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The Grand Trunk in New England

The Grand Trunk in New England

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The Grand Trunk in New England

by Holt, Jeff

  • Used
  • very good
  • Hardcover
  • first
Condition
Very Good/Very Good
ISBN 10
0919130437
ISBN 13
9780919130432
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About This Item

Toronto, Canada: Railfare Book, 1986. 1st Edition . Hardcover. Very Good/Very Good. 176 pages colour and b/w photos - The line was first proposed as a connection between Portland, Maine and Montreal, Quebec in 1844 by Portland entrepreneur John Alfred Poor. Portland was desperate to connect its ice-free port with Montreal and Maine was at risk of being eclipsed by a similar proposal running from nearby Boston, Massachusetts. Montreal - which was in need of a means to transport grain to England during the Winter months - saw an advantage in linking with the smaller port at Portland and Poor's idea became a reality. The Atlantic and St. Lawrence Railroad was chartered in Maine on February 10, 1845, New Hampshire July 30, 1847 and Vermont October 27, 1848 to build a continuous line from Portland, Maine northwest into northeastern Vermont. Construction started July 4, 1846. The first section, from Portland to Yarmouth, opened on July 4, 1848. Further extensions opened to Danville January 1849, and to Bethel March 1851. Sections into and within New Hampshire opened to Gorham on July 23, 1851 and Northumberland July 12, 1852, and the full distance to Island Pond, Vermont on January 29, 1853. Trains commenced regular operation between Portland and the depot on the Paris side of the town line with Oxford at Widow Merrill's crossing October 8, 1849, though the station was listed as "North Oxford" in timetables. The first "train" into South Paris village was contractor's engine Jenny Lind on Jan 1, 1850 when it was run carefully across temporary bridgework up to where the station was being built, as a means of satisfying one of the monied men from Paris Hill to counter his threat of withdrawing his support and money if there was not a train in the village proper on that date (an engine operating by itself without cars meets the ruling of "train"). The Androscoggin bridge was completed March 15, 1850, with regular service to Portland from the present day station grounds to Portland beginning on the 18th. (From John R. Davis) On December 30, 1879, the Norway Branch Railroad opened, running from Norway village on a line 1.45 miles long to connect with the Grand Trunk Railroad at South Paris. The St. Lawrence and Atlantic Railway was chartered to build the part of the line in Quebec, and on August 4, 1851 the two companies agreed to meet at Island Pond. Joining of A&StL rails with those of the StL&A occurred at Island Pond on July 11, 1853. Regular operations commenced with passage of the first through train July 18, 1853 between Montreal and Portland. Four months later, on August 5, the Grand Trunk Railway leased the two companies, giving the Toronto-Montreal line an extension east to Portland. A branch was also built from Richmond, Quebec northeast to Point Levi, across the St. Lawrence River from Quebec City. The line was originally built to the Provincial Gauge of 5 ft 6 in (1,676 mm), and was later converted to standard gauge. The increased traffic from Portland and Point Levi to Montreal placed significant demands on the small car ferry service across the St. Lawrence River at Montreal, and this was replaced by the Victoria Bridge by 1860. The GTR line to Portland was built during the boom period for New England textile mills and various mill towns in northern New England soon saw an influx of French Canadian workers who quickly found work in the region. The GTR's bankruptcy in the early 1920s saw it nationalized by the Canadian federal government, which merged it into the nascent Canadian National Railways (CNR). Unfortunately for Portland, the CNR also included various other rail lines to ice-free Canadian ports in the Maritimes, notably Halifax, Nova Scotia, and their now ex-GTR mainline to Montreal soon became a secondary mainline under CNR as traffic dropped significantly. CN (acronym/name change post-1960) continued to operate the Portland-Sherbrooke line as its Berlin Subdivision but traffic continued to decline and by the late 1980s, following deregulation of the U.S. railroad industry, it became a candidate

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Details

Bookseller
Train World Pty Ltd AU (AU)
Bookseller's Inventory #
UB-012631
Title
The Grand Trunk in New England
Author
Holt, Jeff
Format/Binding
Hardcover
Book Condition
Used - Very Good
Jacket Condition
Very Good
Quantity Available
4
Edition
1st Edition
ISBN 10
0919130437
ISBN 13
9780919130432
Publisher
Railfare Book
Place of Publication
Toronto, Canada
Date Published
1986
Keywords
USED-North America
Bookseller catalogs
USED-North America;
X weight
0 g

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About Train World Pty Ltd

Train World commenced business at 615 Hawthorn road East Brighton in 1973. From a cabinet in a haberdashery store, Train World grew to take over half the shop in 1974 to take over the entire store and by 1977 it had taken over the shop and the rear residence. In 1981 the shop moved across the road to 624 Hawthorn Road East Brighton. Here too the shop grew and grew. So that by 1995 it had taken over the shop, the storage room area, the staff area, the garage, the rear warehouse and finally filling the entire building. Finally on 1st July 2012 Train world moved again to 290 Bay Street Brighton - Since the 1980s the focus of Train World has been trains and model trains, nothing but trains and everything to do with trains. Making it the largest pure train shop in Australia. Train World is a store of some 2,000 square feet. Open seven (7) days a week, that specialise not only in train models but new and used books and magazines of British, American and Australian titles. We usually have 7,000-8,000 titles in stock at any time. Plus we are the Australasian/Pacific Rim distributor for Irwell Press. We have a large holding of current and past new Irwell Press Books. On our home web site Irwell Press and our new / secondhand / used books are listed seperately. and can also be searched by clicking on the search link. We are displaying the covers and details for all our new Australian books and Irwell Press books on library thing. try this link http://www.librarything.com/catalog/TrainWorldand then click on TrainWorld has a suggested style for viewing this library (use it)

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