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- Newsgroups: rec.railroad
- Path: sparky!uunet!gumby!yale!spock!lancelot
- From: lancelot@spock.uucp (Thor Lancelot Simon)
- Subject: Re: NEC
- Message-ID: <1993Jan25.212047.7448@choate.edu>
- Sender: usenet@choate.edu (Usenet posting daemon)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: rattle
- Organization: Choate Rosemary Hall
- References: <1jjf1oINN8vf@iraul1.ira.uka.de> <16B5CF000.M00209@MBVM.Mitre.Org> <1993Jan21.030226.718@walter.cray.com>
- Date: Mon, 25 Jan 1993 21:20:47 GMT
- Lines: 64
-
- In article <1993Jan21.030226.718@walter.cray.com> rl@ferris.cray.com (Randy Lambertus) writes:
- > Very nice article Len. About the Poughkeepsie bridge, what was
- >the extent of the fire. In all the literature I read they allude to
- >the damage by the fire, but never describe the circumstances or
- >the actual results. Was this a wooden bridge that was completely
- >burned or a steel structure that warped and feel. If it was steel
- >how could a fire destroy it unless it was the ties that contributed
- >to the blaze.
-
- It's a steel structure which in fact still exists. PC had been skimping on
- their maintenance to the point where the rail was so loose that the bridge
- was operated under a rule of no brakes whatsoever. As their financial troubles
- worsened, New York state considered bailing them out for repairs to the bridge
- and I believe talks were underway when the ties caught fire, doing some fairly
- substantial structural damage. This was around the time the PC went into
- bankruptcy, so there wasn't much money around to fix things; moreover the state
- comissioned the PC to determine the extent of damages, saying that they'd pay
- if it was less than $X (where X is some number I don't really recall, and which
- may never have been exactly fixed anyway). The Poughkeepsie bridge was actually
- rather a thorn in the side of the PC anyway, as when it existed the railroad
- couldn't charge the mileage all the way north to Albany just to cross the
- Hudson River, but as the railroad was so stingy with its maintenance, trains
- almost always had to be routed through Albany nonetheless. So, surprise
- surprise it turns out that the bridge would cost substantially more to fix than
- NY state is willing to pay, and the bankrupt PC certainly isn't willing to do
- it. Since then I believe some of the track leading to the bridge on each side
- has been taken up, but it's not clear that the bridge would, in fact, be
- prohibitively expensive to fix. Currently I believe that the state owns it,
- and leases it to a utility which runs gas and power lines across it. A private
- individual either owns or leases the trackage rights, as I've spoken with him
- about the bridge several times. So far as I can tell, though, he only owns the
- rights because he could get them for more or less nothing; he also owns the
- charter to the oldest railroad in the state, again evidently just for fun. But
- hey, anything's possible, right? There are some pretty substantial elevation
- problems with connecting the bridge to the existing Conrail line on the west
- side of the river, and Conrail abandoned the line that it originally connected
- to sometime in the early 80's. Well, if demand for rail service were ever
- sufficient, I imagine most of the problems could get solved.
-
- > Just where was the bridge located in relation to the Bear Mountain
- >auto bridge? North or south, and could you see the old New Haven
- >bridge fom there? I am interested because I feel the demise of
- >the Erie-Lackawanna was probably accelerated due to the loss of
- >New England traffic from/to Maybrook.
-
- Which old New Haven bridge? The bridge is substantially north of Bear Mountain,
- about 20 miles. It connects Poughkeepsie and Highland, which are around a
- bend in the river from Newburgh, which is where the Bear Mountain bridge is.
- There's also an auto bridge about a half mile south of the rail bridge; it must
- have been pretty spectacular to watch trains go by on the high trestle while
- stuck in morning traffic. The Poughkeepsie-Highland rail bridge was,
- incidentally, built in 1888 by the Central New England railroad, and was at the
- time the longest and highest trestle in existence. I've been told that it was
- modeled on a very similar but much smaller bridge providing service to the
- cement factories of nearby Rosendale, NY, and having seen that bridge I wouldn't
- be surprised if that were the case.
-
- --
- *******************************************************************************
- *Thor Simon * Okay, just a little pin-prick...There'll be no more-*
- *tls@panix.COM * Aieeeeaaaugh!-but you may feel a little _sick_. *
- *tls@spock.UUCP * ---Pink Floyd *
- *******************************************************************************
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