Predecessors and formation (1839–1872) (1914 postcard) The New Haven system was formed by the merger of two railroads that intersected in
New Haven, Connecticut: the
Hartford and New Haven Railroad, which began service between New Haven and
Hartford in 1839 and reached
Springfield, Massachusetts, in 1844, and the
New York and New Haven Railroad, which opened in 1848 between its namesake cities. The two companies had a history of cooperation; for a time, they jointly leased the
New Haven and Northampton Railroad and coordinated their steamship services with each other. An initial merger attempt between the two in 1870 was rejected by the
Connecticut General Assembly, largely over fears that the merged railroad would form a monopoly. But the legislature approved a second attempt just two years later, and the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad was formed on July 24, 1872. The newly combined railroad owned a main line from
New York City to Springfield via New Haven and Hartford, and also reached
New London, Connecticut via a lease of the
Shore Line Railway (leased in 1870 by the New York and New Haven Railroad). In its first decades, the railroad was widely known as "the Consolidated".
Expansion and acquisitions (1872–1900) The company later leased more lines and systems, eventually forming a virtual
monopoly in
New England south of the
Boston and Albany Railroad. Three more companies, the
New Haven and Northampton Railroad, the
Naugatuck Railroad, and the
Connecticut Valley Railroad, were leased by the New Haven in 1887. With these leases, the New Haven was in control of 10 of the 22 railroads in Connecticut at the time.
Charles Francis Murphy's New York Contracting and Trucking company was awarded a $6 million contract in 1904 (equal to $ today) to build rail lines in the Bronx for the New York, New Haven, and Hartford Railroad. An executive at the railroad said the contract was awarded to avoid friction with New York City’s
Tammany Hall political machine. In response to this contract, the
New York State Legislature amended the city's charter so that franchise-awarding power was removed from the city council and given to the Board of Estimate and Apportionment, which only became defunct in 1989. The struggling
Central New England Railway (CNE) became a subsidiary of the New Haven system in 1904, completing the New Haven's dominance of southern New England railroads. Control of that company unlocked a new route for freight to and from
Maybrook, New York, via the
Poughkeepsie Bridge across the
Hudson River, replacing the
car float operation that previously took place at
Fishkill Landing. Once the CNE was under control, a long route from Maybrook to
Devon, Connecticut, known as the
Maybrook Line, was improved and expanded by the New Haven into a double track freight corridor, while
Maybrook Yard was constructed as a classification yard and locomotive servicing and maintenance point. The Maybrook Line used parts of the CNE, New York and New England, Housatonic, and Naugatuck railroads. It was fully double tracked in 1913. The full CNE main line crossing rural northwest Connecticut to Hartford was unsuitable as a freight corridor owing to steep grades up to 1.6 percent. A signal system was completed and operational along the full length of the Maybrook Line in 1926. In total, 175 different companies were combined to create the full New Haven system. At its peak, the New Haven operated 2,256 route miles (3,631 km). 2,185 of those route miles hosted passenger service in 1920. Morgan and Mellen achieved a complete monopoly of transportation in southern New England, purchasing other railroads and steamship and trolley lines. Substantial improvements to the system were made during the Mellen years, including
electrification between New York and New Haven. Morgan and Mellen went further and attempted to acquire or neutralize competition from other railroads in New England, including the
New York Central's Boston and Albany Railroad, the
Rutland Railroad, the
Maine Central Railroad, and the
Boston and Maine Railroad. But the Morgan-Mellen expansion left the company overextended and financially weak. In 1914, 21 directors and ex-directors of the railroad were indicted for "conspiracy to monopolize interstate commerce by acquiring the control of practically all the transportation facilities of New England." To better handle its freight operations, the railroad greatly expanded its
Cedar Hill Yard in the New Haven area, completing the work in 1925 on what was the largest
classification yard in the United States east of the
Mississippi River. The new facilities served as the hub of the system and handled the sorting of freight cars with two
hump yards along with the maintenance of locomotives and railroad cars, and also contained both a
transloading facility and a plant for adding
creosote to
railroad ties. Expansions to
Hartford Yard and
Northup Avenue Yard in
Providence, Rhode Island, both also equipped as hump yards, were completed in 1929, when both yards were equipped with
retarders along with Cedar Hill to assist in safely sorting freight cars. In 1925, the railroad created the
New England Transportation Company as a subsidiary to operate buses and trucks on routes where rail service was no longer profitable. Growing competition from road transport and the effects of the
Great Depression caused the New Haven to sharply cut passenger services from branch lines. Of the 2,185 route miles with passenger service in 1920, more than saw that service eliminated by 1934.
First bankruptcy and recovery (1935–1954) Under the stress of the
Great Depression the company became bankrupt in 1935, remaining in trusteeship until 1947. Common stock was voided and creditors assumed control. During the
88 stations case, the railroad closed 88 stations in
Massachusetts and 5 in Rhode Island in 1938, and unsuccessfully attempted to abandon the Boston-area portion of the Old Colony Division. The twelve-year reorganization resulted in "eight
Supreme Court decisions, fourteen
circuit court decisions, five
district court decisions, and eleven
ICC reports." During the reorganization, over $300 million () was invested in capital improvement, including locomotives and other rolling stock, tracks, bridges, and railroad facilities. Several lines were abandoned during the bankruptcy, most significantly a large portion of the CNE in New York and Connecticut. Other than the line from Maybrook across the Hudson to Poughkeepsie, the only parts to survive were a trio of segments in Connecticut. Over were cut from the former CNE. The former Old Colony network in the Boston area was also rationalized to eliminate lines that duplicated others, and a variety of branches across the entire New Haven network that saw little traffic were shortened or abandoned entirely. In total, over 300 route miles (480 km) were abandoned by 1938. The railroad emerged in September 1947 under a reorganization plan approved in federal court, without the vast majority of its previous non-railroad interests, and with a number of unprofitable passenger operations on marginal branches replaced with bus service.
Dieselization took place rapidly following the end of
World War II. The railroad had more than 500 steam locomotives in active service in 1941; this number fell to less than 50 by late 1949. Steam locomotives were phased out of regular service entirely in 1952, earlier than many other American railroads. A few steam locomotives were kept beyond this date for passenger excursions. Replacing steam power were a variety of products from the
American Locomotive Company (ALCO), primarily
PA and
FA locomotives for mainline trains and
RS-1,
RS-2, and
RS-3 road switcher locomotives for general use. Along with ten locomotives ordered from
Fairbanks-Morse, the New Haven ordered 161 new diesels between the end of the war and 1951. The arrival of diesels made it possible for the railroad to close numerous facilities dedicated to maintaining steam locomotives or keeping them supplied with water and coal. In 1948, the company operated 644 locomotives, 1,602 passenger cars and 8,796 freight cars on 1,581 miles of track. New leadership and equipment positioned the railroad for a successful future, cut short when former chairman Frederic C. Dumaine took over the company in May 1948 after gaining control of a large portion of the railroad's stock. The 82 year old Dumaine slashed spending, sharply increased dividend payments, and began targeting anyone in management he felt was too well compensated. Passenger service frequencies were reduced as a cost-cutting measure. The company's revenue shrunk by fifteen percent in 1949 before the
Korean War increased economic activity. preserved at the
Danbury Railway Museum Frederic C. "Buck" Dumaine Jr. succeeded his father after his death in 1951 and took the company in a different direction, putting money back into maintaining the railroad and adding more passenger services instead of cutting them. Under his administration, the railroad invested heavily in new passenger equipment, including
Budd Rail Diesel Cars (RDCs), 100 new electric multiple units for commuter service between New York City and Stamford, and ten
EP-5 electric locomotives from General Electric. Perception of the railroad shifted positively as a result.
McGinnis era and financial troubles (1954–1961) during the McGinnis era (1954–1956) electric locomotives in 1955 In 1954, businessman and stock speculator
Patrick B. McGinnis led a
proxy fight against incumbent president Buck Dumaine Jr., vowing to return more of the company's profit to shareholders. McGinnis had previously allied with Buck Dumaine's father during the 1948 takeover, and his proxy fight followed a failed takeover attempt in 1953. He won control of the railroad and appointed Arthur V. McGowan, a longtime acquaintance, Vice President. McGinnis attempted to accomplish many of his financial goals by deferring all but the most essential maintenance. The railroad's new president considered himself a visionary who would save the company by adopting new ideas. McGinnis decided the railroad needed a refreshed corporate image, and so
Knoll Associates was retained to design a new visual identity for the company.
Herbert Matter developed a new color scheme featuring black, red-orange, and white to replace the railroad's existing green, yellow, and orange colors. Matter also designed a new logo consisting of the block letters "NH" arranged vertically, known as the McGinnis logo, to replace its previous script herald. McGinnis ordered the new colors and logo applied to the EP-5 locomotives ordered by his predecessor, the first of a wide variety of locomotives, passenger cars, and freight cars both new and existing to be painted in the railroad's new image. Knoll employed architect
Marcel Breuer to design the interiors and exterior styling of the three experimental trainsets – the ''
Dan'l Webster, John Quincy Adams, and Roger Williams'' – that were ordered in 1955. Breuer also designed new station buildings for
Rye and
New London, neither of which were built, as well as the interior of a never-built design for articulated commuter coaches. McGinnis himself could be found touring the railroad on his
hirail equipped Cadillac and encouraging thrift on the part of employees even as his own compensation skyrocketed. Both the railroad's fleet of electric locomotives and its
Cos Cob Power Station that supplied them with electricity were in need of improvements, but McGinnis ignored recommendations to do so in favor of severe reductions to their maintenance budgets. Rather than invest in its existing electric trains and infrastructure, the railroad instead ordered more than 100 new diesel locomotives from three manufacturers, including 30
FL9 locomotives from
General Motors Electro-Motive Division (EMD). The FL9s were
electro-diesel locomotives that could operate on electric power in the area of
Grand Central Terminal and on diesel power elsewhere. They played into McGinnis' plans to abandon most of the railroad's electrification system in favor of diesel locomotives, keeping it only between New York City and Stamford for electrified commuter service. When McGinnis departed in 1956, ejected from leadership by furious stockholders, he left the company financially wrecked, a situation exacerbated by a major derailment of the
Federal in
Bridgeport, Connecticut, in July 1955 and severe damage from the
1955 Connecticut floods which permanently severed a route between Boston and Hartford. McGinnis proceeded to similarly damage the Boston and Maine Railroad before ending up in federal prison. The experimental trainsets promoted by McGinnis were failures when they arrived between 1956 and 1957: their fixed length meant they could not be adjusted based on demand, they were highly unreliable in service, and they failed to provide a smooth ride for passengers. Of the three, only the
Roger Williams lasted more than a year in operation. The railroad's next and final president was George Alpert, a lawyer and previously a member of the railroad's board of directors. One of his first acts as president was the downwards correction of income statistics previously issued by his predecessor which were not reflective of the railroad's real finances. Alpert recognized that he had inherited a railroad with deferred maintenance and succeeded in securing loans from the
Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) to repair its tracks along with ordering regular spending on maintenance increased. The railroad was unsuccessful in addressing the increasing age of its rolling stock, made worse by the shuttering of locomotive maintenance facilities at
Readville (diesel) and
Van Nest (electric) which overwhelmed the facilities at
Cedar Hill Yard in New Haven. To cut costs, locomotives sent for rebuilding returned with a simplified two-tone paint scheme in place of the more elaborate and expensive McGinnis colors. The completion of the
Connecticut Turnpike parallel to the railroad's main line between New York and Boston in 1958 and growing competition from jet aircraft began to heavily effect the railroad's passenger and freight business, to the extent that a quarter of the railroad's trains between the two cities were cut from the schedule. Alpert strongly advocated for government action to resolve inequitable taxation, with other modes of transportation exempted from taxes while the railroad paid massive tax bills on structures like
Boston South Station. His solution was to attempt to convince the public that government funding was necessary to prevent unprofitable commuter rail service from collapsing entirely. On June 30, 1959, the New Haven discontinued passenger service on the
Old Colony Railroad network in southeastern Massachusetts after the state refused to continue subsidizing the company's operating losses. That year, the company reported close to $11 million in losses. Asked by the Connecticut Public Utilities Commission in February 1960 if the company's survival was in imminent danger, the New Haven's comptroller replied, "Yes, even with the best of management". 30 additional FL9s were delivered by EMD in 1960 and replaced many older locomotives, but this was only made possible via government-supported loans to the railroad.
Second bankruptcy (1961–1969) electric locomotives purchased by the trustees, photographed in 1969 Continuing financial problems forced the New Haven into bankruptcy on July 7, 1961, and federal court judge
Robert P. Anderson assumed
trusteeship. The railroad reported it would have only $9,262,000 in funds to cover expenses of $33,480,000 at the year's end. Company president George Alpert blamed "government subsidies direct and indirect to our competitors, and inequitable taxes" for the railroad's deficits, pointing to billions of dollars in federal funding for highways and airports. A substantial portion of the former New Haven main line between New York and Boston was transferred to
Amtrak in 1976 and now forms the northern leg of the
electrified Northeast Corridor, hosting high-speed
Acela Express and
regional rail service. The main line between
New Rochelle and New Haven is jointly owned by the state of
Connecticut and the
Metropolitan Transportation Authority of New York, and is served by the
Metro-North Railroad’s
New Haven Line and
Shore Line East, providing commuter service from Manhattan’s
Grand Central Terminal as far eastward as New London, Connecticut. The New Haven Line is coded red on Metro-North timetables and system maps, a nod to the red livery used by the New Haven for the last decade of its history.
MBTA's
Providence/Stoughton Line provides commuter service between
Providence and
South Station in Boston. Amtrak took over passenger service on the
New Haven–Springfield Line in 1976, and was joined by the state of Connecticut's
Hartford Line in 2018. On August 28, 1980,
American Financial Enterprises, Inc., acquired the remaining assets of the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad Company when the plan for reorganization was approved by the court and the company was reorganized. This brought to an end the 108-year corporate history of the storied railroad, and the end to the 19-year saga of its second bankruptcy reorganization. American Financial Enterprises would become the largest single stockholder of Penn Central Company shares by the mid-1990s, controlling 32% of the stock of the company.
The Conrail era and beyond (1976–present) , in 1983. Conrail inherited much of the former New Haven network with a mandate to return it to profitable operation. Freight operations on former New Haven lines passed to
Conrail with its government-overseen creation on April 1, 1976. During the subsequent 23 years, Conrail withdrew from much of that territory, abandoning some track and handing other lines over to the Providence & Worcester, Bay Colony, Boston & Maine, Connecticut Central, Pioneer Valley, Housatonic and Connecticut Southern railroads. Those lines still operated by Conrail in 1999 became part of
CSX Transportation as the result of the breakup of the Conrail system. These changes effectively broke up the near monopoly on freight railroads in southern New England that the New Haven once held. The state of Connecticut frequently alludes to the New Haven in its modern transportation projects; much of the state’s commuter equipment is painted in McGinnis-era livery, while the iconic "NH" logo appears on everything from rolling stock, station signage, to tourism materials for the city of New Haven itself. service in 2015, painted in New Haven colors to commemorate the former railroad. The
Connecticut Department of Transportation has painted its diesel commuter rail locomotives used on the non-electrified Danbury and Waterbury Metro-North branches, as well as its Shore Line East operation, in the "McGinnis Scheme," composed of white, black, and orange-red stripes with the iconic NH logo. Although a new livery was introduced with the opening of the
Hartford Line commuter service in 2018, much of its equipment is shared with
Shore Line East, of which some continue to bear the McGinnis livery and the rest have been repainted into the new "
CT Rail" livery. All of these lines were formerly owned by the New Haven. The
Valley Railroad, a preservation line based in Essex, Connecticut that runs both steam and diesel traction, has painted the authentic script-lettering insignia of the original "New York, New Haven and Hartford" railroad on the tenders of its resident steam locomotives, 2-8-0 Consolidation type Number 97 and 2-8-2 Mikado type number 40. There is a third steam locomotive in restoration to running order; a Chinese SY-class Mikado, formerly known as the 1658, it is being renumbered and painted as New Haven 3025, and is to be based on a Mikado-type engine that was typical to the New Haven. The name of the
Hartford Yard Goats Minor League Baseball team reflects the old New York, New Haven and Hartford railroad history and the design of its logo is based on the railroad's original script style logo. The team plays in downtown Hartford at
Dunkin' Donuts Park, which is adjacent to
Hartford Yard, originally built by the New Haven. ==Operations==