Albany and Hudson Electric Railway

The Albany & Hudson Electric Railway was a 37 miles (60 km) long electric railway in New York State. It operated from 1899 to 1929, between Hudson and Albany; it had stops in 14 villages and at an amusement park on the shore of Kinderhook Lake.

Historical marker for the Albany-Hudson Rail Line.
Summer car by Wason Manufacturing Co.[1]

The company was set-up in 1899 by merging the following three railways:

The line was completed and inaugurated in November 1900 as the first third rail interurban line in the United States. Due to financial difficulties it was reorganized in 1909 as Albany Southern. In 1924, the line was taken over by Eastern New York Utilities Corp until being decommissioned in 1929.[2]

Much of the route of the railway became the Albany-Hudson Electric Trail, a section of the Empire State Trail, at the end of 2020.

References

  1. New Cars for Albany & Hudson Railway & Power Co. In: Street Railway Review, Vol. 10., No 10, 15 October 1900, p. 614-615.
  2. Michael Cooney: Albany & Hudson Electric Railway. In: Upstate Earth, an exploration of the past and present of the Hudson and Mohawk Valleys. 21 April 2009. Retrieved on 18 March 2018.


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