Most notable among Page's many projects was a partnership with absentee investors, begun in 1898, to acquire land and construct a modest
short-line railroad to tap new coal reserves in a rugged portion of southern West Virginia not yet reached by the bigger railroads. The project was intended to establish connections to both the
Chesapeake and Ohio Railway (C&O) and the
Norfolk and Western Railway (N&W), which should have inspired competition among rival carriers to transport the coal the rest of the way to market. However, collusion by the leaders of the large railroads (lawful in an era before U.S.
anti-trust laws were enacted) resulted in rates to transport the coal the additional distances to markets which, potentially, would have stopped the project. However, if the C&O and N&W presidents thought they could discourage Page from developing the new areas, they were mistaken. One of the
silent investors Page had enlisted was millionaire industrialist
Henry Huttleston Rogers, a principal in
John D. Rockefeller's
Standard Oil Trust. A master at competitive "warfare", Henry Rogers did not like to lose, and, as one of the wealthiest men in America, he also had nearly unlimited resources. in
Ansted, West Virginia from the
Midland Trail'' While Page continued to meet with the big railroads for rate negotiations that always seemed unproductive, he and Rogers secretly planned a route and acquired rights-of-way all of the way across Virginia to
Hampton Roads, a distance of some . By the time they realized what was happening, the C&O and N&W executives were faced with a new major competitor, a third railroad with direct access to an ocean port.
Victoria is created Late in 1906, near the halfway point on the Tidewater Railway between Roanoke and Sewell's Point, a new town with space set aside for railroad offices and shops was created in
Lunenburg County, Virginia. It was named
Victoria, in honor of
Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom, who was long-admired by Henry Rogers. Victoria was the location of a large equipment maintenance operation, with
roundhouse,
turntable, coaling and water facilities for servicing
steam locomotives, a large rail yard with many tracks, and a large single-story passenger station. Offices for the VGN's Norfolk Division were built by adding a second floor to the passenger station building a few years later.
Virginian Railway born, Jamestown Exposition Early in 1907, with substantial portions of each still under construction, the Deepwater and Tidewater Railways were combined to become the
Virginian Railway. On April 15, 1907, William Nelson Page was elected as its first president. About the same time, a large stretch of the eastern portion of the Tidewater had been completed and regular passenger service was established between Norfolk and Victoria. This proved just in time for the new railroad to serve the
Jamestown Exposition, which was held on land adjacent to the VGN coal pier site at Sewell's Point. At the exposition, Page served as Chief of International Jury of Awards, Mines and Metallurgy. On April 26, 1907, US President
Theodore Roosevelt opened the exposition.
Mark Twain was another honored guest, arriving with his friend Henry Rogers on the latter's steam yacht, the
Kanawha. In addition to President Roosevelt, the newly renamed
Virginian Railway (VGN) transported many of the 3 million persons who attended before the Exposition closed on December 1, 1907.
Financial panic of 1907 – Rogers has stroke Work progressed on the VGN during 1907 and 1908 using construction techniques not available when the larger railroads had been built about 25 years earlier, achieving a more favorable route and grade. By paying for work with Henry Rogers' own personal fortune, the railway was built with no public debt. This feat, a key feature of the successful secrecy in securing the route, was in all likelihood not part of Rogers' initial planning, and was not accomplished without some considerable burden to the financier, however. He had suffered some setbacks in the
Financial Panic of 1907 which began in March of that year. Then, a few months later, he experienced a debilitating
apoplectic stroke. Fortunately, Henry Rogers recovered his health, at least partially, and saw to it that construction was continued on the new railroad until it was finally completed early in 1909.
Final spike, celebrations The final spike in the
VGN was driven on 29 January 1909, at the west end of the massive New River Bridge at Glen Lyn, near where the new railroad crossed the
West Virginia-
Virginia state line. The former Deepwater and Tidewater Railways were now physically connected. In April, 1909,
Henry Huttleston Rogers and
Mark Twain, old friends, returned to
Norfolk together once again for a huge celebration of the new "Mountains to the Sea" railroad's completion. Despite rain that day, a huge crowd of Norfolk citizens was waiting with great excitement at the shore to meet them. While Rogers toured the railway's new $2.5-million coal pier at Sewell's Point,
Mark Twain spoke to groups of students at several local schools. That night, at a grand banquet held in downtown Norfolk, the city's civic leaders, Mark Twain, Rogers, and other dignitaries spoke. In either event, with the building of the VGN, what was accomplished was that a third shipper was established. Rogers left the next day on his first (and only) tour of the newly completed railroad. He died suddenly, only six weeks later, at the age of 69, at his home in New York, because of another stroke. By then, the work of the Page-Rogers partnership in Building the
Virginian Railway was complete. ==Accomplishments==