Railroad equipment and memorabilia Railroads brought great changes in commerce and communications to
New England in the second half of the nineteenth century. Before the advent of railroads, New Englanders depended on the region's lakes and rivers and the seacoast as their primary avenues of travel. Traveling inland proved difficult over roads that were muddy in spring, dusty and rutted in summer and fall, and littered with tree stumps year-round. Beginning in the late 1840s railroads brought new settlers to Vermont and helped the state's fledgling dairy industry flourish by providing access to markets for
milk,
butter, and
cheese. Railroads connected once-remote New England communities to the rest of the country, improving mail delivery and bringing newspapers from
Boston and
New York City the next day instead of weeks later. William Seward Webb served as president of the
Wagner Palace Car Company and the Rutland Railroad at the turn of the twentieth century. The Shelburne Railroad Station, now at the museum, was constructed for Webb to serve the town and his estate at Shelburne Farms. Today it houses part of the museum's collection of railroad equipment and memorabilia. The communication devices displayed range from the simple message hoops and "high-speed delivery fork" to technological innovations like the telegraph and telephone. Other items in the collection include historic photographs and locomotive portraits, maps of the rail network in Vermont and the United States in the nineteenth century, broadsides, and timetables for Vermont railroads, and models of early locomotives. The museum's collection also includes a large group of
railroad lanterns and glass globes from railroads around the
Northeast. Railroad lanterns served as a method of communication between
conductors,
brakemen,
signalmen, and
engineers. Also in the collection are track-setting equipment,
semaphore flags,
handcars, and other
track maintenance equipment. The wooden replica of
Old Ironsides, the first locomotive built by the
Baldwin Locomotive Works, was first displayed at the
Columbian Exposition in Chicago in 1893. Part of the collection is the
Gertie Buck, a self-propelled inspection car built and used by the Dewey family on the
Woodstock Railway in eastern Vermont in the last decades of the nineteenth century. ==See also==