Every post card in my collection has its own story. Every Wednesday I post one of the 3,000 plus stories.
Wednesday, September 10, 2025
I Think They Liked ALCO
The two ALCO C-420 units on the front of this post card are passing in front of what was once the General Office Builing of the Lehigh & Hudson River Railway in Warwick, New York on June 11, 1976.
This excerpt of the history of the Lehigh & Hudson Railway was taken from this website; it is a good read, I recommend that you go there.
https://www.trains.com/ctr/railroads/fallen-flags/remembering-the-lehigh-hudson-river-railway-a-history/
L&HR’s origins date to 1860, when arrival of the New York & Erie Railroad (NY&E), at Greycourt, New York, 10 miles north of Warwick, prompted construction of the Warwick Valley Railroad under the leadership of Grinnell Burt. The Warwick Valley (WV) operated as a 6-foot-gauge feeder to the same-gauge NY&E, using the big road’s equipment for two decades. Around 1880, WV assumed its own operations, was standard-gauged, and built the 11-mile Wawayanda Railroad, which tapped agricultural and mineral sources at McAfee, New Jersey.
The two competitive lines were combined as the Lehigh & Hudson River Railroad, extending from a Pennsylvania Railroad connection at Belvidere, New Jersey, on the Delaware River, to Hamburg, New Jersey, where three miles of isolated Sussex Railroad track linked it to the Warwick Valley. In 1882 the extensions were folded into the 61-mile Lehigh & Hudson River Railway.
Trackage rights were obtained from the Pennsy over 13 miles of its Belvidere-Delaware Division (“Bel-Del”) to Phillipsburg, New Jersey. There, disconnected subsidiaries undertook bridging the Delaware to access Easton, Pennsylvania, and the Jersey Central and Lehigh Valley. The bridge also opened in 1890, creating a three-state route of about 85 miles. The L&HR thus fulfilled the prescient vision of the line’s 1861 directors, who reported, “It was well understood by those . . . promoting the construction of the Warwick Valley Railroad, that in all probability it would be but a link in a great chain destined to be one of the most important thoroughfares, and to effect an important influence upon the commerce and manufacturers of an extensive section of our country . . .” Additional links soon extended the chain of this “important thoroughfare.”
In 1950, it replaced 16 steam engines, including the 6-year-old 4-8-2s, with 11 Alco RS3s; two more arrived in 1951. Radio communication came in 1958. Alco’s first two production C420 diesels arrived in 1963, and seven more by mid-1966 shared assignments with the six remaining RS3s.
In 1976 the federal Regional Rail Reorganization Act that created Conrail took in most northeastern bankrupts including L&HR, and CR’s management proved as committed to abandonment of the Maybrook Gateway as PC’s had been. The former L&HR, reduced to a Conrail branch, limped along, bearing slight resemblance to its former proud, busy self as a few of the remaining C420s served a dwindling customer base. Rail movement of zinc ended in 1980, and the track between Limecrest and Belvidere was removed a few years later.
To the credit of its president, W. Gifford Moore, and trustee, John G. Troiano, L&HR paid off its creditors and entrusted its historical records to the Railroad Museum of Pennsylvania.
The post card was published by Mary Jayne Rowe's company "Mary Jayne's Railroad Specialties, Inc. When I realized that there was a numbering system (MJ629 in the stamp box) to her post cards I wrote a letter to her. I told her that I was cataloguing my post card collection and asked if she had an index of her publications she could share with me. I have 243 post cards that she published in my collection. Her beautiful response was to tell me that it was such a polite request that she sent it to me for free; all she asked was that I make a donation to a local charity. I made a donation to "Feeding Hungry Minds" endowment fund that provides funds for feeding free lunches in schools.
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