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Boston and Maine Corporation


Boston and Maine
boston_and_maine_herald.png
B&M
Reporting marks BM, BMZ
Locale Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New York, and Vermont
Years of operation 18351983
Track gauge 4 ftin (1435 mm)
Headquarters Boston, Massachusetts

The Boston & Maine (AAR reporting mark BM), also known by the abbreviation B&M, was the dominant railroad of the northern New England region of the United States for a century. It is now part of the Guilford Transportation Industries network.

History

B&M was first formed beginning in 1835 to create a continuous inland route between the cities of Boston, Massachusetts and Portland, Maine. It originally rented the Boston and Lowell Railroad tracks between Wilmington and Boston but in 1844 started laying its own tracks from Haverhill through to Boston, completing the route. By 1883, B&M had gained control of other major New England railroads, creating a network of tracks linking Massachusetts, the northern New England states, and eastern New York.

B&M flourished with the growth of New England's mill towns in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, but still faced financial struggles. It came under the control of J. P. Morgan around 1910, but anti-trust forces wrested control back. Later it faced heavy debt problems from track construction and from the cost of acquiring the Fitchburg railroad, causing a reorganization in 1919.

Beginning in the 1930s, freight business was hurt by the leveling off of New England manufacturing growth, and by new competition from trucking.

The popularization of the automobile doomed B&M as a passenger carrier. It gave up on long distance passenger service around 1960 and was able to continue Boston commuter service only by the aid of subsidies from the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority. In 1973 the MBTA bought the rolling stock and tracks near Boston from the ailing B&M. By 1976 the B&M was bankrupt, resulting in the purchase and reorganization of the B&M by Timothy Mellon's Guilford Transportation Industries in 1983.

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Current (operating) Class I railroads of North America

AMTK, BNSF, CN, CP, CSXT, FXE, KCS, NS, TFM, UP, VIA

Former or fallen flag Class I railroads of North America

ACL, AGS, ATSF, BAR, BLE, BM, BN, BO, CBQ, CG, CGW, CNTP, CNW, CO, CR, CRIP, CV, DH, DMIR, DRGW, EJE, ERIE, FEC, GMN, GMO, GN, GTW, IC, ICG, LA, LAT, LN, MEC, MILW, MKT, MP, NH, NKP, NNE, NOTM, NP, NW, NYC, PC, PLE, PM, PRR, SAL, SBD, SCL, SLSF, SOO, SOU, SP, SSW, STLH, TNO, TP, VGN, WAB, WM, WP, YMV



Mentioned In
boston maine corporation is mentioned in the following topics:
Fitchburg Railroad Company Troy & Greenfield Railroad
Troy & Boston Railroad (Fitchburg Railroad) BM
1970 in rail transport List of Connecticut railroads
List of Maine railroads List of New Hampshire railroads
List of Vermont railroads Flying Yankee
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Wikipedia information about Boston and Maine Corporation
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Boston and Maine Corporation". More from Wikipedia



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