Train crashes, passenger
deaths, grade-crossing accidents, derailments.
These are not just the recent history of Metro-North, but events dating
back decades.
A friend of mine, Paul Zajkowsky, loves
reading the microfilms of our town’s weekly newspaper and has been feeding me
clippings of all the stories about the New Haven line. The news reports sound all too familiar.
APRIL
1939: Two lads
on their way to hunt bullfrogs are almost killed crossing the railroad tracks
near Noroton Heights.
JANUARY
1944: An empty train
heading to New Haven smashes into a stopped local train at Darien, creating an
explosion heard two miles away. The
engineer is killed and 14 passengers are injured.
FEBRUARY
1944 (and many subsequent dates): A delivery truck runs off the road at the Hoyt St crossing on
the New Canaan branch, gets caught on the tracks and drove into an oncoming
train.
JANUARY
1949: A ten-year-old
playing with a length of wire comes in contact with the 11,000-volt overhead
caternary. The resulting flash frightens
but does not harm him.
DECEMBER
1954: A Darien man
exits Ernie’s Tavern and clambers up an embankment to cross the railroad
tracks. Struck by a NY-bound express, he
suffers a broken leg.
JULY
1955: Service
has become so bad on the New Haven RR that Norman Cousins, editor of the
Saturday Review, petitions the Interstate Commerce Commission to fine the
railroad “as a hazard to public safety”. Cousins complains that trains are so
crowded that a dozen passengers must ride standing in the vestibule while
others ride in the washrooms.
JULY
1955: New
Haven RR President Patrick McGinnis tells the Norwalk Chamber of Commerce that
local commuters will now have to pay $5 a month for station parking. “I’m a businessman,” he tells them. “I’m not
the Ford Foundation”.
OCTOBER
1955: A flash flood
washes out tracks near Noroton Heights just as a 78-car freight train passes
thru at 35 mph, derailing 23 of the cars and causing $10 million in
damage. Round-the-clock repairs continue
for months.
FEBRUARY
1957: A Bridgeport man,
running to catch a train, sees it pulling out of the station and chases after
it. Grabbing the door of the last car,
he’s unable to board and falls to the tracks.
JANUARY
1958: Within hours of
each other, two locomotives catch fire in the Park Avenue tunnel, shutting down
all train service in and out of Grand Central.
JULY
1958: The AM
commute is disrupted when 11 cars of a freight train derails near Bridgeport.
DECEMBER
1958: Citing mounting
losses, the New Haven RR threatens to eliminate commuter service unless it
receives $900,000 from CT counties and gets NY to waive $1 million in taxes on
Grand Central. Railroad President George
Alpert warns “I do not propose longer to peril the New Haven RR by subsidizing
NYC, Westchester and Connecticut”. (The
NHRR goes into bankruptcy (for the second time) in 1961.)