After years of financial struggle, the line was purchased by the Boston, Hartford and Erie Railroad (BH&E) in 1863. After finally obtaining control of the Norfolk County Railroad, the BH&E set out to complete the planned Southbridge–East Thompson section.[2]: 130 Passenger service on the first portion between Webster, Massachusetts, and East Thompson began in early 1866.[1]: 8 The final spike of the western portion was driven on November 9, 1866, and service began the next February.[2]: 130 [1]: 7 The line was operated as part of a Southbridge–Boston mainline from then until September 1868, when the East Thompson–Mechanicsville section reopened, at which time it was relegated to branchline status as the Southbridge Branch.[1]: 9 [3]
Successor lines
Early-20th-century postcard of Webster station with the Southbridge Branch at far left
The New England Railroad, successor to the NY&NE, was merged into the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad in 1898.[2]: 131 In 1904, the New Haven resumed service on a previously built extension of the Providence and Springfield Railroad from Pascoag, Rhode Island, to Douglas, Massachusetts.[2]: 164 It was soon through-routed with the Southbridge Branch to form a Southbridge–Providence service.[1]: 9 In 1915, daily service on the line included two Providence–Southbridge round trips (all with Boston connections at East Thompson) plus three Webster–Southbridge round trips that did not run on Sundays.[5]
Service on part of the Providence and Springfield line ended by 1921.[2]: 165 In 1924, the line had two daily East Thompson–Southbridge round trips, run by a gas-powered railcar, with Boston connections at East Thompson.[1]: 9 [6] This was reduced to a single daily round trip in July 1930, and ended entirely on August 16.[7][1]: 9 The stations at Quinebaug, Sandersdale, and Webster were all demolished in 1936; the roundhouse was removed that August.[1] The last freight use of the East Thompson–Webster segment took place when the March 1936 floods cut off access to Webster on the Groton–Worcester line. That segment was abandoned the next year.[8]: 120
Abandonment and rail trail
Abandoned bridge over the Quinebaug River in West Dudley seen in 2021
Freight service continued on the Southbridge–Webster portion as a branch of the Groton–Worcester line. It became part of Penn Central in 1969. The line had only one freight train a week; Penn Central applied for abandonment, and it was not recommended for inclusion in Conrail. Instead, the Providence and Worcester Railroad (P&W) took over the branch along with the northern portion of the Groton–Worcester line in 1976.[2]: 132 P&W service on the branch ended in 1988, though rails remained in place. The bridge over Massachusetts Route 131 in Southbridge was removed in 2001.[2]: 132 [8]: 226 P&W applied in 2003 for abandonment of the Southbridge Running Track, which was granted the next year.[2]: 132 [8]: 226 [9]
The Massachusetts portions of the line west of Webster were purchased by the state government in 2004 for conversion to a rail trail.[8]: 226 Attempts by P&W to sell the Connecticut portion to the state government were unsuccessful.[2]: 133 The first 4.1 miles (6.6 km) of the Quinebaug Valley Rail Trail, from Sandersdale to the state line, was completed in the early 2010s.[10][11][12] An additional 1.5 miles (2.4 km) in Dudley was completed around 2016.[13][14] In June 2022, the U.S. Department of CommerceEconomic Development Administration awarded Southbridge a $2.6 million grant to complete the downtown Southbridge section of the trail. The total cost including state and local funding was expected to be $4.3 million.[15][16]
Route
Map of the Southbridge Branch
The Southbridge Branch was 16.9 miles (27.2 km) long.[5] From the western terminal at Southbridge, it ran southeast along the Quinebaug River valley through the villages of Sandersdale and West Dudley, crossing the state line into the village of Quinebaug, Connecticut. It turned northeast and crossed back into Massachusetts, where it crossed the French River and paralleled the Norwich and Worcester Railroad into downtown Webster. It crossed the river twice more into Dudley and back into Webster, then turned southeast to pass Lake Chaubunagungamaug. Crossing again into Connecticut, it joined the Midland Division at East Thompson station.[2] Trackage continued west a short distance from Southbridge station to serve industrial customers. A freight house and three-stall roundhouse were located on this trackage, as was a connection to the Worcester Consolidated Street Railway.[17][18]
Stations
Early-20th-century postcard of East Webster station
The line had ten passenger stations, two of which were shared with other lines.[2]: 129 The 1910-built Southbridge station is the only extant station building on the line. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1989 and has been converted for non-railroad use.[19]
^ abcdefghJoslin, Russell (1981). "The Southbridge Branch". Shoreliner. Vol. 12, no. 2. New Haven Railroad Historical and Technical Association. pp. 6–14. LCCN78-641543.
^ abcdefghijklmnKarr, Ronald Dale (2017). The Rail Lines of Southern New England (2 ed.). Branch Line Press. ISBN9780942147124.
^Humphrey, Thomas J.; Clark, Norton D. (1985). Boston's Commuter Rail: The First 150 Years. Boston Street Railway Association. p. 43.
^Turner, Gregg M.; Jacobus, Melancthon W. (1986). Connecticut Railroads: An Illustrated History. The Connecticut Historical Society. pp. 197–201. ISBN0-940748-89-4.
^ abcdSummer Schedule: Lines East of New London and Willimantic. New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad. August 9, 1915. p. 12.