The Story of the Rome, Watertown, and Ogdensburg Railroad

audiobook

The Story of the Rome, Watertown, and Ogdensburg Railroad

by Edward Hungerford

EN·~5 hours·16 chapters

Chapters

16 total
1

THE STORY OF THE ROME, WATERTOWN AND OGDENSBURGH RAILROAD

1:33
2

PREFACE

1:59
3

CHAPTER I

4:45
4

CHAPTER II

24:11
5

CHAPTER III

45:02
6

CHAPTER IV

25:11
7

CHAPTER V

29:16
8

CHAPTER VI

33:06
9

CHAPTER VII

18:56
10

CHAPTER VIII

36:14

Description

In the early nineteenth‑century Adirondack region, a patchwork of canals, rough roads and narrow river passages left settlers and merchants yearning for faster, more reliable transport. The narrative opens with the arrival of the first locomotives in Utica, marking the moment a new era began for central and northern New York. Against this backdrop, the author traces how visionaries and local leaders rallied to connect Rome, Watertown and the distant port of Ogdensburg, sketching the rugged terrain they had to tame.

The book follows the railroad’s birth, its rapid expansion, and the optimism that accompanied each new spur and station. Illustrated with period photos and vivid anecdotes, it captures both the triumphs of early growth and the looming financial hardships that would later test the line’s resilience. Throughout, the author maintains a measured, affectionate tone, presenting facts plainly while honoring the pioneering spirit that drove the railway’s forty‑year saga.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~5 hours (332K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by David Edwards and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive.)

Release date

2012-03-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

EH

Edward Hungerford

1875–1948

A journalist and prolific American writer who turned the railroad into a subject full of motion, scale, and human effort. His books helped ordinary readers see how trains and transportation shaped everyday life in the early twentieth century.

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