Misplaced Pages

Narragansett Pier Railroad

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

The Narragansett Pier Railroad ( reporting mark NAP ) was a railroad in southern Rhode Island , running 8.5 miles (13.7 km) from West Kingston to Narragansett Pier . It was built by the Hazard family of Rhode Island to connect their textile mills in Peace Dale to the New York, Providence and Boston Railroad at Kingston Station , as well as to ocean-going steamboats at Narragansett Pier . Upon opening in 1876, the railroad also proved crucial in the growth of Narragansett Pier into a major resort. Initially operated at a loss absorbed by the Hazards, by the 1890s the railroad became consistently profitable and handled a brisk passenger business along with freight and mail shipments. The Hazards also operated a connecting steamboat service to Newport .

#192807

97-521: The railroad's fortunes peaked around 1900; the burning of the Narragansett Pier Casino that year was a blow the resort town never fully recovered from. With competition from the newly-opened electric Sea View Railroad and automobiles alike, passenger numbers declined sharply and the Hazard family sought to exit the railroad business. The New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad took control from

194-544: A gas-electric railcar that could potentially run on both the Sea View and the Narragansett Pier. This proved to be a poor decision, as on top of the $ 15,000 (equivalent to $ 228,000 in 2023) purchase price the railroad ended up spending over $ 1,000 on necessary repairs before the railcar even arrived. The railcar's motor was started only after numerous attempts over many weeks by railroad employees. Trials ended poorly when

291-457: A systems analyst from Philadelphia, becoming the line's new owner. Hanold brought back passenger service in the form of excursion trains run on weekends and holidays. Regular excursions included a 1928 flatcar converted into a gondola and a former Boston and Maine Railroad (B&M) combination baggage and passenger car built in 1905. A second passenger car from the B&;M was also obtained in

388-547: A buyer for $ 100,000 (equivalent to $ 420,000 in 2023), the price he had paid to buy the line, and would otherwise sell the company's real estate for development and scrap its remaining equipment. Miller found a potential buyer in California group B-J-T Industries, which expressed interest in buying the line and resuming both freight and passenger business, and announced it was negotiating with Miller in May 1980. The railroad's final owner

485-487: A company in financial trouble and purchased the line to save it. With passenger service gone, the line did little business in Narragansett Pier, averaging three freight cars inbound a year. Excluding one time shipments related to decommissioning of a local military base, outbound traffic was also minimal. At the behest of the State of Rhode Island, which was building a highway crossing the railroad right-of-way near Narragansett Pier,

582-563: A connection with the Sea View in Narragansett Pier. The agreement also permitted the Sea View to run its trolleys on the line, which began in 1902. At the end of the 5-year agreement, the Narragansett Pier Railroad refused to renew it, wary of enabling its competitor. The Sea View Railroad responded by commencing construction of its own line to Peace Dale (and ultimately Westerly ) but only made it to Robinson Street in Wakefield, where

679-410: A dozen passengers, and many trips carried as few as two people. Locals raised objections; residents of Narragansett were particularly upset at the prospect of losing their only remaining passenger rail service. Railroad management insisted they would apply for total abandonment of the line if they didn't get their way. Unsuccessful attempts were made to find funding for a subsidy to stop abandonment, while

776-434: A facility to train new locomotive engineers. The new owners once again revived excursion trains, in hopes of offsetting declining freight business; local schools also expressed interest in sending students to school via train instead of bus. Complaints from local residents about the smell forced the fish plant to truck fish to Maine for processing, and the railroad was unable to get Penn Central to cooperate in shipping salt to

873-644: A locomotive was ordered from the Mason Machine Works for $ 8,000 (equivalent to $ 229,000 in 2023) in early May and arrived the next month. Once it arrived, Rowland G. Hazard's demands for additional features on the locomotive and tender ("We do not find flag stands on the engine", Hazard complained) infuriated owner William Mason . Mason personally wrote an exasperated reply to Hazard, stating "I have never furnished Flag Staves. They are expensive and boyish   .... You paid $ 800 less for an engine than I have ever sold before. You should not expect too much in

970-584: A new, more modest casino failed to attract the patronage of its predecessor. The Hazard family found a buyer in the New Haven, which under the control of J. P. Morgan was fearful of the Southern New England Railway and its plans to build a competing rail line in the area. Were the Southern New England to buy the Narragansett Pier Railroad, it would have an outlet to Narragansett Bay . While

1067-669: A railroad before, and funding from other investors was not forthcoming. For several years, the organizers attempted to secure more funding with little success. Sprague's eponymous Sprague Company was devastated by the Panic of 1873 , and with the financial downturn came even more difficulty in attracting investors. By the time the economy began to recover, the Hazards could count on only a handful of small industries in Wakefield and several hotels in Narragansett Pier as partners in their railroad venture. With

SECTION 10

#1733104460193

1164-502: A railroad-owned distribution facility in Wakefield. By 1977, the railroad was owned by John Miller, a dentist who lived in Newtown, Connecticut , and planned to turn the railroad into a museum. Miller announced his intention to reacquire locomotive 11, previously sold by the Narragansett Pier Railroad in 1937, from a New York railroad museum for passenger excursions. At this point, trains ran only once or twice per week for freight service, and

1261-416: A road trucking subsidiary was also launched in 1930. A new steam locomotive, a 2-6-0 'Mogul' numbered 11, was ordered from ALCO in 1922 and arrived on the railroad in 1923. The new arrival prompted management to retire the company's other steam locomotives, though any breakdowns meant a locomotive from the New Haven had to be rented as a substitute at a high cost. This finally grew unbearable by 1930, when

1358-589: A telegraph line along the railroad in 1879. By September, the Boston Evening Transcript reported the opening of the railroad to Narragansett Pier "has had a marked effect on this very popular seaside resort", including the demise of the stagecoach previously used by visitors from points west or south. The introduction of fast transportation to the resort town prompted a boom in construction of hotels and casinos. Travelers from Providence could reach Narragansett Pier in approximately 80 minutes' time. Though

1455-514: A trestle was built to carry the railroad on a southward curve over Kingston Avenue and two streams, beyond which the Peace Dale station was located along with a freight house and a small rail yard. The next station was at Wakefield, just after a bridge over the Saugatuck River . Beyond Wakefield, the railroad proceeded east, and after a pair of curves to the south and then the east, the final stop

1552-432: A trucking business. After a financial crisis and temporary receivership in 1936, the railroad divested from non-rail operations. Steam locomotives were retired in 1937 in favor of more economical gasoline power. The Hazards exited the railroad business for good by selling to the family trust of Textron founder Royal Little in 1946. Passenger service was abolished in 1952, after which a local lumber yard agreed to purchase

1649-511: A variety of sports, including boating, tennis, billiards, bowling, cards, and shooting, restaurants, stores, reading rooms, a theater, a bandstand, a ballroom, and a beautiful beach. The Narragansett Pier Casino thrived during the Gilded Age until it burned down during the Great Fire of September 12, 1900. That day, a fire broke out in the neighboring Rockingham Hotel. The flames spread quickly to

1746-549: Is now part of Amtrak 's high-speed Northeast Corridor . Prior to the building of the NYP&;B, travelers between New York City and Boston had to pass around Point Judith, Rhode Island and its rough waters to reach the Boston and Providence Railroad in Providence . The B&P was completed in 1835 and began operating the steamer Lexington between Providence and New York, adding

1843-574: The Boston and New York Transportation company , which was soon succeeded by the New Jersey Steam Navigation Company . On January 13, 1840, the latter company's steamer Lexington burned and sank with a loss of 140 lives; there were only four survivors. On May 1, 1848, the NYP&B opened an alignment to the new Union Station in Providence, where it connected directly to both the newly opened Providence and Worcester Railroad and

1940-683: The Evans Auto-Railer) was purchased from the Arcade and Attica Railroad in March 1941 following an overhaul by that railroad's maintenance workers. This was despite the railroad's experimental (and unsuccessful) trials with an eight-ton locomotive from Evans the previous year – the locomotive had the power to haul only a handful of cars at a time, and a trip to the Kingston rail yard inadvertently ended in disaster when "its wooden-spoked wheels fouled every switch in

2037-717: The Massachusetts in 1836. The New York and Stonington Railroad was chartered in Connecticut in May 1832 and the New York, Providence and Boston Railroad in Rhode Island in June of that year to fix the problem. On July 1, 1833 they consolidated to form a new New York, Providence and Boston Railroad. Ground was broken by the subsidiary Providence and Stonington Railroad at Stonington, Connecticut on August 14, 1833. On November 17, 1837

SECTION 20

#1733104460193

2134-540: The Narragansett had provided good service, as the sole locomotive it was used intensively and within a year was in need of an overhaul. With funds still short, company president John N. Hazard purchased a used locomotive from the Providence and Worcester Railroad with his own money and leased it to the railroad for the token price of $ 360 per year. As the company's second locomotive, it was accordingly numbered 2 and named Namcook . Finances had improved enough by 1883 that

2231-458: The Narragansett to catch fire and burn with a loss of 30 lives. Also in 1880, the Rhode Island was wrecked, but her engine was salvaged and was installed in a new steamer of the same name, built in 1882. In 1889 a bridge was built across the Thames River , connecting the two segments and completing the all-rail Shore Line. The steamship operation was augmented in 1889 with the construction of

2328-572: The Republican Party , and was instrumental in the freeing of a number of wrongly imprisoned free Black men during a visit to New Orleans in 1845. While the original mill had used water power from the Saugatucket River , as the mill complex expanded steam power was introduced as well. The boilers required coal, imported to the coastal town of Narragansett Pier four miles (6.4 km) southeast by ships and then loaded on wagons and brought to

2425-525: The Rhode Island , was built in 1873. The Stonington Steamship Company merged in 1875 with the Providence and New York Steamship Company, primarily a freight carrier between the two named ports, to form the Providence and Stonington Steamship Company . The Rhode Island was assigned to the New York-Providence route, joined in 1877 by a new steamer, the Massachusetts . On June 11, 1880, the Narragansett and Stonington collided in heavy fog, causing

2522-526: The William C. O'Neill Bike Path . Several railroad structures have been preserved, along with a steam locomotive that was restored to operating status in 2015 by the Everett Railroad . The Narragansett Pier Railroad was the brainchild of Rowland G. Hazard , an industrialist and member of the prominent Hazard family of Rhode Island. In 1819, Rowland G. Hazard and his brother Isaac Peace Hazard took control of

2619-432: The 70-foot-long (21 m) McKeen railcar broke its motor on a sharp curve at Sprague Park in Narragansett Pier; the railcar never operated again and was ultimately scrapped. Bacon sold the Sea View for scrap two months later when a financing plan with the towns along its route fell through. With the end of trolley service, the New Haven agreed to run a dedicated freight car between Providence and Kingston daily for traffic along

2716-804: The Casino, leaving only the granite walls of The Towers standing. More recently Hurricane Sandy has uncovered the foundation and part of the old boardwalk belonging to the old casino that had been buried by sand. Today, the Narragansett Towers are the only remaining part of the original Narragansett Pier Casino, having survived a number of fires, nor'easters, and hurricanes. one of the most recognizable landmarks in Narragansett. The Towers currently hosts weddings, dances, dinners, plays, and fashion shows. Its location adjacent to Narragansett town beach makes it an ideal venue for social events. Many events take place on

2813-634: The Great Depression. On November 1, 1859 the NYP&B leased the New Haven, New London and Stonington Railroad , less than a year after its completion, giving it a line from Providence to New Haven, Connecticut , though with two ferries, one across the Thames River at New London and another across the Connecticut River . The terminal for steamboats connecting to the Long Island Rail Road

2910-675: The Hazards via a lease in 1911 through its streetcar subsidiary the Rhode Island Company , and the line was subsequently nationalized by the United States Railroad Administration (USRA) between 1917 and 1920. The Rhode Island Company collapsed in 1919, so the USRA returned the railroad to the Hazard family the following year. With the Hazards back in control, the railroad adopted a number of reforms to stay competitive, including both railbus and road bus services along with

3007-471: The Hazards. Funding from stock subscriptions totaled approximately $ 100,000 (equivalent to $ 2,861,000 in 2023 by this point, but expenses reached more than $ 186,000, requiring the company to obtain $ 96,000 (equivalent to $ 2,747,000 in 2023) in bonds to cover the difference. Construction of the railroad, subcontracted to Reynolds Dowling, was launched in February 1876. After inquiries to several builders,

Narragansett Pier Railroad - Misplaced Pages Continue

3104-411: The Narragansett Pier Railroad refused to allow its tracks to cross theirs. The Sea View's station at Narragansett Pier was adjacent to the beach , while arrivals at the Narragansett Pier Railroad station further south needed to take a bus to reach it, which greatly bothered the Hazards. Railroad management was eager to find more sources of revenue and eyed the busy tourist destination of Newport , which

3201-482: The Narragansett Pier Railroad route. The Rhode Island legislature passed a law in April 1920 allowing the towns of Narragansett and South Kingstown to directly subsidize the railroad as well as exempt it from local taxation, and also ordered the state's Public Utilities Commission to allow the railroad to reduce or eliminate unprofitable services. As authorized by the act, the town of Narragansett agreed in June 1920 to suspend

3298-612: The Narragansett Pier Railroad's new connecting line. The railroad paid its first dividend to shareholders in 1893. Private passenger cars owned by wealthy visitors to the Pier became a regular sight along the railroad. Visitors could ride the dedicated Narragansett Pier Express from New York City to the Pier in approximately five hours; other through trains connected the Pier to Providence and to Stonington, Connecticut , (a port of call for steamships from New York City). Special passenger trains were also run as needed, for various social occasions or

3395-474: The Pier was the New York, Providence and Boston Railroad (commonly known as the Stonington Line) which opened in 1837 with a station at West Kingston . From there, travelers had to take a bumpy nine-mile (14 km) stagecoach trip to the Pier. The only alternative was taking a ship across Narragansett Bay from Newport , a route infamous for its rough seas. Hazard had previously been a major investor in

3492-606: The Providence and Stonington Steamship Company. A New Haven subsidiary, the New England Steamship Company , continued the New York-Providence route with various steamers until May 1937. The original line that reached the docks in Stonington from the east was abandoned on September 27, 1914. In 1969 Penn Central absorbed the NYNH&;H. Penn Central went bankrupt in June 1970, and was merged into Conrail in 1976, but

3589-590: The Washington County Fair; polo horses also traveled in special freight trains. A special train carrying newspapers from New York City made the fastest ever traversal of the line by reaching the Pier 12 minutes after leaving Kingston. The Narragansett Pier Railroad was compelled by complaints to reduce its passenger fares in 1901. Passengers also complained that the railroad required long layover times for travelers connecting with trains to and from Providence. The Manufacturers and Farmers Journal reported that

3686-569: The background of the Rhode Island–based cartoon Family Guy , episode " Peter's Got Woods ," when Peter rides by on a tandem bicycle with James Woods, both engaged in song. New York, Providence and Boston Railroad The New York, Providence and Boston Railroad , normally called the Stonington Line , was a major part of the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad between New London, Connecticut and Providence, Rhode Island . It

3783-474: The bike path in 2015. The Towers (Narragansett, Rhode Island) The Towers is a historic structure located at 35 Ocean Road in Narragansett, Rhode Island . It is the only remnant of the Narragansett Pier Casino built in the 1880s. On November 25, 1969, it was added to the National Register of Historic Places . The Narragansett Pier Casino was the center of social life in Narragansett during

3880-487: The cash-strapped railroad entered a state of disrepair. In 1952, the Wakefield Branch Company, a major rail customer along the line, announced it was willing to purchase the railroad so long as passenger service was discontinued. Now worried about losing the railroad entirely, South Kingstown and Narragansett dropped their objections. The company's last operating Mickey-Dink broke one of its axles in June 1952 and

3977-471: The company ceased non-railroad activities entirely. The telegraph line was discontinued in 1939 along with the sale of the Wakefield station – which sat on valuable land in demand for commercial use – to the Wakefield Branch Company, a local lumber, coal, and oil supplier. The railroad adopted dieselization in 1937 by purchasing a Plymouth Locomotive Works switcher. To cut costs, all of the company's steam locomotives were removed from service at this time and

Narragansett Pier Railroad - Misplaced Pages Continue

4074-519: The company purchased outright a used 4-4-0 "American" locomotive from the New Haven, numbered 20. Company finances were harmed by the Great Depression , which started in 1929. Revenues from both passenger and freight business decreased dramatically from 1928 onward: that year the company earned approximately $ 47,000 from freight and $ 13,000 from passengers, but by 1936 these numbers had dropped to $ 27,000 and $ 654 respectively. The Depression spelled

4171-707: The company was able to purchase a more powerful locomotive to replace the Namcook (which president Hazard reclaimed and sold). Ordered new from the Brooks Locomotive Works and comparable to the Narragansett , the new engine was numbered 3 and named Wakefield . Over the following years, a pair of combine cars , four more coal cars, and a boxcar were added to the company's roster, some new and others used. By 1890, passenger business had grown to more than 100,000 passengers per year; 20,000 short tons (18,000 long tons; 18,000 t) of freight were also carried that year. For

4268-561: The company's finances. Since the railroad no longer reached Narragansett Pier, there were no major attractions for tourists on the line, and cost-cutting meant that the vegetation along the line had become overgrown, making sightseeing near impossible. During the 1970s, freight traffic consisted of fertilizer, lumber and building products. In 1971, the line changed hands again when a duo of Illinois industrialists, Grant Veitsch and Theodore Leviton, took over from several businessmen from New Haven, Connecticut . The pair announced plans to establish

4365-488: The company's trains routinely departed more than a half an hour past their scheduled times. This was perceived especially poorly since the trip to Narragansett Pier was only a matter of minutes; the newspaper derided the railroad as "the South County monopoly". The monopoly allegation was also made in 1898 by proponents of a new steamboat wharf in Narragansett Pier that would connect to Providence. Steamboat boosters pointed to

4462-566: The construction of the Union Pacific Railroad and was therefore familiar with the benefits of rail transport. He recognized that both the mills and Narragansett Pier would greatly benefit from a railroad, and therefore set about organizing one with industrialist and politician William Sprague IV , receiving legislative approval for a charter in 1868. While a survey was completed for the proposed railroad promptly after Hazard and Sprague obtained their charter, neither party had ever built

4559-509: The end of private passenger cars on the railroad, though this business had been in decline for a number of years. The formerly profitable bus service began operating at a loss from 1930 onward, despite attempts to attract more customers through advertising. In response, the Hazard family incorporated the South County Transportation Company as a wholly owned subsidiary, keeping the buses (and the highway freight business, which

4656-407: The exemption in 1950. Though Narragansett voters approved another extension, most of the railroad's tax burden was paid to South Kingstown and so the railroad declared Narragansett's offer moot. With no end to the losses in sight, American Associates declared its intention to terminate passenger service in May 1950, pointing to low ridership. It was rare that any Micky-Dink runs carried more than half

4753-495: The first time, the railroad began posting significant profits. Passenger trains covered the length of the line in around 25 minutes, including station stops on the way. Travelers from as far away as New York City and Philadelphia took the railroad to reach Narragansett Pier, making their trips over the Stonington Line to Kingston. The Stonington Line was leased by the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad in 1892, which became

4850-422: The following year. An additional shawl mill was completed in 1859, followed by a major expansion in 1872 which added a large mill dedicated to woolen products. The switch in focus towards wool products was motivated in part by a downturn in sales to the southern states, attributed to Rowland G. Hazard's strong abolitionist sympathies. Hazard was an active member of the antislavery Free Soil Party and its successor

4947-485: The gas-powered railbus resulted in an increase of over 10,000 passengers in one year, prompting the company to order a second one in 1922. Quickly, the railbuses acquired a nickname – "Micky-Dinks" – after the nicknames of two of their drivers. Company management was not ignorant of the role of automobiles and buses in the loss of passenger business, and responded by launching their own bus service in 1925, connecting Narragansett Pier and Providence. In large part, this covered

SECTION 50

#1733104460193

5044-417: The hopes of its restoration, and the railroad acquired an observation car from New Brunswick for use on charters. Additionally, the railroad converted the Peace Dale station, which had been built in 1876, into a museum with a variety of railroad-related exhibits and opened the company's roundhouse and a freight station to visitors. Unfortunately for the company, the excursions were not successful at salvaging

5141-565: The land adjacent to The Towers, as well as the land next door, where the Casino once stood, that now includes a lawn and a courtyard with a fountain. Events such as The Blessing of the Fleet road race and festival, local art festivals, the Lighting of the town Christmas tree, and many beautiful weddings. The Casino at the Narragansett Towers is also the location of the first reports of the now-popular seafood dish " clams casino ." The Towers can be seen in

5238-593: The late 19th century. The Narragansett Pier Casino rivaled the Newport Casino ’s popularity as a resort for the social elite until it burned to the ground in 1900. Built between 1883 and 1886, the Narragansett Pier Casino was a fine example of Victorian Shingle style architecture (a variation of Queen Anne style architecture in the United States ), designed by McKim, Mead, and White . The Casino offered

5335-403: The line in a state of good repair. Matters deteriorated further when the railroad was nationalized by the United States Railroad Administration (USRA) as a wartime measure effective January 1, 1918. Though World War I was not fought on American soil, it hurt the railroad by making both workers and materials harder to come by. Only minimal increases in usage of the railroad could be attributed to

5432-687: The line opened between Stonington and a pier at South Providence, about 1 mile downriver from the city center. At Stonington docks connected to steamboats to New York City through Long Island Sound , and later to the Long Island Rail Road at Greenport, New York , opened July 29, 1844. At Providence, a short car float across the Providence River led to the docks of the Boston and Providence Railroad at India Point in Providence, where travelers could continue on to Boston . Steamboat service from New York to Stonington commenced in November 1837 under

5529-416: The line's railroad cars weren't ordered until halfway through May despite Hazard hoping to open the line on July 1. The company ran its first train on July 17, 1876. As built, the railroad began at a connection with the Stonington Line at Kingston station, where trains from both railroads called. The railroad diverged southeast up a hill, then proceeded east to Gould's Crossing, the first station. At Peace Dale,

5626-458: The mills. Transloading coal into wagons and moving them overland was slow and costly. The lack of an efficient means of transport overland also hampered the mills' ability to import and export materials and finished wool products. Narragansett Pier's potential as a coastal resort had been known to businessmen since the construction of its first hotel in 1856, but significant growth was held back by poor transportation links. The nearest rail line to

5723-405: The more expensive downtown Kingston routing, but when the stockholders held a subsequent meeting on January 26, 1876, to decide on a route, the option bypassing Kingston was the clear victor. The Stonington Line also agreed to subscribe $ 15,000 towards the line's construction in hopes that the opening of the new railroad would provide it with more business, making it the only major shareholder besides

5820-416: The nearby tower " run by the New Haven. The infuriated tower operator phoned Peace Dale and demanded the locomotive never again leave Narragansett Pier Railroad tracks, and the locomotive was subsequently returned to its builder. American Associates, the family trust of Royal Little , purchased the railroad from the Hazard family in April 1946 at a cost of $ 25,000 (equivalent to $ 391,000 in 2023). Little

5917-552: The new main line for the Boston and Providence Railroad . This provided direct connections from Stonington to both Boston and Worcester and locations in between. The B&P's old alignment was kept as a branch to transport passengers and freight to and from the pier at India Point in Providence for transfer to and from the steam boats to New York City and other points as far south as Galveston, TX. Trade in raw cotton moving north to New England textile mills, and finished goods moving south from New England factories remained strong until

SECTION 60

#1733104460193

6014-611: The old NYP&B main line was sold to Amtrak (in Connecticut ) and the state of Rhode Island . It now hosts Amtrak's Acela Express high-speed trains and Northeast Regional conventional service. The MBTA 's Providence/Stoughton Line was extended in 2010 over the old NYP&B past Providence to a new station at T. F. Green Airport in Warwick, Rhode Island ; the line was further extended in 2012 to its current southern terminus at Wickford Junction in North Kingstown. There

6111-625: The operations of a number of textile mills in Peace Dale, Rhode Island , founded by their father Rowland Hazard in 1802. The brothers at first focused on relatively inexpensive wool and cotton products primarily marketed towards the Southern United States . After the mill burned down in 1844, the brothers established a new mill in 1847 which produced broadcloths and shawls ; they formed the Peace Dale Manufacturing Company

6208-483: The original charter set to expire in 1875 and no progress in construction made, Rowland G. Hazard reorganized the company that year at a meeting in Peace Dale; his son John N. Hazard was appointed company president. The primary issue to be settled was the route of the railroad, with two routes available that either bypassed or entered downtown Kingston . Kingston native Elisha R. Potter provided an additional $ 15,000 (equivalent to $ 404,000 in 2023) in funding to support

6305-411: The point they developed damage to their boilers and could no longer operate at full power. Some attention was paid to track work, with the USRA installing new rails and ties (thought the ties often not well-made). A second floor was also added to the station building in Wakefield. Following the conclusion of World War I, the long-troubled Rhode Island Company finally failed on January 30, 1919. As part of

6402-462: The previous year. The railroad acquired a Mack - Brill railbus in 1921 for use along its main line during non-peak times when passenger demand was insufficient for a locomotive-hauled train to be profitably operated. Placed into service on June 9, 1921, the railbus proved both reliable and highly economical, with a cost per train-mile less than one quarter that of a steam locomotive with two passenger cars. The enhanced service frequencies enabled by

6499-487: The railroad applied to abandon the now seldom-used 2.25-mile (3.62 km) segment beyond Wakefield in June 1953. The town of Narragansett dropped its objection to the proposed abandonment after the railroad offered to donate two acres (0.81 ha) of land for use as a park. As no further objections were received, the state of Rhode Island declined to intervene and the Interstate Commerce Commission gave

6596-479: The railroad directed some attention to improving its physical plant, including purchasing a new diesel locomotive in 1958. The railroad's new owner successfully returned it to profitability, handling significant shipments both for itself and the fish plant. The Wakefield Branch Company wanted to keep rail service but was not very interested in running an entire railroad, and therefore was happy to sell. Another change of ownership took place in 1964, with J. Anthony Hanold,

6693-579: The railroad permission to abandon the segment. The new terminus was in Wakefield, reducing the line to approximately six miles (9.7 km) in length. Unfortunately for the state, by this point work on the bridge had progressed to the point it was cheaper to complete it than to abandon its construction. The largest single customer was a fish-processing facility located in South Kingstown which imported salt and exported liquefied fish in tank cars for use in animal feed. Under Wakefield Branch Company ownership,

6790-416: The railroad to ensure its continued operation as a freight-only Class III railroad , though the line was cut back from Narragansett Pier to Wakefield . A succession of later owners attempted to both grow freight business and restore passenger operations with mixed success into the 1970s. Loss of freight business forced the railroad to shut down for good in 1981. Most of the right-of-way has been converted to

6887-478: The railroad was losing money, though this was mitigated by fellow railfans doing much of the railroad's labor on a volunteer basis. Number 11 was shipped to the railroad and restoration started, but ultimately was not completed. Miller decided to sell the line at the end of 1979, stating that while he had enjoyed running the railroad, it was too far of a drive from his western Connecticut home and that all remaining freight customers had ended their rail service. He sought

6984-623: The railroad's high rates between Kingston and Narragansett Pier (50 cents, equivalent to $ 18 in 2023) and surcharges on coal shipments. The wharf was ultimately built by the Providence, Newport and Fall River Steamboat Company in 1898 despite strong opposition from the railroad and some residents; however, it only lasted until 1905. The railroad signed an agreement with the Sea View Railroad  – an electric railroad opened between East Greenwich and Narragansett Pier in 1900 – to add overhead wire between Peace Dale and

7081-419: The railroad's taxes for five years. Despite this, the railroad announced its intention to shut down entirely on March 20, 1921, citing competition by automobiles and trucks and a loss of $ 15,000 (equivalent to $ 256,000 in 2023). Subsequently, the towns of Narragansett and South Kingstown agreed to provide a combined total of $ 15,000 of aid for the railroad in May 1921, enough to cover the company's deficit from

7178-540: The railroad. The company exited receivership near the end of the year when the New Haven, one of the chief creditors, agreed to accept a note rather than a cash payment. However, the South County Transportation Company did not survive, shutting down in July 1936. A few buses were retained by the railroad to continue service between Kingston and Narragansett Pier, largely replacing the Micky-Dinks; this service survived until 1938 when

7275-529: The remaining passenger cars sold for scrap, since the railbuses made them largely redundant. Maintenance was deferred to reduce expenses, resulting in a deterioration of the right-of-way. A surge in traffic brought by World War II helped bring the railroad back from the brink, but following the war the same trends harming the railroad's business – namely the closure of local mills and increased use of automobiles – resumed. A road-rail bus capable of operating on both roadways and railroad tracks (officially known as

7372-658: The resolution of the Rhode Island Company's assets, the Narragansett Pier lease was cancelled in 1920; the USRA returned operations to the Hazard family on March 1, 1920. The president of the Narragansett Pier Railroad, Nathaniel T. Bacon, purchased the bonds of the Sea View Railroad (also previously controlled by the Rhode Island Company) in September 1920. At the behest of Bacon, the railroad experimented with

7469-534: The route of the abandoned Sea View Railroad. Additional stops were added in response to demand, including in Wakefield and the ferry dock in Saunderstown , connecting to Newport . Proving profitable, a second bus line was launched from Kingston station to Narragansett Pier (essentially duplicating the railroad's main line, but also serving the University of Rhode Island which the railroad skipped) in 1927. Beyond buses,

7566-412: The ship to the U.S. government and end steamship services. Changes in the railroad's financial situation led the Hazard family to seek an exit from running the railroad by 1910. Revenues had been declining for several years, driven by a loss of passenger business to automobiles and fewer visitors to Narragansett Pier. The Pier itself never fully recovered from the burning of its casino in September 1900;

7663-549: The steamer Commonwealth on December 29, 1865; the grounding, and recovery at great expense, of the steamer Plymouth Rock in January 1866; and the wreck of the steamer Commodore on December 27, 1866. In 1868 the Stonington Line revived the New York-Stonington steamship operation by organizing the subsidiary Stonington Steamship Company , which placed in service the steamers Stonington and Narragansett . A third vessel,

7760-410: The steamer Connecticut for the Providence route. All the foregoing steamers had been paddlers, but in 1892 the propellers Maine and New Hampshire were built for the Stonington route. During 1892 the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad acquired the NYP&B, merging it on February 13, 1893. The New Haven discontinued the New York-Stonington steamship route in 1900, ending the existence of

7857-513: The threat of this happening was rather remote, taking control of the Narragansett Pier was small change for Morgan. The Narragansett Pier Railroad was therefore leased by the New Haven-owned Rhode Island Company , also controlled by Morgan. With the Hazard family as the predominant shareholders, their approval of the lease overcame opposition from some smaller shareholders who distrusted the New Haven. The Rhode Island Company

7954-434: The two passenger cars on June 29 only for the railroad to discover their air brake hoses were incompatible with the ones on the locomotive, requiring an adaptor to be ordered. The Hazards' ignorance of all the necessities for running a railroad day-to-day was the culprit for a wide variety of rushed orders for everything from spare sections of rail to baggage carts for use at stations (ordered within 48 hours of opening day);

8051-408: The war. Within the USRA, the Narragansett Pier Railroad was grouped with the entire New Haven system and controlled from New Haven, Connecticut , far away from the small Rhode Island branch line which could not claim much importance in the war effort. During USRA control, passenger service was gradually cut from eleven daily trips to six, while the railroad's three steam locomotives were overworked to

8148-533: The way of extra furnishing". For rolling stock , a passenger car and baggage car were ordered from the Osgood Bradley Car Company (lettered A and B respectively) in mid-May, along with six side dump cars to carry coal shipments and a handcar for maintenance of way use. The Hazards had left many details out of their order, requiring Osgood Bradley to write them for particulars on everything from lettering to windows and lighting. Osgood Bradley delivered

8245-569: Was Anthony Guarriello, who purchased it solely to remove its trestles through Peace Dale that he considered an impediment to traffic. The entire remaining line was abandoned in 1981, though several pieces of its equipment were saved, including a caboose transferred to the Valley Railroad in Connecticut, and a diesel locomotive that ended up in Micaville, North Carolina . Narragansett Pier Railroad 11

8342-515: Was a destination for many ships from New York City. To convince some of these travelers to come to Narragansett Pier, the Hazards bought a steamboat, the Herman S. Caswell , in 1879, which began summer service across Narragansett Bay between the two destinations. A replacement, the Manisees , entered operation in 1897 and continued this service until 1900, when declining patronage prompted the Hazards to sell

8439-656: Was also saved at the time of abandonment, and after spending a number of years at the Middletown and New Jersey Railroad , it was obtained by the Everett Railroad in Pennsylvania in 2005. After intensive repairs by the Western Maryland Scenic Railroad shops, the Everett Railroad completed restoration of the locomotive to operating condition in 2015 as Everett Railroad 11 . Most of the former right-of-way

8536-566: Was also the founder and owner of Textron , then a textiles company. Little had both a home and an office in Narragansett, and following the purchase Textron announced plans to use the railroad's station in Narragansett Pier as a sewing plant. The railroad continued operating at a loss, leading to the American Associates asking for tax exemptions from South Kingstown and Narragansett in 1949. Voters in both towns approved exemptions for that year, but South Kingstown voters rejected an extension of

8633-488: Was at Narragansett Pier, where the original station was located by the water on Ocean Drive. The company's original engine house and a freight station were also located here, plus a short spur line to the South Pier itself. The completed line covered a distance of approximately 8.5 miles (13.7 km). Initially, four round trips were run daily for passengers, but growing patronage grew this to six and then nine (though service

8730-482: Was converted into the William C. O'Neill Bike Path (formerly known as the South County Bike Path), which initially opened in 2000 and in 2010 was extended to a mile outside Narragansett Pier. The railroad's two-stall roundhouse in Peace Dale remained standing as of 2007. The Peace Dale and Narragansett Pier train stations were also preserved as of 2017. A replica train station was constructed in Wakefield along

8827-513: Was having issues turning a profit (in no small part due to excessive acquisitions via lease such as the Narragansett Pier Railroad) and in danger of entering bankruptcy. The integration of a steam railroad within the otherwise all-electric Rhode Island Company system posed challenges for the streetcar operator. The Narragansett Pier Railroad's new owners unintentionally neglected many of the required maintenance of way tasks needed to keep

8924-569: Was moved to Groton , on the east shore of the Thames River. In 1864, the NYP&B purchased the NHNL&;S line east of Groton; the remainder was leased by the New York and New Haven Railroad in 1870. During the 1860s, service between New York and Stonington was provided by the Merchants' Steamship Company . This concern suspended service after suffering heavy losses in three disasters: the burning of

9021-436: Was not repaired. Remaining passengers were carried in taxis or the company superintendent's automobile until formal approval for ending passenger service came from the state Public Utilites Commission at the end of the year. Once passenger service was ended, the Wakefield Branch Company kept its promise and purchased the railroad for $ 12,000 (equivalent to $ 137,000 in 2023) on April 1, 1953. The railroad's new owner inherited

9118-420: Was reduced to five round trips in the winter off-season). Passenger trains connected with the Stonington Line at Kingston, and single tickets were available for travel on both railroads. Management attempted to reach similar agreements with other railroads in the region but found no takers. Passenger numbers were strong, with the railroad's sole passenger car filled to the brim on opening day. The freight business

9215-493: Was secondary to passengers in importance, but significant amounts of coal were hauled from ships docking at Narragansett Pier to both the Peace Dale mills and local homes and businesses. Other traffic sources included wood and lumber, various agricultural products, and general freight; ice was imported in trains for local use as a coolant during the summers. Mail service on behalf of the United States Postal Service

9312-505: Was somewhat more successful) one step removed from the railroad. The railroad entered receivership on February 1, 1936, along with its bus subsidiary the South County Transportation Company. T. G. Hazard, Jr, asked for receivership and stated the railroad could not pay its expenses. The railroad's superintendent assumed the position of receiver. Hazard stated that the railroad had continued running chiefly to provide its employees with jobs, and stated his hope that another company would purchase

9409-486: Was started in 1878. Many improvements quickly became necessary – passengers could find no benches at the railroad's stations until they were ordered late in the first month of operations, and a flatcar was quickly found indispensable and ordered from Osgood Bradley the following month. Even cords for the bells on the passenger cars needed replacement, and the Hazards sent a purchase order to Osgood Bradley asking for "the most desirable kind of rope". Western Union installed

#192807