Nashua, Acton and Boston Railroad
Nashua, Acton & Boston Railroad was a railroad between Nashua and Concord with commuter connections to Boston
History
In the mid-to late-1800s, question among railroads to finish the prospering business reason for joining of Boston was enraged. One of the different contenders was the Nashua, Acton and Boston Railroad, made in 1871. They amassed a rail line between Nashua, NH and Acton, MA, at which a leauge with the Framingham and Lowell Railroad was made. The NA&B inquired about Chapter 11 liquidation in the mid 1900s and was balanced as the Nashua and Acton Railroad in 1907 and ended up being a touch of the Boston and Maine Railroad.
The line fizzled and was left behind in 1925 [1]
Accidents
On a foggy December 1, 1899, Boston and Maine mixed set up No. 161 extra Nashua early night for Concord Junction in Massachusetts. The get ready had beginning late stopped at Otterson Street station in Nashua, dropping off a couple of voyagers. The plan then proceeded with plainly, to a "know-nothing" stop in a general sense past Sandy Pond where a truly respectable minimization part starts as the rail line go near Salmon Brook. Correctly when the originator stopped the get ready, taking following a moment he felt the get ready buck, finding that a broad bit of his get ready had segregated at near the station and that it had moved wholeheartedly behind the get ready. Definitely when the second half got up to speed to the straggling stays of the set up, the impact threw the brakeman off of a flatcar onto the tracks. The flatcar, by and large stacked, snapped from the drive of the impact and the cargo auto behind it rode up onto the flatcar. The brakeman was continue running over and beat to death. The elucidation behind the disaster was shown an alliance and stick drawbar being part when the get ready started up on a Delaware and Hudson Railroad compartment auto stacked with coal. [2]
References
- ^ Abandoned Rails. "Nashua and Acton Railroad".
- ^ Nashua City Station. "Boston & Maine: Worcester, Nashua & Portland Div., Acton Branch".