New York, Susquehanna and Western Railway
The New York, Susquehanna and Western Railway (reporting mark NYSW), also referred to as the Susie-Q or the Susquehanna, and formerly referred to as the New York, Susquehanna and Western Railroad, is an American Class II freight railway that operates over 400 miles (640 km) of trackage in the states of New Jersey, New York, and Pennsylvania. The NYS&W was formed in 1881 out of a merger of multiple smaller companies, and their original primary source of income was shipping anthracite coal out of Pennsylvania. From 1898 to 1940, the NYS&W operated as a subsidiary of the Erie Railroad. They emerged from the Erie's control, as part of their bankruptcy reorganization, and they discontinued their coal operations. The NYS&W changed their primary source of income to providing commuter and bus services around the New York City-area, but by 1955, the services were losing money for the company. All of their commuter services were discontinued in 1966, and by that time, railroad experienced additional financial troubles from a loss of freight customers and interchange partners. In 1980, the NYS&W was purchased by the Delaware Otsego Corporation (DO), and they reorganized and expanded the railway's operations and finances. They also benefited from Conrail's monopoly in the northeastern U.S., by operating competing intermodal trains until 1999, when Conrail was split between Norfolk Southern (NS) and CSX. The NYS&W obtains a southern division, which runs from Jersey City, New Jersey to Binghamton, New York, and they obtain a northern division, formed by two branches north of Binghamton, which serve Utica and Syracuse. The two divisions are connected via trackage rights over the Southern Tier Line. HistoryPre-company beginningsThe origins of the New York, Susquehanna and Western Railway trace back to the New Jersey, Hudson and Delaware Railroad (NJH&D), which was chartered by a group of Paterson, New Jersey businessmen in 1832, with the purpose of connecting the ports of the Hudson Waterfront near New York City to Pennsylvania via the Delaware Water Gap.[1][page needed][2] By that time, many industrial firms had been established throughout northern New Jersey, and anthracite coal was being mined out of the Pennsylvania Coal Region.[2] The NJH&D was unable to raise enough funds to begin laying down their trackage, due to money panics and competition from the nearby Morris and Essex Canal.[2] In 1857, the NJH&D charter was sold to the Pennsylvania Coal Company, but they also struggled to raise enough capital to begin construction.[2] Following the events of the Civil War, canals became disused, and a major railroad boom began throughout the United States.[2] In 1866, the New York and Oswego Midland Railroad (NY&OM) was incorporated under the leadership of DeWitt Clinton Littlejohn, and his plan for the railroad was to provide a connection from New York City to the port city of Oswego, New York at Lake Ontario. Construction on their trackage began at Oswego, two years later.[2] In 1867, the NJH&D began their grading in Butler, and several competing railroads also emerged and attempted to develop routes throughout northern New Jersey; the Hoboken, Ridgefield and Paterson (HR&P) graded from the industrial city of Paterson to the Hudson River; and the Sussex Valley Railroad completed a grade that reached the Delaware Water Gap.[3] The most successful attempt was by the New Jersey Western Railroad (NJW), which was founded by Cornelius Wortendyke in 1868, and they began laying down their trackage at Hawthorne, the following year.[3] The NJW quickly decided to shift its focus towards connecting their route with the NY&OM to benefit both railroads. Cornelius Wortendyke signed an agreement with DeWitt Littlejohn, where the two companies would lease and access each other's routes.[2] By 1870, the NJW expanded westward from Hackensack to Hanford, but in doing so, they encountered the NJH&D, the HR&P, and the Sussex Valley, all of which already obtained resources and created their route grades.[3] All four railroads decided it would be convenient to consolidate the work that had already been completed, so they merged together to create the New Jersey Midland Railway (NJM).[2] Concurrently, the NY&OM expanded to Middletown, New York, and they leased the Middletown, Unionville and Water Gap Railroad (MU&WG), since it had provided a connection between the NY&OM at Middletown and the NJM at Hanford.[2] In 1872, the NJM formally became leased by the NY&OM, and the NJM completed construction on their final stretch of trackage from Hackensack to Jersey City, using trackage rights over the Pennsylvania Railroad (PRR).[2] On July 9, 1873, the first train over the NY&OM and NJM was operated from Oswego to Jersey City.[4] With the inaugural run, the two railroads created the third trunk railroad line to connect New York City and the Great Lakes region, but the ongoing Panic of 1873 quickly affected the finances of both companies, with the NY&OM falling under receivership.[4][5] The NY&OM suspended all lease payments, and their partnership with the NJM was quickly put to an end.[6] The NY&OM was later reorganized as the New York, Ontario and Western Railway (NYO&W) in 1879, and they began forming a separate partnership with the West Shore Railroad (later the New York Central Railroad (NYC) to access New York City.[6] The NJM took over the lease of the MU&WG, but in 1875, the NJM was also put into receivership from the after affects of the Panic, and James McCulloh and Garret Hobart served as the NJM's receivers.[2][7] Formation and expansionIn 1880, investors from the original NJM regrouped and reorganized the company as the Midland Railroad of New Jersey, with Hobart serving as their president, and the company regained their finances by serving New Jersey industrial firms.[2] The investors decided to profit from hauling anthracite out of Pennsylvania, and they chartered the New York and Scranton Construction Company, which in turn chartered four other small companies, to lay down portions of the NJM route from New Jersey to Pennsylvania.[8] On May 26, 1881, the Midland Railroad of New Jersey merged with the five companies to form the New York, Susquehanna and Western Railroad (NYS&W); "Susquehanna" was incorporated in the name, since one of the company's goals was to reach the Susquehanna River.[3][8] In 1882, the new NYS&W railroad extended westward to Gravel Place, Pennsylvania, but they were originally reluctant to extend through the Pocono Mountains, so they began to outsource their coal traffic to the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad (DL&W) and interchange with them at Stroudsburg.[3][9] To reach the Hudson River waterfront ports, the NYS&W would transfer their coal traffic to the Pennsylvania Railroad at Marion Junction via the Hudson Connecting Railway.[3] The NYS&W also began operating passenger trains.[9] By the late 1880s, the NYS&W's profitability boomed from their coal-hauling business and from their industrial and farmer customers.[10] In 1887, the railroad laid down a double-track route from Paterson to Jersey City to accommodate their rising traffic.[9] In 1892, the Susquehanna ended their transfer partnerships with the DL&W and the PRR, when they extended their own line eastward from their Little Ferry Yard to a new coal terminal at Edgewater, and they began leasing the newly-chartered Wilkes-Barre and Eastern Railroad (WB&E) between Stroudsburg and Wilkes-Barre, for direct coal mine access.[3][9] In 1896, the NYS&W chartered the Susquehanna Connecting Railroad to directly access the Lackawanna Valley south of Scranton, and to divert coal traffic away from the DL&W.[9] Erie Railroad controlThe NYS&W's prosperity caught the attention of an influential financer, J. P. Morgan, and a company he financed, the Erie Railroad.[9] The Erie already had access to coal mines north of Scranton, but they desired to also access the mines south of the area, and they believed the Susquehanna provided the best route there.[3] On behalf of the Erie, Morgan quietly purchased the NYS&W's stock until he obtained the majority of their shares, and by July 1898, the Erie took over control of all of the railroad's operations, making the Susquehanna their subsidiary.[1][page needed][11][8] In 1908, the Susquehanna purchased their final new steam locomotive, 2-8-0 No. 140, from the Baldwin Locomotive Works; all of their subsequent steam locomotives were either leased or purchased second-hand from the Erie.[12] In 1911, the Susquehanna's Jersey City passenger terminus was moved from the PRR's Exchange Place Station to the Erie's Pavonia Terminal, and their freight terminus was moved from the PRR's Marion yards to the Erie's Croxton yards.[9][13] In 1923, the Susquehanna's total gross income peaked at $5.5 million.[9] The Erie subsequently invested in rebuilding and upgrading the NYS&W's trackage and bridges. During the 1920s, the Erie began operating under the control of the Van Sweringen brothers, and they installed a new president for the Erie, John J. Bernet.[9] During Bernet's tenure for the Erie, he initiated a major modernization program for the Susquehanna; most of the railroad's original steam locomotives and wooden passenger cars were scrapped and replaced with newer Erie equipment.[3][9] Throughout the 1930s, the NYS&W experienced some major financial problems from the Great Depression, and the Erie began to neglect them.[3] The general demand for anthracite coal was declining, and while other anthracite-hauling railroads were able to change their freight priorities, the NYS&W struggled to follow suit.[14] During 1937, the railroad defaulted on some major bonds and taxes they owed, and on June 1, they filed for bankruptcy and reorganization.[15][16] That same month, the bankruptcy court appointed two co-trustees to the NYS&W; Walter Kidde and Hudson Bordwell, but the latter died only five months into his position, making the former their sole trustee.[16][17] Walter Kidde, who had no prior experience in operating railroads, began to explore ways of reorganizing the NYS&W and its assets.[18][16] The first task he did was to terminate the company's lease of the Wilkes-Barre and Eastern, effectively ending their anthracite coal operations, and the WB&E was quickly shut down and ripped up, after they filed for their own bankruptcy.[19][20][21] He also entrusted ownership of the Susquehanna Connecting Railroad to the Erie.[14] In 1938, Kidde discontinued a portion of the NYS&W's commuter passenger services.[14] By March 1940, Kidde arranged other cutbacks for the Susquehanna, which resulted in the company being disbanded from the Erie's control.[16][22] Walter Kidde-Henry Norton reorganizationFollowing the abandonment of the WB&E, the NYS&W did not prospect any benefits in continuing their Pennsylvania operations, so by 1941, they cut back the western end of their line to Hainesburg, New Jersey.[19] Walter Kidde decided to have the Susquehanna improve their remaining suburban commuter passenger trains and make profits from providing bus services to Manhattan, and the Susquehanna Transfer Railway was created in 1939, for this purpose.[16][23][24] Kidde also opted to dieselize the NYS&W's locomotive roster to reduce their operating costs. In June 1940, they began to purchase some streamlined self-propelled rail cars from the American Car and Foundry Company (ACF) to cover their commuter services.[25] In 1941, the NYS&W began to order some S-2 switchers and RS-1 road switchers from the American Locomotive Company (ALCO) to supersede their steam locomotives.[26][27] A precedent was quickly set on the NYS&W, where all of their diesels with multiple-unit controls would only receive even road numbers, while all of their non-multiple-unit diesels would only receive odd road numbers.[28] The Susquehanna also settled a $7 million freight balance debt they owed the Erie by paying them $250,000 and purchasing their freight terminal in Edgewater.[16] The railroad also obtained money from World War II, by providing an effective coastal coal barge route out of Edgewater, to aid a major coal shortage in Great Britain, since a similar route out of Norfolk, Virginia, was blocked by the 1942 submarine menace.[16][29] In February 1943, Kidde died, and his deputy and executive officer, Henry K. Norton, subsequently succeeded him as the Susquehanna's trustee, and he opted to continue Kidde's restructuring plans for the company.[30][31] By June 1945, almost all of the Susquehanna's remaining steam locomotives had either been retired or sold off, and they declared themselves as the first Class I railroad in the United States to completely dieselize.[26][32] Three locomotives, 2-10-0s Nos. 2435, 2461, and 2492, were retained as yard switchers, until they were also retired by October 1947.[32] After World War II ended, coal continued to be shipped from Edgewater to Europe, in accordance with the Marshall Plan, until the NYS&W shut down their coal terminal in 1948.[29] During that time, the railroad signed a contract with Seatrain Lines to provide rolling stock-shipping services at Edgewater.[33] By November 1951, the Susquehanna's entire passenger car fleet was replaced with stainless steel cars, their entire streamlined rail car fleet was replaced with Budd Rail Diesel Cars, and many of their passenger stations were revamped.[16][34] On June 3, 1953, the NYS&W emerged from bankruptcy and completed its reorganization process, having reduced their capitalization from $42 million to $16 million.[16][35] Norton subsequently became the NYS&W's newest president, as a reward for his and Kidde's restructuring methods.[16] 1955-1961 financial troublesTwo years later, in 1955, stockholders voted to have Norton demoted to chairman and replaced by former Chicago Great Western vice-president James M. Baths, due to Norton's excessively-progressive foresight.[3][36] In December that same year, the NYS&W's president position was changed again to Ralph E. Sease, a former Central of Georgia executive.[37] By that time, the Susquehanna had run all of their passenger trains at a financial loss from declining ridership and competition from a new park and ride service, and they considered filing an application to discontinue their services.[24][38][39] The railroad also lost money after one of their primary customers, the Ford Motor Company, closed their Edgewater assembly plant.[29] Following the Recession of 1957, the NYS&W experienced additional financial problems, and a portion of their other freight customers abandoned the railroad to begin relying on truck shipping.[10][14] Sease opted to arrange some cutbacks for the company, which involved discontinuing a number of their commuter services and moving their Jersey City passenger terminus from Pavonia Terminal to the DL&W's Hoboken Terminal.[40] The NYS&W subsequently sold off its Budd passenger cars and replaced them with used second-hand equipment. One of the other cutbacks was the abandonment of the Hanford Branch, the remains of the original NJM-NY&OM route, since it had lost its farm traffic to the recession, and long-time interchange partner NYO&W had shut down.[41] In 1961, another one of the NYS&W's long-time interchange partners, the Lehigh and New England Railroad (L&NE), ceased operations, and the following year, the NYS&W consequently abandoned its route between Hainesburg and Sparta Junction.[42] The route was later ripped up and became part of the Paulinskill Valley Trail. Irving Maidman ownershipIn October 1962, the NYS&W railroad was purchased by a New York real-estate developer and millionaire, Irving Maidman.[35][43][44] Maidman previously acquired the former Ford Edgewater plant for use as a rental warehouse, and since the NYS&W happened to have served the building, Maidman opted to purchase the majority of the railroad's shares to ensure their freight services in Edgewater remained active.[35][44][45] The first task Maidman did for the NYS&W was to obtain a $550,000 federal loan for the purchase of three EMD GP18 road switchers to assist the NYS&W's failing ALCO locomotives.[14][46] In 1963, Maidman became the NYS&W's newest board chairman and chief executive officer (CEO), and he began to install new executives for the railroad, including his wife Edith Shivitz and his son and attorney Robert Maidman.[14][44][47] The management changes also involved Ralph Sease resigning from his president position and being replaced by John P. Clark.[14][45] That same year, Maidman began to have the NYS&W prioritize on serving his warehouse business, but the railroad consequently began to neglect their other stockholders and the rest of their remaining freight customers.[44] Maintenance on the NYS&W's trackage also became deffered, and in ensuing years, it resulted in derailments and slower deliveries, which in turn resulted in additional customers abandoning the railroad.[10] Maidman also arranged for the NYS&W to sell some of their land properties to other businesses Maidman owned, and they began to lease some new land property in Edgewater for use as backup storage.[44] He also discontinued all of the NYS&W's bus services, and he filed a petition to the state of New Jersey to terminate all of the railroad's commuter services.[43][49] As a desperate attempt to eliminate all ridership, Maidman personally offered to pay the NYS&W's 200 remaining commuters $1,000 each to stop using their trains, but only five of them accepted.[14][50] In June 1966, the NYS&W obtained court permission to terminate all of their passenger services, despite commuters having petitioned to keep them open.[51][52] The railroad's final commuter train operated on June 30 with only a day's notice, and the following day, uninformed commuters waited to board NYS&W trains that never arrived.[51] By that time, Maidman had petitioned the Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) to have the NYS&W involved in the Pennsylvania Railroad-New York Central merger.[53][54][55] The ICC in turn asked the PRR and NYC to incorporate the Susquehanna, along with the bankrupt New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad (New Haven) into the merger as a condition, and both railroads agreed to the former, since it provided a major connection between the PRR and NYC in New Jersey.[54][56][57] The new Penn Central Transportation Company (PC) was formally created on February 1, 1968, but only the New Haven became included in the merger.[56][58] The NYS&W's inclusion fell through, after Maidman and PC's management disputed over the railroad's price value; Maidman wanted to sell the NYS&W for its business value, while PC's management wanted to purchase it for its salvage value.[58] In March 1969, the NYS&W withdrew their ICC application to save costs and continue independently.[58][59][60] By December 1968, the Susquehanna turned a profit for the first time since 1955, with an income of $17,755.[58][60] That same year, the railroad lost another interchange partner, the Lehigh and Hudson River Railway (L&HR), when their Station Road bridge in Sparta was deemed unsafe, and they had to cut back their Sparta route to Oak Ridge.[42] Also in that same year, Seatrain Lines breached their shipping contract with the NYS&W by moving their shipyard operations from Edgewater to Brooklyn for a separate partnership with the U.S. government, and Maidman sued Seatrain for $4.8 million in compensatory damages.[61] The NYS&W also sued the Erie's successor, the Erie Lackawanna Railway (EL), for $1.6 million in unpaid usage of Susquehanna trackage, but they subsequently settled for a $186,315 claim, and the EL agreed to pay a $15,000 yearly fee.[60][62] By the end of 1969, the NYS&W turned a profit of $297,644.[62] In 1970, NYS&W executive William T. Frazier became the railroad's newest president, after the position had been changed three times within the previous five years.[62][63][64] In 1971, the NYS&W lost their interchange with the Central Railroad of New Jersey (CNJ) at Green Pond Junction, when a stretch of trackage at Smoke Rise was washed away and mud-covered by Tropical Storm Doria.[65] Following the damage from Storm Doria, along with that from Hurricane Agnes the following year, the Susquehanna began operating at a financial loss again, and the condition of their remaining trackage worsened.[42][66] Concurrently, Irving Maidman also began to lose money from his other businesses, and he began intentionally defaulting on property taxes owed to the state of New Jersey and Citibank, believing they were overcharging him.[67][47][68] In mid-1975, William Frazier became hospitalized for cancer treatment, and then in August, Maidman ransacked Fraizer's desk and discovered that since 1971, Frazier, along with chief engineer Joseph J. Novellino, both defrauded the railroad with fake bills for personal gain and funding for Novellino's private business.[69][70] The board of directors quickly voted to have Frazier resign, and Maidman became the Susquehanna's president.[70] In September, Maidman, along with his son Robert, convinced the NYS&W's board of directors to purchase $2 million in general mortgage bonds from W. E. Hutton & Co. while secretly arranging the transaction to bail Maidman out of a major debt he owed Hutton.[71][44] Second bankruptcy protectionBy January 1976, the NYS&W defaulted on $252,498 of business and property taxes owed to the state of New Jersey, and they were forced to file for section 77 bankruptcy.[44][72] By that time, the NYS&W railroad was cut down to a 43-mile (69 km) line from Croton and Edgewater through Paterson to Butler. Simultaneously, Conrail was being developed to assume control of many other bankrupt railroads in the northeastern U.S., but the NYS&W was not included.[72] The Securities and Exchange Commission began to investigate the NYS&W's operations, and they quickly discovered that the railroad's purchase of their $2 million bond on Maidman's behalf was stock fraud.[71][44] The bankruptcy court quickly confiscated control of the Susquehanna from Maidman and appointed Walter G. Scott as the railroad's new trustee. Maidman's other businesses, including the Edgewater warehouse, were also confiscated by other creditors, and by June 1977, Maidman's final remaining source of income was his new limited position on the NYS&W as a real-estate consultant.[44][47] Scott began to rearrange the NYS&W's operations and assets; the railroad suspended all land leases Maidman began, they reprioritized the maintenance of their locomotives and trackage, and they hired new industrial customers.[10][44] Some other members of the new court-appointed management team believed the NYS&W would be able to regain its finances by serving as an alternative to Conrail's services.[10] Maidman, who often quarreled with Scott, had hopes of regaining control of the railroad before selling it on his own after it emerged from bankruptcy, having said to The Record "I expect to straighten things out. I'll get the railroad back. I'll tell Scott to go to hell."[44] In June 1978, Maidman became physically weakened and hospitalized, following a car accident, and then in October 1979, he died at the age of 82.[47] During that time, the NYS&W still struggled to financially recover, and their trackage was deteriorated to the point they held a 10-mile-per-hour (16 km/h) speed restriction.[73][74] The Federal Railroad Administration (FRA) had banned the NYS&W from shipping hazardous materials on their trackage as a safety precaution.[75] On November 21, 1979, their creditors decided to petition the ICC to shut down and liquidate the railroad by February 1, 1980.[42][74][76] The NYS&W's remaining customers appealed the petition, since they envisioned the shut down would result in 6,000 jobs being lost across the state.[76] A public hearing subsequently postponed the railroad's closure throughout 1980.[42][76] On August 15, the ICC authorized the closure, and the NYS&W railroad's final revenue train operated on August 29.[42][77] Delaware Otsego acquisition and expansionIn 1966, the Delaware Otsego Corporation (DO) was founded by a group of businessmen and railfans led by Walter G. Rich.[78] DO's original purpose was to operate tourist trains over a 2.6-mile (4.2 km) section of the NYC's abandoned Ulster and Delaware branch near Oneonta, New York. In 1971, after the section was ripped up in favor of Interstate 88's construction, DO purchased the 16-mile (26 km) Cooperstown branch from the Delaware and Hudson Railway (D&H) and began operating it as the Cooperstown and Charlotte Valley Railroad (CACV).[78] Within ensuing years, DO's tourist operations were shut down from low ridership, and they began making profits from reactivating abandoned branch lines as short line freight railroads.[20] Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, DO acquired and leased multiple short lines; in 1972, they acquired the Erie Lackawanna's Richfield Springs branch and began operating it as the Central New York Railroad (CNYK); from 1974 to 1984, they owned and operated the Fonda, Johnstown and Gloversville Railroad (FJ&G); and from 1976 to 1989, they were contracted to operate the Lackawaxen and Stourbridge Railroad (LASB).[20][11][79] By 1979, DO's short line renovations caught the attention of New Jersey state and county officials, who were exploring ways of having the NYS&W continue operations under new ownership.[20] They asked DO to submit a proposal to purchase the NYS&W, and in turn, DO sent a team of inspectors to evaluate the railroad's trackage.[74] Two other parties also offered to purchase the railroad, but in June 1980, the bankruptcy court accepted DO's $5 million offer.[74] On September 1, DO took over the NYS&W's operations under lease before purchasing all of their assets, two years later.[74] DO quickly rebranded the railroad as the New York, Susquehanna and Western Railway, with Walter Rich becoming their newest president and CEO, and he opted to retain the Susquehanna name out of his fondness of the NYO&W.[80][11] The NYS&W's first train under DO operated on September 2, 1980.[77] That same year, DO established their own real-estate unit to begin arranging for the NYS&W to lease and sell line-side land property that was deemed unessential for railroad purposes.[81] Within the next two years, the NYS&W retained their status quo in serving industrial customers, having retained most of their pre-DO executives and employees.[82] DO and the New Jersey Department of Transportation (NJDOT) jointly funded a $1.35 million reconditioning of the NYS&W's trackage.[83] By that time, seven of the NYS&W's twenty-seven locomotives were still operable: three GP18s, three RS-1s, and one S-2; the rest had deteriorated outdoors and were subsequently scrapped.[74] In 1982, the NYS&W sold their deteriorating Edgewater branch, but they continued to maintain and operate it until October 1989, when it was shut down from a lack of customers and unsafe conditions of the branch's tunnel.[84] The Edgewater yard was subsequently ripped up and redeveloped as a shopping mall and condominium complex, and the tunnel began to house a pipeline for the Amerada Hess Corporation. Following the Staggers Rail Act of 1980, Conrail began to abandon many of their routes to streamline their operations, including their former DL&W Binghamton-Jamesville and Binghamton-Utica branches in New York, their former L&HR Warwick-Franklin route, and their former Erie Greenwood Lake Branch in New Jersey.[85][82] DO feared the abandonment of the Utica branch would landlock their CNYK railroad, and they were interested in further expanding their operations. They contacted the routes' customers for freight potential, and they negotiated with Conrail to purchase the routes.[85] On April 16, 1982, the ICC approved DO's $4.2 million purchase of the routes from Conrail, and they commenced operations under DO, the following day.[85][86] The two DL&W branches out of Binghamton and the CNYK quickly became labeled as the NYS&W's Northern Division, and the former L&HR route, the Greenwood Lake Branch, and the NYS&W's remaining original trackage in New Jersey became labeled as their Southern Division.[82] To connect the two divisions, DO arranged a haulage rights agreement with Conrail, where once-a-week NYS&W trains would operate over a portion of Conrail's Southern Tier Line between Binghamton and Passaic Junction in Saddle Brook, New Jersey, using Conrail crews.[85][87][88] If Conrail chose to terminate their haulage rights contract, a trackage rights agreement would be exercised, involving the restoration and usage of the NYS&W's route between Butler and Sparta Junction, which had been completely shut down since the early 1970s.[89][88] To cover the Northern Division operations, one GP18 was transferred over, and DO purchased some ALCO locomotives second-hand: one RS-3 from the recently-closed Adirondack Railway; two C420s from a holding firm owned by Tony Hannold; and five C430s from Conrail.[85][90] In July 1983, the first NYS&W haulage train operated over Conrail, as per the haulage agreement.[42] That same year, DO established a new subsidiary, Susquehanna Properties, Inc., to expand the NYS&W's land-leasing program, and customers who had solely relied on truck-shipping began to purchase Susquehanna property and constructed line-side facilities for rail services.[81] They also put a portion of their Little Ferry Yard up for lease and redevelopment, since most of their freight classification operations had been moved to Passaic Junction.[91] By that time, Walter Rich reported to his fellow stockholders that reorganizing the NYS&W helped DO expand from a short line operation to a regional railroad network.[92] In 1985, Conrail filed their former L&HR route between Franklin and Belvidere, for abandonment.[93] DO and Sussex County jointly purchased a portion of the route between Franklin and Lime Crest, to serve its remaining customers and to preserve the NYS&W-L&HR interchange at Sparta Junction.[92][93] Launch of intermodal trainsIn 1984, the NYS&W was approached by SeaLand, an international shipping corporation, to form an intermodal container-shipping partnership, and to lease part of the railway's Little Ferry Yard for use as a container facility.[81][42] SeaLand previously negotiated with Conrail for the partnership, but they were unimpressed with Conrail's terms where only their container facilities would be used; SeaLand preferred to establish their own facility.[42] DO knew that operating intermodal trains was becoming a booming business, so they agreed to the partnership. In 1985, SeaLand signed a contract with the NYS&W where they would lease 22 acres (110,000 square yards) of their Little Ferry property for twenty years, and they quickly began construction on their new facility.[81] At the same time, the NYS&W signed a partnership contract with the D&H and CSX to ship SeaLand trains from Little Ferry to Chicago, Illinois.[81][42] On August 5, 1985, the NYS&W operated their first SeaLand intermodal train.[91] It was quickly followed by many other trains bound between Little Ferry and the western U.S., and for shipping east of Little Ferry, the containers were shipped via truck to nearby shipyards.[81] The intermodal operations quickly boosted the NYS&W's income by 125%, and the following year, the railway turned a profit of $3.2 million out of a gross take of $19 million.[83] DO decided to purchase some additional diesels to accommodate their expanding intermodal operations.[94][95] They originally planned to purchase four ALCO C636s from Conrail, but after some coaxing from CSX for compatible motive power, DO instead purchased a fleet of EMD SD45s and F45s from GATX, which previously leased them to the Burlington Northern Railroad (BN).[94][95] The NYS&W subsequently began to retire their ALCO diesel roster.[96] Despite Conrail being kept out of the partnership, the NYS&W still used Conrail trackage and crews, as per their haulage agreement, and Conrail became slightly agitated by having to haul competing intermodal trains.[81][97] On April 1, 1986, Conrail terminated their haulage contract with the NYS&W—operations continued under the contract until October 1—and they negotiated for a new contract with higher rates, hoping the railway would accept the new rates before quietly abandoning their intermodal operations.[97] In doing so, Conrail allowed the NYS&W the opportunity to restore their Butler-Sparta route and to exercise their proposed trackage rights agreement.[81][98] DO quickly initiated a rehabilitation and upgrade on the route, along with their former L&HR trackage, to accommodate their mainline intermodal traffic.[99][98] The rehabilitation process lasted for six months and cost $8 million to complete, and the railway utilized a grant from NJDOT and a low-interest loan from the FRA.[99][88] In October, the upgrades were completed, and the NYS&W began to use DO crews to operate haulage trains under their new trackage rights agreement over Conrail's Southern Tier Line between Binghamton and Campbell Hall, and over Conrail's L&HR line to the new NYS&W-Conrail interchange at Warwick.[99][98] Since the rehabilitation process was face-paced, two derailments subsequently occurred on the Butler-Sparta route from some incomplete trackage, but they were quickly repaired, and no further accidents were reported.[88] 1988-1995 expansionIn 1988, the Norfolk Southern Railway (NS) partnered with Hanjin to operate intermodal trains between North Bergen, New Jersey, and Chicago, and they subcontracted the NYS&W and the D&H to haul the trains between North Bergen and Buffalo, New York.[100] In June that same year, the Delaware and Hudson was filed for bankruptcy by their parent company, Guilford Transportation Industries, and they disbanded the D&H, following two labor strikes. To preserve their intermodal partnership, Rich convinced the bankruptcy court to appoint the NYS&W to take over the D&H and their operations.[101] CSX gave the NYS&W some financial support to operate the D&H by underwriting their financial losses and leasing a fleet of GE Dash 8-40Bs.[101] The NYS&W also gained access to the D&H's trackage rights over Conrail from Binghamton to Buffalo. In 1991, the bankruptcy court began accepting bids to purchase the D&H, and DO made an offer, but they lost to the Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR).[42][101] CPR succeeded the D&H in the NYS&W's intermodal partnership.[102] In 1992, the NYS&W installed various freight transloading facilities for their industrial customers in New Jersey, to diversify their freight operations.[104] From 1992 to 1994, the NYS&W operated their intermodal trains at a $4.1 million loss, since the intermodal-shipping industry was affected by the early 1990s recession. The NYS&W reversed their losses by renewing their intermodal contracts with NS and CSX to increase their intermodal traffic, and the NYS&W and NS began to jointly haul container-on-flatcar and trailer-on-flatcar trains for CSX Intermodal.[101] In 1995, the NYS&W turned a profit of $1.6 million, but in 1996, the NYS&W experienced a $1 million loss, following that year's blizzard and a further decline in intermodal traffic.[105] In 1994, Onondaga County, New York purchased Conrail's former DL&W trackage between Jamesville and Syracuse, with the provision that the NYS&W provide shuttle commuter service in Syracuse between Syracuse University, Armory Square, and the Carousel Mall, and further proposed routes were considered.[106] The NYS&W utilized $7 million state grants and loans and initiated a rehabilitation of the route to boost its speed restriction, and they installed a new intermodal interchange with Conrail at Syracuse.[106] The shuttle commuter provision lead to the creation of OnTrack, which the NYS&W operated in exchange for property tax relief on the route, and three former New Haven Rail Diesel Cars were acquired and restored.[106][102] With OnTrack, the NYS&W operated their first commercial passenger trains since 1966.[102] In May 1995, DO obtained another subsidiary, the Illinois-based Toledo, Peoria and Western Railway (TP&W), and they began assisting the NYS&W's intermodal interchanges with western U.S. railroads by providing a bypass route around Chicago.[102] Conrail split and management buyoutThroughout the 1990s, Norfolk Southern negotiated with Conrail to merge together, and DO and CSX both feared the merger would affect their freight operations.[106] DO made an offer to outright purchase Conrail's Southern Tier Line, along with their Meadville Line between Hornell and Youngstown, Ohio, but it was swiftly rejected.[106] DO and CSX then secretly financed a regional development authority's purchase of the Meadville Line, to prevent Conrail from ripping it up.[106] The NS-Conrail merger subsequently fell through, but in October 1996, CSX unexpectedly announced their plans to merge with Conrail. Following some subsequent disputes by NS, it was announced in April 1997 that the Surface Transportation Board (STB) would authorize Conrail to be split between NS and CSX.[107] Since NS and CSX would both receive direct routes into the New York City area, the NYS&W would lose all of their intermodal operations, which by that time, provided 70% of the railway's annual income.[104] Walter Rich quickly mulled his options to satisfy his fellow DO stockholders. One option was to carry out their proposed "Northeast Network" alliance with the Canadian National Railway (CN), where the NYS&W would have provided a New York City connection for CN, and the two railways would have jointly purchased Conrail's Montreal Line, while the NYS&W would have either purchased Conrail's Southern Tier Line or extended their trackage rights to a Conrail-CN interchange at Buffalo.[104] DO's stockholders were looking into selling their DO shares to secure the corporation's future, and they contacted fourteen parties for a buyout, but only NS and CSX expressed interest. In June 1997, Walter Rich, along with DO Vice-President C. David Soule, negotiated with CSX chairman and CEO John Snow and NS executive David R. Goode to arrange a transaction between their three companies.[108] On August 17, a new privately-held holding company, DO Acquisition LLC, completed their $55 million purchase of Delaware Otsego via a stock tender offer of $22 per share.[109] The purchase brought the NYS&W under control of DO Acquisition LLC, with Walter Rich obtaining 80% of DO's shares, while Norfolk Southern and CSX each received 10%, along with the right of first refusal to purchase the Susquehanna, if Rich chose to sell it.[109][110] The transaction was completed on October 3, and the NYS&W's Northeast Network alliance plan with CN was quickly dropped.[108] In 1999, the Conrail split between NS and CSX was finalized, and they began to operate intermodal trains out of New Jersey, on their own.[111] That same year, all of the NYS&W's intermodal contracts expired, and their final intermodal train operated on February 3, 2001.[104][112] Post-Conrail activityThe NYS&W reoriented their freight operations to solely serve their industrial customers, but Rich explored other opportunities for the railway to gain additional profits.[112] Following the Conrail split, CSX and NS both experienced overflowing freight traffic on their new routes, so the NYS&W allowed CSX to use their trackage as a detour for their River Line trains, and they allowed NS to use their Southern Division as a relief route to prevent their Southern Tier trains from conflicting with NJ Transit's commuter operations.[106][102][113] Concurrently, NJ Transit negotiated with the NYS&W to provide commuter service in the Southern Division between Hawthorne and Sparta, to alleviate roadway congestion on Route 23.[106][102] The proposal was postponed, when a suitable location for an NJ Transit storage yard around Sparta could not be agreed upon. In 2005, the NYS&W leased a section of the Southern Tier Line from Port Jervis to Binghamton from Norfolk Southern under the Central New York Railroad name, which was previously reorganized as a paper corporation. All operations and maintenance of the route would be performed by NYS&W personnel, while NS retained overhead trackage rights. In 2006, NYS&W's Utica branch experienced some major storm damage, with some sections of trackage in Chenango County, being washed out. The branch was consequently removed from service, and the NYS&W began to rely on CSX's connection in Utica to serve their customers on the branch between Utica and Sangerfield. On August 9, 2007, Walter Rich died of pancreatic cancer, at the age of 61.[114] Nathan Fenno succeeded Rich as president of the NYS&W, and he ordered for all passenger operations to be discontinued, including the cost-prohibitive OnTrack service, and the railway's remaining passenger equipment was subsequently sold off. Many older diesel locomotives were also sold off.[115] In July 2011, NYS&W obtained ownership of five leased CEFX locomotives to aid their increasing power shortage. The five locomotives were used to supplement the railway's fleet in mainline service and occasional local freight service. New FRA-compliant diesel multiple unit rail cars were also placed into service.[116][117][118] That same year, a project to rehabilitate the Utica branch began by the Chenango County Industrial Development Agency, with funding being provided by the agency, Chenango County, the New York State Department of Transportation, and the federal Economic Development Administration. Throughout the 2010s, the project was promoted via social networking blogs and Facebook,[119] resulting in Kinnelon officials publicly voicing support for it.[120] By May 2017, the project was completed, and service on the Utica branch was resumed.[121] In October 2015, U.S. Congressman Bill Pascrell joined state legislators in creating a coalition to revive NJ Transit's proposed Hawthorne-Sparta commuter service over the NYS&W.[122] In January 2016, the local governments of the involved municipalities passed concurrent resolutions to restart the project.[123] In 2021, the NYS&W formally abandoned their Lodi and Passaic branch lines.[124] Excursion operationsUnder Delaware Otsego management, the Susquehanna began to operate diesel-powered public excursion trains, with the first one taking place in October 1981, for the Jersey Central Chapter of the National Railway Historical Society (NRHS).[125] In 1982, DO purchased a fleet of dome cars from the bankrupt Auto-Train Corporation and began to use them for additional excursion trains in the NYS&W's Northern Division.[126] Passenger ridership on the trains barely broke-even, so in 1985, the excursion services were reduced, and most of the dome cars were sold to fund the rehabilitation of the NYS&W's Butler-Sparta route.[126][125] There was subsequently a hiatus of excursion operations until July 1988, when the NYS&W hosted some additional trains, as part of that year's NRHS Convention.[125] In 1989, the NYS&W decided to host their own steam-powered excursion program, taking inspiration from similar programs hosted by Norfolk Southern and Union Pacific (UP). They originally planned to restore and operate Southern Railway 385 and United States Army 4039, both of which previously operated on the defunct Morris County Central tourist railroad, but those plans fell through, after it was determined the restoration of both locomotives would be too costly.[127] In June 1990, the NYS&W decided to import a new steam locomotive from China, taking inspiration from SY Nos. 1647 and 1658 on the Connecticut Valley (VALE) and Knox and Kane (K&K) railroads, respectively.[128][129] The railway contracted the Tangshan Locomotive and Rolling Stock Works to construct a modified copy of the SY class, and its boiler design was altered to abide with the American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME) boiler code and Federal Railroad Administration (FRA) regulations.[128][129] The new locomotive, numbered SY-1698M, was planned to be renumbered as NYS&W No. 141, and following several months of shipping delays, the locomotive was loaded on board Norwegian vessel Braut Team and began its voyage to the U.S., in May 1991.[129] The following month, on June 7, Braut Team sunk at the Bay of Bengal after encountering a major storm, and SY-1698M was lost.[130][131] The NYS&W subsequently explored multiple steam locomotives to acquire and replace their lost SY.[132] In November that same year, two operable steam locomotives became available for purchase; No. 1647 by the VALE and Canadian National 6060 by the Canadian government of Alberta.[133][134] The NYS&W began negotiating with both parties to purchase their locomotives, but the group that operated No. 6060 at the time protested to keep the locomotive from leaving Canada, and the Alberta government subsequently began to reconsider the locomotive's future.[133][134] The Susquehanna believed the reconsideration would be a long process, so they dropped their negotiations with them, and by December 2, they finalized their purchase of No. 1647 from the VALE.[127][133][134] After being repainted as NYS&W No. 142 and reclassified as an N-4, the locomotive began hauling multiple excursions on the Susquehanna's trackage.[127] In 1997, the Susquehanna quietly diminished their excursion program to lower their operating costs, and the Susquehanna Technical and Historical Society gained the rights to operate No. 142-led excursions for occasional events.[135][136] In 2003, the NYS&W sold the No. 142 locomotive to the historical society, following a major increase in insurance premium prices, and since 2004, No. 142 resided at the Belvidere and Delaware River Railway (Bel-Del).[135][137] Following the death of Walter Rich in 2007, all remaining excursions on the Susquehanna were put to an end.[137] Connections with other railroads
Stations
Locomotive roster
Former locomotives
See also
References
Bibliography
Further reading
External linksWikimedia Commons has media related to New York, Susquehanna and Western Railway.
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