Northern Vermont Railroad Explained

Railroad Name:Northern Vermont Railroad
Marks:NVR
Locale:Vermont
Start Year:1996
End Year:2002
Predecessor Line:none
Successor Line:Montreal, Maine & Atlantic Railway
Length:86miles
Hq City:Newport, Vermont

Northern Vermont Railroad (Northern Vermont Railroad Company Incorporated) (reporting remark NVR) was a former class III railroad that operated in Vermont from 1996 to 2002. NVR was based in Newport, Vermont.

The Northern Vermont Railroad was created by holding company Iron Road Railways on and began operations on 28 September 1996 [1] on the former Canadian Pacific Railway's Lyndonville Subdivision and the Boston and Maine Railroad's former Wells River Subdivision.

The company had no employees, and trackage rights on the system (with 86miles all in Vermont) were owned by Canadian American Railroad.[1]

Iron Road ceased operations in late 2002 and NVR was merged along with Canadian American Railroad, Bangor and Aroostook Railroad and Quebec Southern Railway to form Montreal, Maine and Atlantic Railway, which also went bankrupt following the Lac-Mégantic disaster. The Central Maine and Quebec Railway (CMQ) was formed as the successor to the MM&A, resuming operations in 2016; CMQ would be acquired by Canadian Pacific in 2019, thus bringing back some of the former CP lines into its system.

Service on NVR routes was resumed by the Washington County Railroad in 2003.

Rolling Stock

NVR operated a handful of locomotives, boxcars and snowplows[2]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Home - RRB.Gov. www.rrb.gov.
  2. Web site: Canadian Freight Car Gallery - Northern Vermont Railroad. Chris. vanderHeide. freight.railfan.ca.
  3. Web site: Iron Road Railways. donsdepot.donrossgroup.net.