The backers of the
Whitehall and Plattsburgh Railroad had attempted to establish a railway line along the west side of
Lake Champlain via the
Ausable River valley. The effort sputtered out in 1870–1871, leaving two disconnected railway lines: a line between
Plattsburgh, New York, and
Ausable, New York, and a line between
Port Henry, New York, and
Fort Ticonderoga. The latter had been leased by the
Rutland Railroad in an effort to prevent the creation of the new route. This setback proved temporary.
New York State Assemblyman
Smith Mead Weed, and
Rensselaer and Saratoga Railroad president
Isaac V. Baker Jr., persuaded the
Delaware and Hudson Railway to back a new effort to build the line. The first New York and Canada Railroad was incorporated on March 16, 1872, and the consolidated with the Whitehall and Plattsburgh and
Montreal and Plattsburgh Railroads on April 15, 1873, to form the second New York and Canada Railroad. The New York and Canada eschewed the Ausable River route of the White and Plattsburgh in favor of a more direct route that followed the Lake Champlain coast. The company completed the line between Whitehall and Addison Junction on November 30, 1874. The difficult terrain between Port Henry and Plattsburgh required an additional year and that part of the line opened on November 29, 1875. The Whitehall and Plattsburgh Railroad line to Ausable was retained as a branch. To reach Montreal, trains used the former Montreal and Plattsburgh Railroad line between Plattsburgh and
Mooers, New York, then the
Ogdensburg and Lake Champlain Railroad from Mooers to
Rouses Point, New York, and then the tracks of
Grand Trunk Railway. The New York and Canada constructed a line from
Chazy, New York, to Rouses Point, eliminating the need to run via Mooers and the Ogdensburg and Lake Champlain Railroad. This line opened on September 18, 1876. The New York and Canada also constructed a short, branch through
Ticonderoga, New York, to Baldwin, on the north end of
Lake George. This line opened in May 1875. A final shortening of the route to Montreal occurred with the building of the
Napierville Junction Railway and subsequent D&H control. The Napierville Junction Railway, incorporated in 1906, built a line from the Canadian border near Rouses Point north to
Delson and a junction with the
Canadian Pacific Railway. The New York and Canada built a connection up to the border. The new route opened on May 20, 1907. The D&H merged the New York and Canada on May 23, 1908. == Lines ==