On July 4th, 1928, nearly three years after the opening of the Erie Canal, Charles Carroll, 91 years old and the last surviving signer of the Declaration of Independence, turned over the first shovel of dirt, marking the beginning of construction of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, America’s first railroad.1 With this single action, the Erie Canal’s death notice had been signed. Even before the B&O was created, the Mohawk and Hudson Railroad was incorporated in New York on April 17th, 1826, less than six months after Governor Dewitt Clinton dedicated the grand opening of his “ditch.”2 Ironically, the purpose of the Mohawk and Hudson was to compete with the Erie Canal. When New York’s railroad finally managed to finance itself, (delayed financing allowed the B&O to be constructed first), it could be built. Completed a year later in August, 1831,3 it took less than an hour to travel the 17-mile rail line compared to the all-day meandering 40-mile segment of the Erie Canal it replaced.4 The name of the steam locomotive to make this first run: none other than Continue Reading “Postcard Perfect, In Any Season”
Postcard Perfect, In Any Season
By Chris Carosa on October 30, 2012
Posted in Western New York State of Mind Tagged 50 Hidden Gems, Arcade, Arcade and Attica Railroad, Attica, Attica and Allegany Valley Railroad, Attica and Arcade Railroad, Attica and Freedom Railroad, B&O, Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, Birdsill Holly, Blasdell, Boonton, Buffalo, Buffalo Attica and Arcade Railroad, Cattaraugus County, Charles Carroll, Chautauqua County, Cuba, Curriers, Delaware Lackawanna and Western Railroad, DeWitt Clinton, DL&W, Dunkirk, Erie Canal, Erie County, Erie Railroad, Hydraulic Tunnel, Kenneth Springirth, Lackawanna, Lockport, Millard Fillmore, Mohawk and Hudson Railroad, New York Central, Ridge Road Bridge, Sandusky, Seneca Yard, Tonawanda Valley and Cuba Railroad, Tonawanda Valley Railroad, Wyoming County