
Locomotive ''Coos'' in c.
1856
The 'St. Lawrence and Atlantic Railroad' , known as 'St-Laurent & Atlantique Quebec' in
Canada, is a
short line railroad operating between
Portland, Maine on the
Atlantic Ocean and
Montreal, Quebec on the
St. Lawrence River. It crosses the
Canada-U.S. border at
Norton, Vermont, and is owned by short line operator
Genesee and Wyoming.
The line was originally built by the 'Atlantic and St. Lawrence Railroad' in the U.S. and the 'St. Lawrence and Atlantic Railway' in Canada, meeting at
Island Pond, Vermont, south of the
International Boundary. Major communities served include
Portland, Maine,
Lewiston, Maine,
Berlin, New Hampshire,
Island Pond, Vermont,
Sherbrooke, Quebec and
Montreal, Quebec.
History
The line was first proposed as a connection between Portland and
Sherbrooke, Quebec in
1844 by Portland entrepreneur
John Alfred Poor. Portland was desperate to connect its
ice-free port with Montreal and Maine was at risk of being eclipsed by a similar proposal running from nearby
Boston, Massachusetts. Montreal saw an advantage in linking with the smaller port at Portland and Poor's idea became a reality. The 'Atlantic and St. Lawrence Railroad' was chartered in
Maine on
February 10,
1845,
New Hampshire July 30,
1847 and
Vermont October 27,
1848 to build a continuous line from
Portland, Maine northwest into northeastern Vermont.
The first section, from Portland to
Yarmouth, opened on
July 4,
1846. Further extensions opened to
Danville January
1848,
Paris June 8,
1850, and to
Bethel March
1851. Sections into and within
New Hampshire opened to
Gorham on
July 23,
1851 and
Northumberland July 12,
1852, and the full distance to
Island Pond, Vermont on
January 29,
1853.
The 'St. Lawrence and Atlantic Railway' was chartered to build the part of the line in
Quebec, and on
August 4,
1851 the two companies agreed to meet at Island Pond. Regular operations began
April 4,
1853 between
Montreal and
Portland. Four months later, on
August 5, the
Grand Trunk Railway leased the two companies, giving the
Toronto-Montreal line an extension east to Portland. A branch was also built from
Richmond, Quebec northeast to
Point Levi, across the
St. Lawrence River from
Quebec City.
The line was originally built to the
Provincial Gauge of 5 ft 6 in (1,676 mm), and was converted to
standard gauge about
1873.
The increased traffic from Portland and Point Levi to Montreal placed significant demands on the small
car ferry service across the
St. Lawrence River at Montreal, and this was replaced by the
Victoria Bridge by
1860.
The GTR line to Portland was built during the boom period for New England
textile mills and various mill towns in northern New England soon saw an influx of
French Canadian workers who quickly found work in the region.
The GTR's bankruptcy in the early
1920s saw it nationalized by the Canadian federal government, which merged it into the nascent
Canadian National Railways (CNR). Unfortunately for Portland, the CNR also included various other rail lines to ice-free Canadian ports in the
Maritimes, notably
Halifax, Nova Scotia, and their now ex-GTR mainline to Montreal soon became a secondary mainline under CNR as traffic dropped significantly.
Despite the decline in traffic being handled over the line, its strategic connection to the Atlantic Ocean for Montreal saw another use arise during the
20th century when a Canadian company built a pipeline to carry oil from terminals in Portland to refineries in Montreal; the pipeline followed the GTR route along certain parts and is still in use today.
CN (acronym/name change post-
1960) continued to operate the Portland-Sherbrooke line as its Berlin Subdivision but traffic continued to decline and by the late
1980s, following
deregulation of the U.S. railroad industry, it became a candidate for divestiture to a shortline operator. In
1989, the 'St. Lawrence and Atlantic Railroad' was formed to take over operation of the
Island Pond, Vermont-Portland section and several years later this was extended to the border at
Norton. In
1998, following Canadian deregulation, the short line operator formed a subsidiary St. Lawrence and Atlantic Railroad (Quebec) to operate the remaining line from the border at Norton through to Ste-Rosalie, where it connects with the CNR main line to Montreal.
External links
★
Genesee & Wyoming - St. Lawrence & Atlantic Railroad
★
The Grand Trunk in New England
References
★
Railroad History Database
★
Steamtown Special History Study - Berlin Mills Railway No. 7