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Belfast and Moosehead Lake Railroad (2009)

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Belfast and Moosehead Lake Railroad
BML trains resting in Unity Yard (2020)
Overview
HeadquartersUnity, Maine
Reporting markBML
LocaleWaldo County, Maine
Dates of operation2009–present
PredecessorMaine Central Railroad Co., Belfast Branch (Under lease, 1871–1925)
Belfast and Moosehead Lake Railroad Co. (1926–2007)
Technical
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Length30.57 miles (49.20 km)
Other
Websitebelfastandmooseheadlakerail.org/portal/index.php
Route map

33.07
Burnham Junction
Sebasticook River
29.34
Winnecook (Unity Pond)
24.95
Unity
22.61
Common Ground Country Fair
21.40
Thorndike
18.47
Knox
14.07
Fobes (Former siding)
12.27
Brooks
7.15
Waldo
2.50
City Point Center Yard and Museum
0
railbanked segment

The Belfast and Moosehead Lake Railroad (operated as the Belfast and Moosehead Lake Railway from 2009 to 2012) is a subsidiary of the Brooks Preservation Society (BPS), a not-for-profit organization established in 2008 to protect and preserve historic rail transportation infrastructure and assets located within Waldo County, Maine.[1]

History

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Following the announcement in February 2008 of the formal demise of the original 1867-chartered Belfast and Moosehead Lake Railroad Company (1871–2007) by its then-private not-for-profit operator, the Belfast & Moosehead Lake Railroad & Preservation Society based in Unity, Maine, the BPS was incorporated as an all-volunteer non-profit 501(c)(3) organization to purchase the MEC-built 1892 B&MLRR station house in Brooks (MP 12.27) to save and preserve it as an historic railroad structure.[2][3]

No. 53 (left) and No. 50 (right) at City Point in 2012.

In the months that followed, the BPS acquired several pieces of surviving B&MLRR rolling stock including the road's two still operating 1940s vintage 70-short-ton (63-long-ton; 64 t) GE diesel-electric locomotives: BML#50 that had been bought new by the road in November 1946 to provide the line the first non-steam power to ever operate over its 33-mile (53 km) grade from Belfast to Burnham Junction, and BML#53 that had been acquired by the BML in 1970 from Vermont's Montpelier and Barre Railroad.[4][5][6] A track inspection car, open-air observation car, 1926-vintage ex-DL&WRR Pullman-built chair car, ex-MEC stainless steel coach/cafe car, and an ex-MEC caboose were later added to the equipment roster.

No. 50 (left) and No. 53 at City Point.

In February 2009, the BPS entered into a lease agreement with the Maine Department of Transportation (MDOT) to operate over the State-owned 30-mile (48 km) portion of BML grade running inland from the Belfast/Waldo town line (MP 3.14) to Burnham Junction (MP 33.07) and early that July began operating weekend excursion trains between Brooks (MP 12.27) and Waldo (MP 7.15).[7] The following November the BPS leased the remaining three miles (4.8 km) of grade within the Belfast city limits between the Belfast/Waldo town line and the Penobscot McCrum property line under the US Rt. 1 bridge from its still then owner, Unity Property Management (UPM).[8] This permitted the BPS to establish regular seasonal excursion service from the Upper Bridge (MP 1.2) to Waldo.

In July 2010, the City of Belfast purchased the UPM-owned portion of the grade within the city limits in order to preserve the corridor and with the intention of developing it as a public multi-use rail trail.[9] While exploring how to design and finance such a rail trail, however, the City also agreed to continue to lease that portion of the grade during the interim on a year-to-year basis to the BPS to operate seasonal trains inland from its Upper Bridge station.[10][11]

BML#3248 at City Point station where operations were moved in 2013

After two seasons of operations from the Upper Bridge, however, the City cancelled the lease with the BPS in October 2012, and four months later formally applied to the Surface Transportation Board of the US Department of Transportation and the US Department of the Interior for permission under the National Trails System Act (16 USC§1241 et seq.) to "railbank" their portion of the grade from the Belfast waterfront at Pierce Street up to the turnout to the privately owned City Point Central Railroad Museum at MP 2.5 next to the Oak Hill Road grade crossing.[12][13][14]

The completed "Passy Rail Trail" converted BML grade near the Beavertail at MP 1.3 (July, 2016)

The loss of the lease with the City forced the BPS to relocate the railroad's excursion train service in 2013 to the 19th century station house at the City Point Museum site, a property which the BPS subsequently purchased from its long-time private owner.[15][16] The remaining 0.64 miles (1.03 km) of City-owned grade from the City Point turnout to the Belfast/Waldo town line as well as the 30 miles (48 km) of State-owned grade beyond continues to be available to the B&MLRR over which it now operates its scheduled seasonal weekend excursion service from the City Point station to the bogs beyond Waldo, as well as other special event runs and group charters over that and other parts of the line.[17]

In late September 2014, the City began the process of pulling up and scrapping the grade's over 300 short tons (268 long tons; 272 t) of late 19th and early 20th century rolled 75-pound-per-yard (37.2 kg/m) steel rail, spikes, tie plates, sleepers, and other materials.[18][19] Between May and September 2016 extensive grading, paving, installation of railings and other physical upgrading work was undertaken along the corridor to complete its conversion to a formal pedestrian and bike trail called the "Passy Rail Trail".[20][21][22]

As of 2018, operations have since been moved to their current location, Unity, Maine, while City Point Center Yard and Station is now used as a storage area to store their equipment. Passenger trains depart at 11 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. These trains generally head west past Unity Pond, through the Burnham Bog, and then reverse back to Unity Station and Depot. Eastbound trains will terminate either at the Maine Organic Farmers and Gardeners Association Station in Thorndike, ME, or Farwell General Store, also located in Thorndike. Trains run nearly year round, with the winter season picking up in late February, and running through the winter holiday season.[23][24]

Rail Bike rides are also operated in conjunction with normal trains, only during the summer season. These are pedal-powered carts that ride the rails, with accommodations for two riders per bike along with a baggage compartment.[25]

Over the course of 2018–2021, the BML began acquiring several new pieces of Maintenance of Way equipment. Much was purchased through auction, along with in coordination with the Canadian Pacific Railway in Derby, ME. (Formerly the Central Maine and Quebec Railway). The railroad has been host to many elderly machines from the Bangor and Aroostook Railroad, Montreal, Maine and Atlantic Railway, Canadian American Railroad, and also CSX Transportation. Much of which has been repaired and refurbished for mainline operation, and has aided in tie renewal efforts by the BML, along with the Maine State DOT. Recent achievements include tie renewal to the point of trackage being FRA Class 1 conditions from the line's western terminus at Burnham Junction, to Thorndike Yard, the location of one of the town's former chicken feed mills, ditching and culvert replacement along the entire rail corridor, tree clearing to allow for safe passage of trains, the full restoration of one former Maine Central Railroad Pullman passenger car, along with a Swedish State Railways dining car, the near full rebuild of BML locomotive 53, and replacement and repair of several grade crossings.

Equipment

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Locomotive details[4][5][6]
Number Builder Type Build date Status
50 General Electric 70-ton switcher 12/1946 Operational
53 General Electric 70-ton switcher 01/1947 Undergoing repairs
51 General Electric 70-ton switcher 12/1946 Display
1483 EMD GP9 01/1959 Operational
1950 General Electric 44-ton switcher 06/1950 Operational
7926 General Electric 45-ton switcher 03/1944 Operational
1524 EMD MP15 01/1982 Owned by Maine Switching Services
1585 EMD GP9u 05/1955 Operational owned by LTEX
8231 EMD GP9u 02/1958 Operational owned by LTEX
3902 EMD GP39-3M (rebuilt GP35) 02/1964 Operational owned by LTEX
1555 EMD GP9u 07/1956 Operational owned by LTEX

References

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  1. ^ "Belfast & Moosehead Lake Railroad Excursions". BrooksPreservation.org. Archived from the original on September 22, 2012.
  2. ^ Staples, Beth (February 5, 2008). "End of the line for the B&MLRR". The Republican Journal.(subscription required)
  3. ^ Davis, Jay (August 7, 2008). "Brooks group buys railroad station". The Republican Journal.(subscription required)
  4. ^ a b Fuller, Steve (October 5, 2008). "Brooks Preservation Society continuing to make tracks". The Republican Journal.(subscription required)
  5. ^ a b Fuller, Steve (December 1, 2008). "Rail revival continues in Brooks". The Republican Journal.(subscription required)
  6. ^ a b Cooper, Bruce C. "A Surviving Shortline Contemporary of the Central Pacific Railroad: The Belfast & Moosehead Lake Railroad". BMLRR.com.
  7. ^ Stickney, Ben (August 19, 2009). "Preservationists reviving Waldo County rail one tie at a time". The Republican Journal.(subscription required)
  8. ^ Andrews, Ethan (November 3, 2009). "Brooks rail group picks up a little more track". The Republican Journal.(subscription required)
  9. ^ Andrews, Ethan (June 30, 2010). "Council approves rail corridor purchase". The Republican Journal.(subscription required)
  10. ^ Andrews, Ethan (May 28, 2011). "Belfast Moosehead Lake Railway back in Belfast pretty much". The Republican Journal.(subscription required)
  11. ^ Holbrook, Ben (June 27, 2012). "Council continues to explore rail banking former rail corridor". The Republican Journal.(subscription required)
  12. ^ "National Trails System Act (16 U.S.C. 1247(d)(e))". Cornell University Law School; Legal Information Institute.
  13. ^ Holbrook, Ben (October 9, 2012). "City to terminate lease with Brooks Preservation Society". The Republican Journal.(subscription required)
  14. ^ Holbrook, Ben (February 9, 2013). "City approves banking portion of rail corridor". The Republican Journal.(subscription required)
  15. ^ Holbrook, Ben (July 9, 2013). "Brooks Preservation Society to buy City Point Station". The Republican Journal.(subscription required)
  16. ^ Cooper, Bruce C. "2013 Images of City Point and Upper Bridge stations". Digitalimageservices.com.
  17. ^ "B&MLRR Services & Rates". BrooksPreservation.org. Archived from the original on September 22, 2012.
  18. ^ "Example of 1896 steel 75 lb rail in place on the Belfast & Moosehead Lake Railroad grade". Archived from the original on September 3, 2014.
  19. ^ Bailey, Jordan (August 14, 2014). "Rail removal set to begin for future Passy Rail Trail". The Republican Journal.(subscription required)
  20. ^ Holbrook, Ben (January 23, 2013). "Council whittles down rail trail design options". The Republican Journal.(subscription required)
  21. ^ Holbrook, Ben (June 1, 2013). "Rail trail construction to cost about $600,000". The Republican Journal.(subscription required)
  22. ^ "Posted: Belfast rail trail closed; city pushes to open by summer". The Republican Journal. May 4, 2016.(subscription required)
  23. ^ "RailCyclers". Railcyclers.com.
  24. ^ "The Scenic Train Ride In Maine That Runs Year-Round". Only in Your State.com.
  25. ^ "RailCyclers". Railcyclers.com.
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