We all dream about traveling first class. Big comfy seats, real food and free drinks. This is the only way to fly.
But did you know that there used to be a handful of private, first-class “club cars” on the New Haven Railroad’s commuter trains? Among the most legendary was one that ran from New Canaan from 1908 to 1976, car # 5113.
Fortunately, the New Canaan Historical Society has preserved all of the original paperwork for private club known as “The New Canaan Car” (NCC). And the story is fascinating.
The plush custom-built car carried about 60 passengers, half the load of a regular coach. The car had its own buffet from which an attendant, Willie Spaulding (who worked for 26
Attendant Willie Spauling at Christmas |
years), dispensed continental breakfast in the morning and poured adult beverages in the evening.
Pulled on train #331 in the morning, the private car left New Canaan at 7:43 am, arriving at Grand Central by 8:48. The return run on train #332 left at 5:09 pm and was back in New Canaan by 6:15.
Membership was not cheap. In 1966 initiation fees were $200 and the monthly surcharge was $100, not including the price of the ticket. By 1974 the NCC was paying Penn Central $69,300 a year to haul its private car.
Over the years I had heard rumors about this railroad “unicorn”… often reported but seldom seen. And one of the rumors was that this gentlemen’s club did not allow women members. Not so from reading their By Laws. But neither did their membership directory ever show a female’s name as far as I could find.
Members were allowed to bring guests (even women!) with permission of all other
Interior of The New Canaan Car |
members. And the NCC was famous for its birthday parties and holiday fests. One set of minutes went into great detail about the BYO liquor cabinet which used to operate on the honor system but which by 1968 needed a lock and key.
Memberships in the NCC were handed down from father to son but there was no apparent waiting list. In 1972 the Membership Committee was asking members to help identify “goodly and likely candidates” to replace retirees.
After the bankruptcy of the New Haven RR, Penn Central took over and the railroad raised its hauling fees. Even though many of the NCC’s members were CEO’s of companies doing a lot of freight business with Penn Central, the railroad didn’t care. It was broke.
The arrival of Metro-North saw the railroad convert from old, heavyweight cars pulled by locomotives to the all-electric M2’s, and this marked the end of the line for the NCC.
In 1976 Metro-North parent MTA said it was willing to rebuild a Bar Car just for the NCC; but at a cost of $70,000, that seemed too rich even for the New Canaan crowd. Worse yet, then-Governor Ella Grasso said the state should not subsidize millionaire commuters in private cars.
The last run of the NCC’s private car was April 1st 1976. When the train arrived in New Canaan at 6:15 pm, the party continued ‘til 8. The next day members stripped the car of all its furnishing (which were owned by the club), including 64 chairs, six bridge tables and three smoke stands (ashtrays) which went into storage. By 1979, the furniture storage fees had drained the NCC’s treasury and after 71 years, the club was dissolved… a sad end to such an illustrious history.
Posted with permission of Hearst CT Media.
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