St. Johnsbury and Lamoille County Railroad explained

St. Johnsbury and Lamoille County Railroad
Marks:SJL
Locale:Vermont
Predecessors:Ogdensburg and Lake Champlain Railroad,
St. Johnsbury and Lake Champlain Railroad
Successor Line:Lamoille Valley Rail Trail
Map State:collapsed

The St. Johnsbury and Lamoille County Railroad (StJ&LC) was a railroad located in northern Vermont. It provided service to rural parts of the state for over a century, until track deterioration and flood damage made the line unusable and uneconomical to repair, which forced the line to close in 1995. Vermont is in the process of converting the roughly 96-mile route from St. Johnsbury to Swanton into a rail trail, known as the Lamoille Valley Rail Trail. Once completed it will be the longest rail trail in New England.

History

The railroad began construction in December 1869 as part of the Vermont Division of the Portland and Ogdensburg Railway to connect the Great Lakes with the seaport of Portland, Maine. It would be completed on July 17, 1877, with Governor Horace Fairbanks driving in the silver spike in Fletcher. Although the railroad had plans on expansion to Lake Ontario, the line originally ended at Swanton. The Vermont Division was extended to Rouses Point in 1883, allowing it to connect to the Ogdensburg and Lake Champlain Railroad and provide a direct connection to the Great Lakes.[1]

The eastern end of the Vermont Division was leased to the Maine Central Railroad in 1912, and the remainder of the line became a subsidiary of the Boston and Maine Railroad. The Boston & Maine operated their segment as the St. Johnsbury and Lake Champlain Railroad after 1925. This segment was reorganized as the St. Johnsbury and Lamoille County Railroad in 1948.[2]

Freight traffic was 30% inbound commodities, 20% outbound dairy products to Boston, 15% outbound forest products, and 25% outbound limestone, talc and asbestos. The remaining 10% was bridge line traffic (westbound paper and eastbound feed) for the Maine Central Railroad Mountain Division. Six 70-ton General Electric Diesel locomotives replaced steam locomotives. Passenger service ended in 1956. Trucks had taken all of the milk traffic by 1961, but bridge line traffic had increased six-fold following the 1953 dissolution of Maine Central's joint operating agreement with Boston and Maine Railroad. Light-duty rail and covered bridges prevented the line from accepting new heavier "incentive" freight car loadings. The covered bridges were replaced or reinforced so worn out light diesel locomotives could be replaced by larger locomotives; but track conditions deteriorated under the heavier loads.[3]

The State of Vermont purchased the line from Samuel Pinsly in 1973. The line was then operated by Morrison-Knudsen as the Vermont Northern Railroad for a time. In 1978, local shippers took over the operation and it became the Lamoille Valley Railroad. In 1989, the line was leased to a Florida company and was operated by them until major flooding in 1995 and 1997 damaged the line so much that it was not profitable to repair the track. In 2002, the state of Vermont started converting the 96-mile route into a recreational trail and created the Lamoille Valley Rail Trail, under a railbanking arrangement. This process was completed in May 2023.

Rail trail

The State of Vermont created the Lamoille Valley Rail Trail Committee in 1997 to begin the conversion of the old route into a recreational trail. In 2002 the federal Surface Transportation Board allowed the decommissioning of the old right of way into a trail, with then representative Bernie Sanders earmarking over $5 million in federal funding for its construction. Work began in 2006, with work slowly progressing with funding availability and the labor-intensive rehabilitation of old stone supports and bridges. As of 2023, construction of the 93 mile trail has been completed, from downtown St. Johnsbury to downtown Swanton, tracing the course of the Lamoille River and the Sleepers River.[4] [5]

Route and Station listing

!Milepost!Town / City!Station!Image!Note!Position
0.0St. JohnsburySt. JohnsburyInterchange with Maine Central Railroad and Canadian Pacific Railway.[6]
1.4Fairbanks Scales factory
11.48DanvilleDanville
14.85West Danville
16.30Joe's Pond
19.7WaldenWalden[7]
23.87Dow
27.80GreensboroGreensboroIn the village of Greensboro Bend, so named for the large arc of the track as it turned south to follow the Lamoille River.
31.0HardwickEast Hardwick
34.73Hardwick98-foot covered bridge built 1909 over the Lamoille River burned 1959.[8]
35.7Granite JunctionJunction with Hardwick and Woodbury Railroad.
39.0WolcottFisher Covered Railroad BridgePreserved 90-foot bridge built in 1908 over the Lamoille River. It was strengthened in 1968 to be the last covered railroad bridge in service.[9]
120-foot covered bridge built 1909 over the Lamoille River. Replaced by Baltimore Truss steel bridge about 1917
41.03Wolcott
48.88MorrisvilleMorrisville[10]
51.56Hyde ParkHyde Park
56.35JohnsonJohnson
64.26CambridgeCambridge JunctionJunction with Central Vermont Railroad. 113-foot covered bridge built 1899 over the Lamoille River replaced by steel bridge about 1968.
68.81FletcherFletcher
74.24FairfieldEast Fairfield
78.44Fairfield[11]
83.05SheldonSheldon
84.56Sheldon JunctionJunction with the Missisquoi Railroad line
87.40HighgateEast Highgate
90.91Highgate
94.73SwantonEast Swanton
Swanton Covered Railroad BridgeThree-span 369-foot covered bridge over the Missisquoi River built in 1898 was on the main line between East Swanton and Swanton. It was preserved by routing StJ&LC trains over the Central Vermont Railroad.[12]
96.10SwantonStation now houses Swanton Historical Society
Fonda JunctionSwanton Lime Works and interchange with Central Vermont Railroad

Locomotives

NumberBuilderTypeDateWorks numberNotes
11Baldwin Locomotive Works2-6-0190933394ex-Montpelier and Wells River Railroad #11 purchased 1926[13]
21ALCO Manchester0-6-0190946339ex-Boston and Maine Railroad #286 purchased 1947 scrapped 1949
22ALCO Manchester0-6-0190946338ex-Boston and Maine Railroad #285 then Montpelier and Wells River Railroad 2nd #11 purchased 1944
23ALCO Manchester0-6-0190845125ex-Boston and Maine Railroad #272 then Montpelier and Wells River Railroad 2nd #9 purchased 1940 sold 1944
24ALCO Manchester0-6-0190845131ex-Boston and Maine Railroad #278 purchased 1930 scrapped 1949
25ALCO Manchester0-6-0190845118ex-Boston and Maine Railroad #265 purchased 1929 scrapped 1941
26ALCO Manchester2-6-0190638990ex-Boston and Maine Railroad #1419 purchased 1929
1st #27ALCO Manchester2-6-0191047629ex-Boston and Maine Railroad #1485 purchased 1929
2nd #27Baldwin Locomotive Works0-6-0192356033ex-McKeesport Connecting Railroad #27 purchased 1949 scrapped 1955
28ALCO Manchester2-6-0191048961ex-Boston and Maine Railroad #1491 purchased 1929
30Baldwin Locomotive Works0-6-0192438990ex-McKeesport Connecting Railroad #30 purchased 1949 scrapped 1953
31Schenectady Locomotive Works4-6-018995171ex-Boston and Maine Railroad #2040 purchased 1929
32Schenectady Locomotive Works4-6-018984714ex-Boston and Maine Railroad #2035 purchased 1930
33ALCO Schenectady2-8-0190125052ex-Boston and Maine Railroad #2350 purchased 1930 wrecked 1944
34ALCO Schenectady2-8-0191149001ex-Boston and Maine Railroad #2421 purchased 1930
35ALCO Schenectady2-8-0191149007ex-Boston and Maine Railroad #2427 purchased 1930 scrapped 1938
36ALCO Schenectady2-8-0191047648ex-Boston and Maine Railroad #2404 purchased 1932 scrapped 1949
37ALCO Schenectady2-8-0191149005ex-Boston and Maine Railroad #2425 purchased 1932
38ALCO Schenectady2-8-0190225073ex-Boston and Maine Railroad #2357 purchased 1934 wrecked 1944
39ALCO Schenectady2-8-0190225072ex-Boston and Maine Railroad #2356 purchased 1936
40ALCO Schenectady2-8-0191149000ex-Boston and Maine Railroad #2420 then Montpelier and Wells River Railroad #18 purchased 1939
41ALCO Schenectady2-8-0190742843ex-Boston and Maine Railroad #2388 purchased 1946 scrapped 1948[14]
42ALCO Schenectady2-8-0191047645ex-Boston and Maine Railroad #2401 then Montpelier and Wells River Railroad #19 then Barre and Chelsea Railroad #19 purchased 1946
43ALCO Schenectady2-8-0191047656ex-Boston and Maine Railroad #2412 then Barre and Chelsea Railroad #22 purchased 1947
44ALCO Schenectady2-8-0191149003ex-Boston and Maine Railroad #2423 then Montpelier and Wells River Railroad #20 then Barre and Chelsea Railroad #20 purchased 1947
46General Electric70-ton194829297sold Montpelier and Barre Railroad 1973[15]
47General Electric70-ton194829298sold Montpelier and Barre Railroad 1956
48General Electric70-ton194829299sold Montpelier and Barre Railroad 1973
49General Electric70-ton194830022scrapped 1963
50General Electric70-ton194930184sold Montpelier and Barre Railroad 1957
51General Electric70-ton195130844sold Frankfort and Cincinnati Railroad 1972
52General Electric70-ton194729087ex-Barre and Chelsea Railroad #13 purchased 1955 sold Montpelier and Barre Railroad 1973
53General Electric70-ton195131168ex-Mississippi Export Railroad #48 purchased 1958 sold 1960
54General Electric70-ton195331724ex-Mississippi Export Railroad #50 purchased 1958 sold Montpelier and Barre Railroad 1973
55General Electric70-ton194930175ex-Lakeside and Marblehead Railroad #11 purchased 1963 sold Montpelier and Barre Railroad 1973
56General Electric44-ton194317929ex-Carnegie-Illinois Steel Company #5 purchased 1965 sold 1966
1st #200General Electric70-ton194729092ex-Unadilla Valley Railroad #200 purchased 1960 scrapped 1965
2nd #200EMDGP9195620973ex-New York Central Railroad #5960 purchased 1967 sold 1973
201EMDGP9195723589ex-New York Central Railroad #6056 purchased 1967 sold 1973
202American Locomotive CompanyRS-3195178937ex-Reading Railroad #523 purchased 1968 sold Montpelier and Barre Railroad 1973
203American Locomotive CompanyRS-3195380498ex-Great Northern Railway #229 purchased 1968 sold Montpelier and Barre Railroad 1973
204American Locomotive CompanyRS-3195078292ex-Lehigh and Hudson River Railroad #4 purchased 1970
205American Locomotive CompanyRS-3195078369ex-Lehigh and Hudson River Railroad #10 purchased 1971 sold Montpelier and Barre Railroad 1973. In 1976 it was sold to the Vermont Railway as #605, and in 1984 it was sold to Batten Kill Railroad as #605.
206American Locomotive CompanyRS-3195280163ex-Delaware and Hudson Railroad #4073 purchased 1972

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Welcome to The Lamoille Valley Rail Trail. vtvast.org. 2020-01-14.
  2. Lewis (1974) pp.6-39
  3. Lewis (1974) pp.39-51
  4. News: www.lvrt.org. 2020-01-20-->.
  5. Web site: Lamoille Valley Rail Trail . Vermont Agency of Transportation . 2023-06-06. Vermont Rail Trails . State of Vermont . 2023-06-08 .
  6. Lewis (1974) p.113
  7. Lewis (1974) p.114
  8. Lewis (1974) pp.60&115
  9. Lewis (1974) p.60
  10. Lewis (1974) p.115
  11. Lewis (1974) p.116
  12. Lewis (1974) pp.60&116
  13. Lewis (1974) p.123
  14. Lewis (1974) p.124
  15. Lewis (1974) p.126