.
Feedback

Following the Trolley Tracks Around Southeastern Connecticut

Patch readers know all about the Electric Railway -- do you?

I had some fantastic e-mails this week with information about the electric rail, from researchers who pointed me to sites around the web and from one reader who has made it his personal area of research! 

To start: Deb Troffater at the James Blackstone Memorial Library hooked me up with the Winter 1982 issue of the Journal of the New Haven Colony Historical Society, which has a history of the New Haven area street railways. Here are some quick facts:

  • Electric operation for a railway first came to Connecticut in 1888. Previous "mass transit" options had been horse-driven.
  • The first electric railway was the Ansonia, Derby & Birmingham line, which opened May 1, 1888.
  • New Haven got electric cars in 1892, after some trial runs between 1889 and 1891.
  • The first cars were electrified horse cars; by 1900, the trolley lines were all using the new-fangled, eight-wheeled electric cars, which had a larger passenger capacity.
  • The Branford Electric Railway opened July 31, 1900, and operated between Hemingway Avenue, East Haven, and Court Street in Short Beach. It extended into Branford Center.

As I learned from my visit to the Trolley Museum, the Branford Electric line is the oldest suburban trolley operation still running in the United States.

Regular TW5MS contributor sent me some great resources, including an article from Guilford Preservation, which offered the following facts:

  • The Shore Line Electric Railway, which opened in 1910 served: New Haven, East Haven, Branford, North Branford, Guilford, Madison, Clinton, Westbrook, Deep River, Groton, New London, Essex, Chester, Stonington, and Waterford.
  • The Shore Line Electric Railway ran until 1919; afterwards, many of the lines were purchased by New Haven & Shore Line.

Pete also used the Web to track down the historic photos on display with this article.

Reader David Sindel sent me not only information, but his own compiled map for where the shoreline track once ran. (He also linked me to the 1916 map shown above.) Here's some of what David had to tell me:

The Shore Line's primary corridor was from New Haven to Old Saybrook, serving the towns along the way, with a branch from Old Saybrook to Chester via Essex and Ivoryton. In a 1916 consolidation, the Shore Line absorbed most of the other trolley lines in the eastern part of the state. These included the New London & East Lyme (New London - Old Saybrook with a branch to Niantic), Norwich & Westerly (an amalgam of Norwich-Westerly, Groton-Stonington, and Westerly local lines), and lines to Willimantic and Putnam. The Shore Line also leased the New London and Norwich local lines and the Montville Street Railway which connected the two, thus giving it a near monopoly on trolley operations in eastern and southeastern CT.

David also told me that despite the parts of the line I'm familiar with here in Branford, the more frequently traveled line ran up in the Foxon area, because it was more direct. East Haven and Branford saw local trolley traffic from New Haven, but commuters to Old Saybrook took the northern route. The sections of track owned by the Trolley Museum are from the right-of-way sections -- most of the trolley line ran along main roads, like the tracks being dug up that Steve posted in last week's column.

The is operated by the Branford Electric Railway Association, which was formed in 1947 and purchased the 1.5 miles of track between River Street, East Haven, and Court Street in Short Beach. In 1981, the line was nominated by the Connecticut Historical Commission to be on the National Registry of Historic Places. The museum's collection includes trolley cars from all over the country and Canada, but a few are original Connecticut cars. The 1911, built in 1919, was painstakingly restored by George Papuga, a volunteer with the museum for almost fifty years. He began at the age of 11, working on that very trolley car, and he was able to use some of his volunteer work as high school credit for his shop classes. 

Another of the museum's cars, the 500, was a "special" car, used by the Connecticut governor so he could travel in style. Connecticut's current governor recently announced that he expects the State Bond Commission to approve a $1 million state grant to the museum to help construct new storage areas for the trolleys above the flood plain -- preventing the kind of damage that Hurricane Irene caused last year, and keeping our trolley history safe!

Newsletter & Alerts

Get the best stories each day and important breaking news

Subscribe

Not from New London Patch? Find your Local Patch »

Loading comments ...
Note Article
Just a short thought to get the word out quickly about anything in your neighborhood.
Share something with your neighbors. Write a new post... What's up? Make an announcement, speak your mind, or sell something
Mario de Lucia May 22, 2013 at 07:52 pm
And what I meant by that comment that I don't think this whole thing has anything to do withRead More t-shirt , it's just a shutout to the Mayer and what he is bringing to the table .
Mario de Lucia May 22, 2013 at 07:50 pm
We are young we like change and we like a good laugh that's all the t- shirt is ,
Joshua Pendleton May 22, 2013 at 07:48 pm
The queen of England probably has seen this shirt. Ryan (Owner of Trywork trading) sent a few toRead More London a few weeks ago.
Jason Morris May 22, 2013 at 01:30 pm
Jessica's previous two posts in other city's patch pages, with the exact same title (just schoolRead More district name changed) have been moderated/deleted. Recommend this corporate advertisement to get the same fate. The concerns are true, but it's an ad nontheless.
Joshua Pendleton May 22, 2013 at 06:44 pm
Love the shirt or hate it, it is Zacs right to wear what he wants, when he wants to. Democracy isRead More founded on tolerance. This tolerance includes public officials hanging out in their back yard. Intolerance of things of this nature is a slippery slope.
Jeff Brown May 22, 2013 at 04:17 pm
Not a very big deal to me, not a particularly smart move , but it's not a huge deal . Some of youRead More are gonna flip out about it because that's just what you do. Get a life and move on. That being said rob is right about being a representative of this city and acting like it .
rob May 22, 2013 at 03:19 pm
Jason, he took an administrative position to represent the City, this means 24 hours a day even ifRead More you don't get paid for it. You must be part of the clan.
Felicia Hendersen May 21, 2013 at 07:52 am
OMG this is too funny. Nice comparison.
Sue P. May 20, 2013 at 11:03 am
Very good comparison. I also wanted to add that the Ct. College students that believe what FinizioRead More has to say remind me of The Children of the Corn. After speaking with a friend we realized that Mayor Finizio is like a college student. I just wish he knew that real life does not work this way. New London has already played this game with the Giordano lady years ago. Remember her she was from Ct. College and also was going to make New London a hip city. We got homeless people and brownfields. So much for that idea. Been their done that. How about a new idea for once. Please don't think about shutting down State St. that too was a bad idea. Just ask Mr. Hyslop and Ms. Glover how their ideas worked out. It doesn't matter anyways it's all about the votes and getting your Children of the Corn on the Council. I mean come on drivers licenses for illigals who ever thought that one up.
J. Scagnetti May 20, 2013 at 10:07 am
I'd say more like G.I. Joe vs cobra, oh no wait, He man vs skeletor or maybe even the thundercats vsRead More mumra! Lol
Carol Haley May 19, 2013 at 07:14 pm
Here's the latest Spencer from the AP, if we can believe them: Traffic in southwest ConnecticutRead More could be a mess for as much as a week until service is restored to the commuter rail line affected by a derailment that injured scores of passengers, Gov. Dannel P. Malloy warned Sunday.
Spencer May 19, 2013 at 07:10 pm
Another blow to not only NL's but the entire Southern CT's economy! Guess who will be picking upRead More the tab?
Carol Haley May 19, 2013 at 05:26 pm
I read that Malloy is hoping Monday but there are problems with the tracks and that has to beRead More repaired. Taking a guestimate, if it isn't Monday, maybe the end of the week.
Richard Waselik May 22, 2013 at 03:40 pm
I would say that the Collective Bargaining Agreement would have to be looked at for his Union.Read More Mr. Hathaway is not in Local 1378. He is MEU. I would say, that this is an interesting question for our members. Local 1378's CBA does not go into this language, however it does state that prior to reorganization, the union must be notified to bargain the impacts (not exact language). This is not to say that the union has final say, or say at all as to how the administration shall operate, but the impact to the employees is what matters as well as the position in general. I will look into this language in reference to the Charter and forward it to the MEU as well. Thank you.
Kathleen Mitchell May 22, 2013 at 03:17 pm
The following is from NL's Charter, Sec 46. Does it mean that Bill Hathaway would be entitled to aRead More public hearing? "...Any officer or employee so removed, suspended, laid off or reduced in grade shall, if he so request, be furnished with a written statement of the reason therefor, be allowed a reasonable time for answering such reasons in writing and be given a public hearing by the officer making such removal, suspension, lay-off or reduction in grade, before the order therefor shall be made final..."
Richard Waselik May 22, 2013 at 10:37 am
I have not seen any details other than word of mouth at this time in reference to more being addedRead More to the pension plan after two years. I would not be surprised. This would be another instance in which the charter was violated and would have to be mentioned to the Admin. Committee. I would be willing to gamble that they were put into the employee pension plan as well.
Alphonse DeLachance May 21, 2013 at 08:30 am
I cannot believe that they lied! Who could have seen this coming.
Carol Haley May 17, 2013 at 07:44 am
Pretty funny Spencer. But you don't want a museum there. You need something that generates taxes.Read More Museums are mostly non-profit thereby not generating any taxes. I know you were being funny. I was disgusted to read the developer couldn't show financial backing.
Kathleen Mitchell May 17, 2013 at 05:47 pm
Who would haveever thought of Wasp Spray? When you get the case of spray, be sure and drop a can offRead More at my house;>)
Jeff Brown May 17, 2013 at 03:46 pm
Good article, gonna have to pick up a case of wasp spray!