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Rutland and Washington Railroad

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Thomas Canfield

The Rutland and Washington Railroad was a railroad company based in Rutland, Vermont which was chartered in Vermont on November 13, 1847, and built between Rutland and Eagle Bridge in Rensselaer County, New York in 1851 and 1852.[1] One of the company's founders was Merritt Clark, a Vermont politician,[2] and another was Thomas Canfield, later involved with the Northern Pacific.[3] In order to build in New York, the company, on June 24, 1850, took a perpetual rent-free lease of the franchise rights east of Salem of the Troy and Rutland Railroad, which had been chartered in that state on July 2, 1849. The remainder of the Troy and Rutland, from Salem west to Eagle Bridge, was completed in 1852 and leased to the Rutland and Washington effective July 2.[4]

After the Panic of 1857, a majority of the company's bonds were acquired by Jay Gould at 10 cents on the dollar, which left him in control of the company.[5] Gould is identified as the company's superintendent in a July 1863 newspaper article.[6]

The company's property (Salem to Rutland) was sold at foreclosure in 1865, the portions in New York and Vermont being sold on March 15 and May 23, respectively, to holders of the Rutland and Washington's securities. The property of the Troy and Rutland (Eagle Bridge to Salem) was sold on July 11, 1863, to Jay Gould. The property in New York was conveyed to the Troy, Salem and Rutland Railroad (incorporated June 3, 1865) on June 3 (Eagle Bridge to Salem) and June 30 (Salem to state line). On February 1, 1867, the Salem and Rutland Railroad was incorporated and received the portion in Vermont. The Troy, Salem and Rutland leased the Salem and Rutland on March 19, and subsequently acquired its entire stock, allowing the latter to release the former from all obligations on October 10, 1867. However, the Troy, Salem and Rutland was never an operating company, immediately leasing its road to the Rensselaer and Saratoga Railroad upon acquisition until it was merged into that company on October 20, 1868. The Delaware and Hudson Company leased the Rensselaer and Saratoga, including the Eagle Bridge-Rutland line, on February 24, 1870.[4]

References

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  1. ^ Whittemore, Henry (1909). "Fullfilment [sic] of the Remarkable Prophecies Relating to the Development of Railroad Transportation". Catskill Archive – Railroad Extra. Retrieved October 20, 2008.
  2. ^ University of Vermont Library - Special Collections Finding Aids - Clark/Field Families Collection
  3. ^ Vermont Historical Society Library – Thomas H. Canfield (1822-1897) – Papers, 1842-1932
  4. ^ a b Interstate Commerce Commission, 116 I.C.C. 611 (1926): Valuation Docket No. 328, Delaware and Hudson Company et al., pp. 729-730, 740-746
  5. ^ "Rutland and Washington Railroad Company - Signed by Erastus Corning". StockLobster.com. Retrieved October 20, 2008.
  6. ^ The Civil War Draft in Vermont "Conscripts: The 1863 Draft for the Fourth Sub-District" Rutland Herald, July 23, 1863