove (OCRR station)|||-||
Middletown (RI)|
Newport (OCRR station)||Old Colony and Newport Scenic Railway
excursion trains|}
Cape Cod line
{| class="wikitable"!State!Milepost!City!Station!Opening date!Connections and notes|-|rowspan=30|
Massachusetts||rowspan=3|Middleborough, Massachusetts|bgcolor=ffdfff| Middleborough/Lakeville (MBTA station)||southern terminal of
MBTA Commuter Rail Middleborough/Lakeville Linesplit with #Fall River/Newport line and
Middleborough and Taunton Railroad (OCRR)]|||-||South Middleboro (OCRR station)|||-||rowspan=4|
Wareham, Massachusetts|Tremont (OCRR station)||junction with the Fairhaven Branch Railroad (OCRR)]|||-||Wareham (OCRR station)|||-||Agawam (OCRR station)|||-||rowspan=4|
Bourne, Massachusetts|
Cohasset Narrows (OCRR station)||junction with the
Plymouth and Vineyard Sound Railroad (OCRR)]|||-||North Sandwich (OCRR station)|||-||
West Sandwich (OCRR station)|||-||
Sandwich, Massachusetts|Sandwich (OCRR station)||
Cape Cod Central Railroad excursion trains]|
West Barnstable (OCRR station)|||-||
Barnstable (OCRR station)|||-||rowspan=2|
Yarmouth, Massachusetts|Yarmouth (OCRR station)||junction with the Hyannis Branch|||-||[Dennis, Massachusetts|
South Dennis (OCRR station)|||-||rowspan=2|Harwich, Massachusetts|North Harwich (OCRR station)|||-||Harwich (OCRR station)||junction with the Chatham Railroad (Massachusetts)|-||rowspan=2|Brewster, Massachusetts|
Brewster (OCRR station)|||-||
East Brewster (OCRR station)|||-||
Orleans, Massachusetts|
Orleans (OCRR station)|||-||rowspan=2|Eastham, Massachusetts|Eastham (OCRR station)|||-||
North Eastham (OCRR station)|||-||rowspan=2|
Wellfleet, Massachusetts|
South Wellfleet (OCRR station)|||-||Wellfleet (OCRR station)|||-||rowspan=3|
Truro, Massachusetts|South Truro (OCRR station)|||-||
Truro (OCRR station)|||-||
North Truro (OCRR station)|||-||
Provincetown, Massachusetts|
Provincetown (OCRR station)|||}
Notes
References
- Railroad History Database
- Edward Appleton, Massachusetts Railway Commissioner, History of the Railways of Massachusetts (1871)
- The Chronology of Railroading in Walpole, Massachusetts
- Hough, Henry Beetle. Martha's Vineyard, Summer Resort, 1835-1935 (Tuttle Publishing Co., 1936.)
This article is about the large system that started with the incorporation of the line between Boston and Plymouth in 1844. For the earlier Old Colony Railroad, incorporated in 1838, see New Bedford and Taunton Railroad, its name from 1839 to 1873.
{{Infobox SG rail|railroad_name=Old Colony Railroad|logo_filename=no image.png|logo_size=|marks=|locale=
Boston, Massachusetts to southeastern Massachusetts and Providence, Rhode Island|start_year=
1845 system, mainly covering southeastern [Massachusetts, USA. Old Colony trains ran from Boston to points such as Provincetown, Massachusetts, the tip of
Cape Cod, and Providence, Rhode Island via its Boston and Providence Railroad. Except to Providence, passenger service stopped in 1959, but it has since been partially restored by the MBTA in the 1990s (on the
Plymouth/Kingston Line and
Middleborough/Lakeville Line), and the controversial
Greenbush Line is planned for opening in 2007. The term as it is used now does not typically include the Providence line.
The former Old Colony system is also used to haul trash from Cape Cod; the Cape Cod Canal Railroad Bridge, a
lift bridge over the
Cape Cod Canal, was recently refurbished and reopened in 2003. A tourist train (the Cape Cod Central Railroad) operates on the Cape and there have been proposals to restore passenger service to
Hyannis, Massachusetts to relieve severe traffic congestion at the two highway bridges over the canal.
The Old Colony and Newport Scenic Railway operates on part of the line to Newport, Rhode Island.
Some outlying portions of the Old Colony Right-of-way (railroad) on
Cape Cod have been converted to a multi-use trail, and there are efforts to do the same with the branch to
Woods Hole, Massachusetts.
History
The earliest predecessor of the Old Colony system was the
Granite Railway, in fact the first chartered railroad in Massachusetts (and one of the
first railroads in the United States), incorporated in
1826 and opened soon after. This however did not become part of the Old Colony system until 1871, when the Old Colony and Newport Railroad bought it.
The first major part of the system was the
Boston and Providence Railroad, incorporated in
1831 and opened in
1834 and 1835 between Boston, Massachusetts and Providence, Rhode Island. As with the Granite Railway, this line however did not fall under Old Colony control until rather late, when it was leased by the Old Colony in
1888.
The first railroad known as the Old Colony Railroad was incorporated April 13, 1838 to run from the end of the
Taunton Branch Railroad - which ran from the Boston and Providence to
Taunton, Massachusetts - to
New Bedford, Massachusetts. This however was renamed as the
New Bedford and Taunton Railroad on March 26, 1839, before construction began, and only became part of the Old Colony system in
1879, when the Old Colony leased the
Boston, Clinton, Fitchburg and New Bedford Railroad into which it had been merged.
The true origin of the Old Colony system was the second
Old Colony Railroad, incorporated March 16, 1844 and organized
June 25. Construction began immediately, and the main line from
South Boston, Massachusetts to
Plymouth, Massachusetts opened on November 10,
1845.
The
Fall River Branch Railroad was incorporated March 14, 1844, and construction began soon after, on a line from
Myricks, Massachusetts on the
New Bedford and Taunton Railroad southwest to Fall River, Massachusetts. The
Randolph and Bridgewater Railroad was incorporated
March 25, 1845 as a branch from the Old Colony at
Braintree, Massachusetts via
Randolph, Massachusetts to Bridgewater, Massachusetts, and the
Middleborough Railroad was incorporated the next day to continue that line past Bridgewater through Middleborough, Massachusetts to Myricks, to form a continuous line to Fall River. The three companies were consolidated August 8, 1845 into the
Fall River Railroad (confirmed
April 16, 1846 by the legislature), and the whole line was opened
December 16, 1846, having opened previously in 1845 between Myricks and Fall River.
The Old Colony Railroad and Fall River Railroad merged on March 25, 1854 (effected July 1), forming the
Old Colony and Fall River Railroad, which owned a two-pronged line from Boston to Plymouth and Fall River, splitting at Braintree.
The
Newport and Fall River Railroad was incorporated in May
1846, opening on
February 25,
1864 as a continuation of the Fall River line to
Newport, Rhode Island. Prior to its opening, it was merged into the Old Colony, forming the
Old Colony and Newport Railroad in July
1863. Additionally, a new shorter line to Fall River and Newport was completed by the
Dighton and Somerset Railroad in
1866.
The
Cape Cod Branch Railroad was incorporated
April 8,
1846 and organized in July as a branch of the Fall River Railroad at
Middleborough, Massachusetts onto
Cape Cod, ending at Hyannis, Massachusetts. The first section to
Onset, Massachusetts opened January 31, 1848, with the section to Sandwich, Massachusetts opening in
May 29, and the rest to Hyannis in 1854 (with steamboat service to
Nantucket, Massachusetts). The
Cape Cod Central Railroad was incorporated
May 28, 1861 as a branch of the Cape Cod Branch Railroad, running from
Yarmouth, Massachusetts east and northeast to
Orleans, Massachusetts, and opening in 1865. The two companies were consolidated May 1, 1868 into the
Cape Cod Railroad, and the line was later extended to Provincetown, Massachusetts, at the tip of Cape Cod, opening
July 23, 1873.
The Old Colony and Newport Railroad bought the Cape Cod Railroad on
May 1, 1872, and the two companies were consolidated on
October 1, forming a new
Old Colony Railroad. This formed a system with three branches, the original two splitting at Braintree to Plymouth and Newport (extended from Fall River), and a third splitting from the Newport branch at Middleborough to Provincetown, with a branch via the original Cape Cod Branch Railroad to Hyannis. Numerous other branch lines were leased or owned by the company (see below).
In 1874, Old Colony founded the
Martha's Vineyard Railroad, built across nine miles of sand on the island of
Martha's Vineyard, running from the
Oak Bluffs steamer wharf to Mattakeeset Lodge in
Katama,
Edgartown. The locomotive
Active (later renamed the
South Beach) was the sole operating train. This branch existed until 1896.Hough, Henry Beetle.
Martha's Vineyard, Summer Resort, 1835-1935 (Tuttle Publishing Co., 1936.)
On March 1, 1893 the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad leased the massive Old Colony system, which by then included the
Boston and Providence Railroad and everything substantially east of it, as well as long branches northwest to Fitchburg, Massachusetts and Lowell, Massachusetts. Along with the lease of the New England Railroad in
1898, this gave the New Haven a virtual monopoly on rail transport in New England south of the
Boston and Albany Railroad.
The NYNH&H merged into Penn Central in 1969, which was in turn merged into
Conrail in 1976.
Except on the Boston and Providence (which is not usually considered part of the Old Colony system), passenger service was eliminated in
1959. The
Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority restored service on the
Plymouth/Kingston Line and
Middleborough/Lakeville Line in the 1990s, and the
Greenbush Line (part of the South Shore Railroad) is planned to open in 2007.
Lines and branches
mapThe three original trunk lines, as discussed above, ran from Boston, Massachusetts to Plymouth, Massachusetts,
Provincetown, Massachusetts and
Newport (RI). A dense network of branches filled the area between these.
Other main lines
New Fall River/Newport line
The Easton Branch Railroad was chartered in
1852, incorporated in 1854 and opened in 1855, as a continuation of the
Stoughton Branch Railroad from Stoughton, Massachusetts to
Easton, Massachusetts. It was at first operated by the Boston and Providence Railroad, the operator of the Stoughton Branch. In 1865 the Old Colony and Newport acquired the line, using it as part of their new route towards Fall River and Newport, incorporated in 1864 as the
Dighton and Somerset Railroad. This line split from the old line at Braintree Highlands, Massachusetts and ran southwest to
Stoughton Junction, where the Easton Branch Railroad was followed to Easton. From there, the line continued south via
Taunton, Massachusetts to merge with the old line at
Somerset Junction. The Old Colony and Newport acquired the Dighton and Somerset in 1865, opening it in 1866.
Boston and Providence
The
Boston and Providence Railroad was incorporated and chartered in
1831, opening a line from
Boston, Massachusetts to Providence (RI) in 1834 and
1835. Eventually it had branches to
Dedham, Massachusetts,
Stoughton, Massachusetts, North Attleborough, Massachusetts and
East Providence (RI); see its article for more details. The Old Colony leased the B&P in 1888.
Additionally, the B&P owned the
Providence, Warren and Bristol Railroad, running from East Providence to Bristol (RI), and its branch to
Fall River, Massachusetts, the Fall River, Warren and Providence Railroad. The Old Colony bought the latter directly in 1875, the year the bridge connecting it to the Newport line in Fall River opened; the former was directly leased to the Old Colony in 1891 (despite already being controlled through the B&P).
Boston, Clinton, Fitchburg and New Bedford
The Taunton Branch Railroad was incorporated in 1835 as a branch of the Boston and Providence Railroad from Mansfield, Massachusetts to Taunton, Massachusetts. It was built from
1835 to
1836, and operated at first by the B&P. The New Bedford and Taunton Railroad was incorporated in
1838 at the Old Colony Railroad, changing its name in 1839 to the New Bedford and Taunton. Construction ran from 1839 into
1840, extending the line to
New Bedford, Massachusetts, at which time the Taunton Branch split from the B&P and ran concurrently with the NB&T. In Taunton was a short branch, known as the
Weir Branch or Taunton River Branch, owned jointly by the two companies. In 1873 the two merged into one, forming the New Bedford Railroad.
On the other end of the eventual route, the
Fitchburg and Worcester Railroad was chartered in
1846, organized in 1847, and built from 1848 to 1850, running from Fitchburg, Massachusetts south to
Sterling Junction on the Worcester and Nashua Railroad. At the time it was owned by the same company as the Worcester and Nashua.
The Boston and Worcester Railroad's Framingham Branch, running from
Framingham, Massachusetts on their main line northwest to
Framingham Centre, Massachusetts, opened in
1849. The
Agricultural Branch Railroad was incorporated in
1847 and opened in
1855 from Framingham Centre to Northborough, Massachusetts, and in
1866 the rest of the way to Pratt's Junction on the Fitchburg and Worcester. The Boston and Worcester leased the line beginning in
1853. Branches were also built to Marlborough, Massachusetts and
Lancaster Mills, Massachusetts. The Agricultural Branch changed its name to the Boston, Clinton and Fitchburg Railroad in
1867, taking over the Framingham Branch from the Boston and Worcester, and in
1869 it merged the Fitchburg and Worcester into itself.
The final section was incorporated in 1867 and opened in 1870 as the Mansfield and Framingham Railroad, connecting the Boston, Clinton and Fitchburg at
Framingham, Massachusetts with the Taunton Branch at Mansfield, Massachusetts. Since opening, the line was leased by the Boston, Clinton and Fitchburg, and in
1874 the newly-formed New Bedford Railroad was leased to the BC&F. In 1876 the BCF and New Bedford merged to form the
Boston, Clinton, Fitchburg and New Bedford Railroad, though the Mansfield and Framingham remained separate but leased. In 1879 the Old Colony leased the combined company, merging it into itself in 1883.
The Framingham and Lowell Railroad was chartered in 1870, and opened and leased to the Boston, Clinton and Fitchburg in
1871. It ran as a branch of the BCF at
Framingham Centre, Massachusetts north to
Lowell, Massachusetts. In
1882 the line was reorganized as the
Lowell and Framingham Railroad, merging into the Old Colony in 1886. Regular passenger traffic on the branch ceased in the mid 1930s although, the New Haven Railroad used it to route north bound ski trains through the 1950s. When the New Haven Railroad was absorbed into Conrail, this line was not, save a small portion in Framingham. The ownership of the line passed to the Commonwealth of Massachusetts who contracted with Conrail to provide service. During the 1980s the Framingham to Concord Section was abandon, and service was contracted to the Bay Colony RR to supply North Acton based lumber yards from West Concord (aka Concord Junction). Service stopped in the early 1990s. By late 2005, all grade crossing had been removed by Mass Highway. The line is slated to be converted to the Bruce Freeman Rail Trail.
Several branches were built from the south part of the BCF&NB. A branch from
Attleboro Junction, north of
Taunton, Massachusetts, west to the Boston and Providence Railroad in Attleboro, Massachusetts, opened in 1871 as a shortcut between Taunton and Providence (RI). In
1882, a cutoff opened between the new Fall River/Newport line at
Raynham, Massachusetts (north of Taunton) to the BCF&NB at Whittenton Junction, northwest of Taunton, allowing trains on the new line to stop in downtown Taunton, rathern than stopping in the eastern part of downtown.
The Fall River Railroad was chartered in 1874 and opened in 1875, running from the BCF&NB in northern
New Bedford, Massachusetts west to the outskirts of downtown
Fall River, Massachusetts. The Old Colony leased it in 1882, and merged it in 1896.
Wrentham Branch
The first section of the
Wrentham Branch was opened in 1890, connecting the
Boston, Clinton, Fitchburg and New Bedford Railroad at
Walpole Junction to the Attleborough Branch Railroad (a branch of the
Providence and Boston Railroad) at North Attleborough, Massachusetts. The next section opened in
1892, continuing northeast from Walpole Junction to Norwood, Massachusetts, ending at a junction with the
New England Railroad. The rest of the branch opened in 1903, continuing south past North Attleborough to Adamsdale Junction on the Rhode Island and Massachusetts Railroad, after which the New Haven (now the owner of all these lines) gave up the Attleborough Branch, which became a streetcar line.
Branches north of Braintree
In Braintree, Massachusetts, the Plymouth, Massachusetts line split from the line to
Middleborough, Massachusetts (which split there towards Cape Cod and
Newport (RI)). South of that junction, the new line towards Newport split from the Middleborough line. Also in Braintree, north of the other junctions, the
South Shore Railroad (see
#Plymouth line branches) split to the east. Branches north of Braintree served suburbs of
Boston, Massachusetts.
Milton and Shawmut
The
Dorchester and Milton Branch Railroad was incorporated and chartered in 1846, leased to the Old Colony in 1847 and opened in 1848, running from the Old Colony at Neponset, Massachusetts west through southern
Dorchester, Massachusetts and northern
Milton, Massachusetts to Mattapan, Massachusetts. It was merged into the Old Colony in
1887.
The Shawmut Branch Railroad was incorporated in
1870 and built in 1872, running from the main line at Harrison Square (Boston) southwest and south through
Dorchester, Massachusetts to the Dorchester and Milton Branch.
The Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority bought the whole Shawmut Branch and part of the Dorchester and Milton Branch in
1926, using the Right-of-way (railroad) for their Dorchester Extension and Ashmont-Mattapan High Speed Line, now two parts of the Red Line (MBTA).
Granite
The
Granite Railway was incorporated in
1826 and opened soon after, running from
granite quarries in Quincy, Massachusetts north to the Neponset River in Milton, Massachusetts. The Granite Branch Railroad was incorporated in
1870, and built a line from the Old Colony in Braintree, Massachusetts north to and along the Granite Railway, then east back to the Old Colony at Atlantic, Massachusetts. The Old Colony and Newport bought the line in 1871, along with the original Granite Railway.
Plymouth line branches
South Shore
The South Shore Railroad (Massachusetts) was chartered in
1846 and built from
1847 to
1849, running from the Old Colony in
Braintree, Massachusetts to Cohasset, Massachusetts. From opening until
1854 it was leased by the Old Colony; the Old Colony (as the Old Colony and Newport) again leased it in 1870, consolidating it in 1876.
The
Duxbury and Cohasset Railroad, chartered in
1870, extended the South Shore Railroad. It opened in
1871 to
Duxbury, Massachusetts and 1874 to
Kingston, Massachusetts on the Plymouth line. It was jointly operated by the South Shore and Old Colony, and merged into the Old Colony in
1878.
Nantasket
The Nantasket Beach Railroad was chartered and opened in 1880, running from Nantasket Junction on the South Shore Railroad north to
Pemberton, Massachusetts. It was reorganized in
1884 and leased to the Old Colony in
1888.
Hanover
The Hanover Branch Railroad (Massachusetts) was chartered in 1866 and opened in
1868, running from the Plymouth line at
North Abington, Massachusetts east to Hanover, Massachusetts. The Old Colony bought it in 1887.
Bridgewater
The
Bridgewater Branch Railroad, owned by the Old Colony and Newport, ran from
Whitman, Massachusetts on the Plymouth line to
Bridgewater Junction in northern Bridgewater, Massachusetts on the Middleborough line. A short connection, known as the Elmwood Branch, connected the branch to the Middleborough Line entirely within East Bridgewater, Massachusetts, north of Bridgewater.
Braintree-Middleborough branches
Easton
The Easton Branch opened in
1888, running from the main line at
Matfield, Massachusetts west to the new main line at
Easton, Massachusetts.
Plymouth and Middleborough
The
Plymouth and Middleborough Railroad was chartered in 1890 and opened in
1892, connecting the Newport/Cape Cod line at Middleborough, Massachusetts to the Plymouth line at
Plymouth, Massachusetts. The Old Colony leased it just before opening.
Middleborough and Taunton
The
Taunton and Middleborough Railroad was incorporated in
1848. It was reorganized in
1853 as the Middleborough and Taunton Railroad, opening in
1856 between the Old colony at
Middleborough, Massachusetts and the Boston, Clinton, Fitchburg and New Bedford Railroad at
Middleboro Junction south east of
Taunton, Massachusetts, and operated as an Old Colony branch. It was merged into the Old Colony in 1874.
Cape Cod line branches
Fairhaven
The Fairhaven Branch Railroad ran from West Wareham, Massachusetts on the Cape Cod main line southwest to Fairhaven, Massachusetts, across the Acushnet River from
New Bedford, Massachusetts. It was incorporated in
1849, chartered in 1851 and built from
1852 to 1854. The
New Bedford and Taunton Railroad bought the line in
1861, with a ferry connection at New Bedford and Fairhaven. It was merged into the Old Colony Railroad in
1883, four years after the Old Colony leased the Boston, Clinton, Fitchburg and New Bedford Railroad (the successor of the New Bedford and Taunton).
Wareham
The Cape Cod Branch Railroad opened the
Wareham Branch in early
1849, running a short distance to the
wharves at Wareham, Massachusetts.
Onset
Woods Hole
The
Vineyard Sound Railroad was incorporated in 1861, reorganized as the
Plymouth and Vineyard Sound Railroad in 1868, and consolidated into the Old Colony in 1872. The Old Colony built the line, splitting from the main line at
Buzzards Bay, Massachusetts and running south to
Woods Hole, Massachusetts.
Hyannis
The Hyannis Branch was part of the original Cape Cod Branch Railroad, opened in 1854, but was bypassed by the later extensions. The branch ran from the main line at
Yarmouth, Massachusetts to the
wharf at Hyannis, Massachusetts.
Chatham
The Chatham Railroad (Massachusetts) was chartered in 1887 and opened later in the year, as a branch of the Cape Cod line from
Harwich, Massachusetts to Chatham, Massachusetts. The Old Colony leased it in 1888.
Station listing
For stations on any branch besides the main trunk lines, see the article on that branch. For stations on the Plymouth line, see
Plymouth/Kingston Line. For stations on the trunk line north of Middleborough, see Middleborough/Lakeville Line.
Fall River/Newport line
{| class="wikitable"!State!Milepost!City!Station!Opening date!Connections and notes|-|rowspan=7|
Massachusetts||
Middleborough, Massachusetts|bgcolor=ffdfff|
Middleborough/Lakeville (MBTA station)||southern terminal of MBTA Commuter Rail
Middleborough/Lakeville Line (though relocated onto the Cape Cod line)
split with
#Cape Cod line and Middleborough and Taunton Railroad (OCRR)]|
Lakeville (OCRR station)||-||Berkley, Massachusetts|
Myricks (OCRR station)||junction with the Boston, Clinton, Fitchburg and New Bedford Railroad (OCRR)]|Assonet (OCRR station)||-||rowspan=3|Fall River, Massachusetts|
Somerset Junction (new OCRR Fall River line)|-||[Bowenville (OCRR station)||junction with the Fall River, Warren and Providence Railroad (OCRR)]||-|rowspan=5|
Rhode Island||
Tiverton (RI)|
Tiverton (OCRR station)|||-||rowspan=3|Portsmouth (RI)|Bristol Ferry (OCRR station)|||-||Coal Mines (OCRR station)|||-||
Portsmouth Grove (OCRR station)|||-||Middletown (RI)|Newport (OCRR station)||Old Colony and Newport Scenic Railway excursion trains|}
Cape Cod line
{| class="wikitable"!State!Milepost!City!Station!Opening date!Connections and notes|-|rowspan=30|Massachusetts||rowspan=3|
Middleborough, Massachusetts|bgcolor=ffdfff| Middleborough/Lakeville (MBTA station)||southern terminal of
MBTA Commuter Rail Middleborough/Lakeville Linesplit with #Fall River/Newport line and
Middleborough and Taunton Railroad (OCRR)]|||-||South Middleboro (OCRR station)|||-||rowspan=4|
Wareham, Massachusetts|Tremont (OCRR station)||junction with the
Fairhaven Branch Railroad (OCRR)]|||-||
Wareham (OCRR station)|||-||Agawam (OCRR station)|||-||rowspan=4|Bourne, Massachusetts|Cohasset Narrows (OCRR station)||junction with the
Plymouth and Vineyard Sound Railroad (OCRR)]|||-||North Sandwich (OCRR station)|||-||
West Sandwich (OCRR station)|||-||Sandwich, Massachusetts|
Sandwich (OCRR station)||Cape Cod Central Railroad excursion trains]|West Barnstable (OCRR station)|||-||
Barnstable (OCRR station)|||-||rowspan=2|Yarmouth, Massachusetts|Yarmouth (OCRR station)||junction with the
Hyannis Branch|||-||[Dennis, Massachusetts|
South Dennis (OCRR station)|||-||rowspan=2|
Harwich, Massachusetts|
North Harwich (OCRR station)|||-||
Harwich (OCRR station)||junction with the
Chatham Railroad (Massachusetts)|-||rowspan=2|Brewster, Massachusetts|Brewster (OCRR station)|||-||
East Brewster (OCRR station)|||-||
Orleans, Massachusetts|Orleans (OCRR station)|||-||rowspan=2|Eastham, Massachusetts|Eastham (OCRR station)|||-||
North Eastham (OCRR station)|||-||rowspan=2|
Wellfleet, Massachusetts|
South Wellfleet (OCRR station)|||-||Wellfleet (OCRR station)|||-||rowspan=3|
Truro, Massachusetts|South Truro (OCRR station)|||-||
Truro (OCRR station)|||-||
North Truro (OCRR station)|||-||Provincetown, Massachusetts|Provincetown (OCRR station)|||}
Notes
References
- Railroad History Database
- Edward Appleton, Massachusetts Railway Commissioner, History of the Railways of Massachusetts (1871)
- The Chronology of Railroading in Walpole, Massachusetts
- Hough, Henry Beetle. Martha's Vineyard, Summer Resort, 1835-1935 (Tuttle Publishing Co., 1936.)