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Lexington Branch : ウィキペディア英語版
Lexington and West Cambridge Railroad

The Lexington and West Cambridge Railroad was a railroad company chartered in 1845 and opened in 1846, that operated in eastern Massachusetts, U.S.A.〔 It and its successors provided passenger service until 1977 and freight service until 1980 or early 1981.
==History==

A single track line〔''Atlas of the City of Cambridge'', Philadelphia: G.M. Hopkins & Co. (1873)〕 was constructed in 1845-46, connecting Lexington Center to the Fitchburg Railroad (now the MBTA Fitchburg Line) in West Cambridge〔The area north of the Fitchburg Line right-of-way is now included in North Cambridge, Neighborhood 11〕 (near the site of the modern Alewife Station). When the separate ''town'' of West Cambridge changed its name to Arlington in 1867, the railroad was also renamed, as the Lexington and Arlington Railroad.〔(About the Lexington Branch )〕
The Boston and Lowell Railroad purchased the line in 1870 and built a new connection (most of which would constitute a major portion of the later Fitchburg Cutoff) to their main line at Somerville Junction. The connection, from what is now the Magnolia Field-Varnum Street area in Arlington, ran through North Cambridge and West Somerville (Davis Square); a station was located at Somerville Junction, commemorated by a park near what are now Centre and Woodbine Streets.〔The park was dedicated on September 25, 2008. (【引用サイトリンク】title=City of Somerville: Park at Somerville Junction )〕 The Boston and Lowell created a subsidiary, the Middlesex Central Railroad, to build an extension from Lexington to Bedford and then Concord Center (Lowell Road), which opened in 1873.〔 The Lowell Road station was adjacent to today's Minuteman National Historical Park. A extension from Concord Center to Concord Prison (Reformatory Station on Elm Street) would give the name Reformatory Branch to the Bedford-Concord segment in 1879.〔 The branch continued another half mile further west to a junction (called "Concord Junction" or "Middlesex Junction" per different sources) with the Nashua, Acton & Boston Railroad and other rail lines.
The independent Billerica and Bedford Railroad built a connecting narrow gauge line in 1877, but went bankrupt the next year.〔(The Billerica & Bedford Railroad )〕 In 1885, the Middlesex Central purchased the right-of-way and used it to build a standard gauge extension to North Billerica from Bedford. The North Billerica-Boston segment was known as the Lexington Branch.〔
The Boston and Maine Railroad purchased all of the Boston and Lowell in 1887. According to railroad historians,〔(Archival research ) Accessed 2010-04-18〕 double-tracking from Somerville Junction to Lexington was instituted just prior to the B&M era, in 1885-86, and discontinued in 1927. Double width bridge abutments can be found in Arlington. The branch eventually ended service, as it had begun, as a single track line.
Regular service on the line used the route through Somerville Junction, via West Somerville (Davis Square) and North Cambridge, from 1870〔(''Somerville, Past and Present'' (book excerpt) ) Accessed 2008-09-13〕 until 1927,〔 at which time it reverted to the original route via the Fitchburg main line. Both routes are represented in the first chart below (with present-day highways superimposed). The branch when routed via the main line split off from it about 0.4 mile west of the West Cambridge Station, located 4.16 miles from Boston〔 at Sherman Street. The turnoff was by the once-flourishing brickyards at the site of today's Rindge Towers.〔''Survey of Architectural History in Cambridge: Northwest Cambridge'', 1977, ISBN 0-262-53032-5, Cambridge Historical Commission, Cambridge, Mass., Fig. 46, p. 35〕〔(Another source of 1930 map ) retrieved 2010-02-13〕
At one time, around the turn of the 20th century, there were 38 trains a day through Arlington,〔 a lesser number through Lexington. On April 24, 1926, passenger service ended on the Reformatory Branch, and on February 5, 1927, the remaining freight service was abandoned on the short segment between Concord Center and Reformatory Station. On December 31, 1931, passenger service on the outer Lexington Branch from Bedford and North Billerica was discontinued. Remaining services were converted from steam to diesel trains in 1956.〔 In 1958, Arlington Centre and Lake Street stations were closed due to low ridership, as bus service on Massachusetts Avenue was more frequent and often faster. By popular request, Arlington Centre was reopened in October 1965, and Lake Street in March 1968.
In 1962, the Boston and Maine abandoned both segments north and west of Bedford. It was noted at the time that the Bedford-Concord section had only seen 19 trains in 19 years.〔 http://www.branchlinepress.com〕 The town of Bedford purchased the rights of way within its boundaries in 1963.〔
By 1965, the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority was subsidizing a single daily passenger train (using Budd Rail Diesel Cars) between Boston and Bedford.〔 On December 26, 1976, the MBTA purchased the rights of way and passenger equipment from the Boston and Maine (which retained freight trackage rights). Operation of MBTA Commuter Rail was contracted at that time to the Boston and Maine, and later was awarded to other private companies.
Beginning on January 10, 1977, a snowstorm blocked the line for a few days, after which the MBTA announced it would not resume passenger service.
In 1979, the Interstate Commerce Commission gave permission for the Boston and Maine Railroad to stop running freights on the line. Common power on the branch at that time was SW # 1227. The last freight train to ply the line was hauled by a GP9, with 23 cars. According to one source〔 the final trip was in 1980, and the same year the tracks were severed from the main line. Another source〔(About the Lexington Branch )〕 gives the date of the final run as January 31, 1981.
In 1980, a federal judge ruled that the Lexington Branch must be restored after construction of the parking garage at Alewife Station over the right-of-way.〔 http://www.branchlinepress.com〕 In 1981, the MBTA entered into an agreement with the Town of Arlington to advocate that the Lexington Branch be abandoned. In return for the MBTA's support for converting the railroad to a bikeway, Arlington allowed the MBTA to use some of its land as a construction staging area for the Red Line extension project.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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