Faced with increased competition from the Hotel Kaaterskill (served by the
Kaaterskill Railroad),
Catskill Mountain House owner Charles Beach hired the
Otis Elevator Company to build a cable funicular railroad straight up the
Great Wall of Manitou. Opening on August 7, 1892, the line measured long with a rise of , a maximum
grade of 34%, and an average grade of 12%. In 1904, the line was shortened and the lower
trestle eliminated. According to the
New York Times in 1892, a trip from New York City which previously took 5 or 6 hours, took 3 hours and 12 minutes thanks to the railway. A cable pulled the specially designed
passenger cars up the mountain, hooking a mechanism from the car onto the cable. To balance the system there were two cars which could each seat 75 passengers. The cars were built by
Jackson & Sharp Co. in 1892. The cars were named
Rickerson and
Van Santvoord. A small open-air baggage car was coupled to the downhill end of each passenger car. In April, 1899, the Otis Elevating Railway was sold for $10,000 in a
foreclosure proceeding. In August 1899, the owners of the Otis Elevating Railway announced plans to build an electric railroad from
Saugerties, New York to the town of
Catskill. == Design ==