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From the Cortland Democrat of Cortland, NY Friday, March 7, 1924
Many Wooden Trestles and Much Snow Forced Midland to Quit 45 Years Ago
Announcement was made in the Cortland Democrat on
Dec. 20, 1878, that the New York and Oswego Midland railroad would
abandon its line from Norwich to DeRuyter on Jan. 1, 1879, unless
it was snowed in sooner. Mention is made in January of shipments made
at DeRuyter by Otselic businessmen and farmers "since the Midland
quit running", but some of the oldtimers connected with the road
recall that the Midland continued in business until February, and
that trains ran until the road was snowed in. The Midland was in financial
difficulty and was reorganize as the New York, Ontario & Western.
Driving from DeRuyter over Crumb Hill and through the
town of Otselic, one would hardly think it ever was a railroad route. In
summer it is not difficult to keep in view the embankments and cuts of the
former railroad as one drives along the highway. In such weather as this
section has had in the past two weeks, the prospector would encounter some
of the difficulties that discouraged the managers of the old Midland in the
winter of 1879, snow and much of it.
Snow, however, was not the greatest perplexity of the
railroad company. Between DeRuyter and Norwich there were 14 or 15 wooden
trestles, long and high, that were costly to maintain. It was only by
building such trestle that a railroad could be possible. Ira Goodsell of
South Otselic told The Democrat of a picture of the trestle at Otselic
Center, and the one from which the accompanying cut was made was found
in the possession of Truman Duncan, who was willing to lend it. Mr. Duncan's
house stands not far from the spot where the railroad bank ended and this
trestle began. As a young fellow he cut stakes when the structure was put up,
and remembers it's beginnings, its nearly 10 years of use, and then its
abandonment, and how it was taken down and the timbers removed.
Trestle 700 Feet Long
The trestle was 43 feet high and 700 feet long and the
picture shows how it curved between the two sides of the valley crossing.
Not far from Mr. Duncan's house, near the west end of the trestle, was
the Otselic Center railroad depot, where M.E. Tallett, now of DeRuyter,
began his career as station agent in 1873. The freight house was an immense
structure and Mr. Tallett did a bug business for himself as a side line,
amounting to $25,000 a year. In the old days the railroad agents usually
were the coal and feed dealers of the small towns.
Mr. Tallett can tell many interesting stories of his
experiences as station agent at Otselic Center. The Auburn branch of the
Midland ran from Norwich to DeRuyter and thence through Cortland and
Freeville to Scipio in Cayuga county. There were two trains each way daily,
and in summer there were many excursions from Norwich to Scipio. It was 29
miles by rail from DeRuyter to Norwich, and at Otselic he sold tickets to
DeRuyter for 33 cents and to Norwich for 55 cents, at three cents a mile.
Mr. Tallett had been teaching school when a young man
and one day was approached by the supervisor of Otselic, Sprague Barber,
with the suggestion that he take the job as station agent. He had no
knowledge of telegraphy but the company sent him Silas Blanchard, of
DeRuyter as operator, and from him he learned the art. Mr. and Mrs. Tallett
were married in 1874 and in two weeks Mrs. Tallett had learned telegraphy
and in four weeks was appointed operator.
Fuel for Wood Burners
One of Mr. Tallett's duties as agent was to procure the
railroad¹s supply of fuel for its locomotives, which were the old wood-burners.
Choppers worked throughout the week on Crumb Hill, cutting the wood. Saturday
afternoon a string of flat cars would be hauled to the hill for loading on
Sunday when no trains were running. Mr. Tallett superintendent this job and
had the loaded cars run by gravity down the grade onto the switch at his
station. He recalls how a carload of sand got away on the Crumb Hill summit
one day and went down the grade into DeRuyter and as far as Cuyler before it
stopped. Dick Lewis made the wild ride in the car.
W.C. Hartigan was operator at Norwich while Mr. Tallett
was at Otselic. Mr. Hartigan continued with the Midland on its main line
after the Auburn branch was abandoned. He was superintendent of the Northern
division thirty years, until he retired Nov. 1, 1923, after 55 years of
railroading with one company. In December a party of thirty O.&W. employees
went to Mr. Hartigan's home in Norwich and presented him a purse of $750 in gold.
When the Midland gave up the struggle with the deep snow
and high trestles in 1879, Mr. Tallett went to DeRuyter and got himself a
job as operator and later agent with the Utica, Ithaca & Elmira, running
from Canastota to Elmira. The road from Cazenovia to DeRuyter had been built
quite recently making the connecting link that completed what is now the
E.&C. branch of the Lehigh Valley.
Mr. Tallett, speaking of the daily milk trains on today's
railroads, told how dairy products used to be shipped, the butter and cheese
of the farms and factories. When he began his work at the DeRuyter station,
Mondays and Thursdays were the butter and cheese days, and there was from
one to five carloads each shipping day.
The Auburn branch of the Midland was one of the few roads
built among the many that were projected and for which towns were bonded.
In the early seventies the trestles were built of 12 by 12 hemlock, cut
from the hills nearby and only the pine had to be shipped in. Today, concrete
and iron would be used, but the cost would be so great that not even the
men who had the nerve to bond towns and run railroads on wooden trestles
would dare venture to raise the money.
Cortland Railroad Men
There are men around Cortland today who had a hand in
opening that part of the railroad that runs between Cortland and DeRuyter.
Dr. C. H. Webster was located at East Homer when the road was built and
the contractors had their horses shod and their wagons repaired in his shop.
Henry Bliss was an employee of the contractors of the railroad, and R.D.
Buckingham, now running the Buckingham Hotel north of Homer, is another
who worked on the road while it was being built and for it after it got started.
The stations on the abandoned road between DeRuyter and
Norwich were Crumb Hill, Otselic, Beaver Meadow, Lower Beaver Meadow,
Plymouth and Frinkville. The first and last named were flag stations;
the others regular railroad towns. Stage lines were started again when
the railroad quit and in the Democrat files of the weeks following are
announcements that William Graham was operating a stage every other day
between DeRuyter and Norwich. J. Crandall's stage made trips from Norwich
to Beaver Meadow, and Simeon Crumb carried passengers, mail and freight
from Beaver Meadow to South Otselic.


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