New England is home to many railroad “firsts”, but none is more impressive than the Mount Washington Cog Railway, the world’s first cog rail line. And it’s still running, at a profit, 152 years late, using some of the original equipment.
Unlike most railroads, “The Cog”
doesn’t pull its coaches along a relatively flat line with flanged wheels on
two parallel tracks. A cog railroad’s
locomotive directly connects its gears to a center rack of iron teeth, pushing
the train up the mountain very slowly, but surely.
On a normal railroad the train
can handle a two percent grade (or climb) at best. On the Mount Washington Cog the grade is as
steep as 38% as the train ascends the 6,288-foot peak over three miles of steep
track at about 3 mph.
A recent race up the mountain
between humans on foot and The Cog saw the train win the climb to the summit by
about ten seconds.
Originally proposed as a
tourist attraction by Sylvester Marsh in
1858, the entrepreneur was almost laughed out of the New Hampshire legislature
when seeking a charter, teasing him that he had as much chance of building a train
line to the top of New England’s highest peak as building “a railway to the
moon”.
But build it he did and it is
still running to this date, now owned by the Presby family who once owned the
nearby Mount Washington Hotel and Bretton Woods Resorts. Since assuming sole ownership of this
historic line, Presby has poured over $3 million of dollars into its
preservation and enhancement.
While The Cog still operates
two century-old steam locomotives, their unique design with slanting boilers
(to handle the steep pitch) requires hand-made replacement parts. These old puffers consume a ton of coal and a
thousand gallons of water on every trip while generating a lot of smoke, known
to locals as “Cog smog”.
Augmenting the two steam
powered trips each day is a fleet of biodiesels that do the journey on 18
gallons of cleaner-burning fuel. Each
locomotive pushes one passenger car carrying 70 passengers. Like the locos, the passenger cars are all
hand-crafted on the property and are adorned with beautiful wood inlays. The
newest cars also have a reassuring automatic air brake system.
During the COVID shutdown in
2020 the railway accelerated a rehab process, replacing the rails and racks on
the line and building a state-of-the-art repair shop. The five-year project was finished in eight
months.
Since its opening over 150
years ago The Cog has always attracted crowds.
Pre-COVID ridership topped 120,000 annually and with an expanded
all-year schedule they hope to surpass those numbers this year.
Unlike some railroads we know,
The Cog runs on time thanks to superb maintenance and a dedicated staff of
100. They’re even hiring new engineers
and mechanics, some of them coming from an apprenticeship program with a nearby
community college.
Summer and fall are the busy
seasons, but a wintertime climb half-way up the peak sounds spectacular, given extreme
weather conditions atop the peak where the winter wind chill gets to 50 below.
Tickets aren’t cheap, but well
worth it for the experience. Some of the
fall steam trips are already booked up. If you’re any kind of railfan, The Cog
is a must for your bucket list.
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