The Wolfeboro Railroad or Wolfeborough Railroad (later the Wolfeboro Branch of the Boston and Maine Railroad) is a former short line that provided service to the summer resort town of Wolfeboro, New Hampshire (formerly spelled "Wolfeborough") on Lake Winnipesaukee.

Wolfeboro Railroad
The former Wolfeboro station in 2019
Overview
StatusDefunct
LocaleNew Hampshire
Termini
Service
Operator(s)Wolfeborough Railroad Co. (1870-1872)
Eastern Railroad (1872-1884)
Boston and Maine Railroad (1884-1960s)
Wolfeboro Railroad Co. (1972-1978)
Wolfeboro Steam Railroad Co. (1980-1985)
History
Opened1870
Closed1985
Technical
Line length12 mi (19 km)
Charactershortline railroad (1870-1936)
heritage railway (1972-1985)
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
Route map

0.00
Sanbornville
1.94
Brookfield
5.77
Cotton Valley
8.80
Fernald
10.56
Lake Wentworth
Lake Wentworth
Crescent Lake
11.50
Wolfeboro Falls
11.98
Wolfeboro
Lake Station
(summer only)

History

edit
 
Map

Construction

edit

Wolfeborough Railroad Company was founded on July 1, 1868, and it built a 12-mile-long (19 km) standard gauge short line from the Portsmouth, Great Falls and Conway Railroad's tracks in Sanbornville, New Hampshire (formerly known as Wolfeborough Junction) to Wolfeboro.

Construction on the line began in November 1871, and the line was open for traffic on August 19, 1872. On January 6, 1872, the Eastern Railroad leased the Wolfeboro Railroad for a period of 68 years.[1]

B&M era

edit
 
Steamboat Mt. Washington pulling alongside Wolfeboro's lakeshore railroad station, early 20th century

In 1884, the Boston & Maine took over operations on the Eastern, including the Wolfeboro Railroad. The tracks in Wolfeboro were extended across Main Street to a dock on the shore of Lake Winnipesaukee for easy connections to lake steamboats, with a waiting room on the first floor of a factory. On Christmas Eve, 1899, the building burned down, and in 1900, the B&M built a new Lake Station.[1]

On June 30, 1892, the Wolfeboro Railroad was acquired by the Boston & Maine as part of its purchase of the Eastern Railroad, and it continued operating the line as the Wolfeboro Branch. Also in 1892, the first post office for Wolfeboro Falls opened in the B&M station there.[2] By 1903, the B&M had headquartered its Eastern Division in Sanbornville, running a large maintenance facility there. On April 8, 1911, the Sanbornville shops were destroyed in a fire. The B&M did not rebuild the facilities, sending trains instead to Dover for repairs.[1]

Decline

edit

In 1927, the B&M began using railcars on the line. In 1935, the lakefront station was closed, and on May 16, 1936, the B&M stopped running trains for passengers only, although it continued running mixed passenger and freight trains until about 1950. By the 1960s, only freight trains were running on the track.[1]

Once freight service became unprofitable, the B&M decided to close the line. However, throughout the 1970s and 1980s, several companies maintained the line as a heritage railway. On December 19, 1972, a new company called the Wolfeboro Rail Road Company (WRR) was founded and took over the line, running both freight trains and a tourist steam train and reopening the lakeshore station.[2] On January 28, 1976, the WRR also began operation on a section of railroad owned by the State of NH, under an operating contract, on the opposite side of the lake, between Concord and Lincoln. However, in November 1977, facing financial trouble, the contract for operations on the Concord to Lincoln line was cancelled, and a new contract was awarded to the Goodwin Railroad.

In 1979, the Wolfeboro Steam Railroad Corporation bought the Wolfeboro line, running tourist trains from 1980[1] until 1985. In 1985, the line was purchased by the State of New Hampshire, which uses the right-of-way as the Wolfeboro Recreational Rail Trail, now known as the Cotton Valley Rail Trail. The rails are intact, and they are actively used by rail clubs.[3] The rail corridor is maintained by members of the Cotton Valley Rail Trail Club. In 1987, Wolfeboro Station was struck by lightning and caught fire, and it was repaired by the town.

References

edit
  1. ^ a b c d e "Wolfeborough Railroad: An In Depth History". Lake Winnipesaukee Museum. Accessed April 17, 2016.
  2. ^ a b Wolfeboro Historical Society. (2001). Images of America: Wolfeboro. Charleston, South Carolina. Arcadia Publishing.
  3. ^ "Cotton Valley Rail Trail". New Hampshire Division of Parks and Recreation. Accessed April 17, 2016.
  • Robert M. Lindsell: The Rail Lines of Northern New England. Branch Line Press, Pepperell, MA (2000), ISBN 0-942147-06-5.
  • Wolfeboro Railroad forum, on Winnipesaukee.com.
  • R.C. Libby: Rails To Wolfeborough: A Condensed History of the Wolfeborough Rail Road Wolfeboro Rail Road (1984).
edit