Commuting
is nothing new to Nutmeggers. But to appreciate our current challenges in
“getting there”, consider what it was like centuries ago.
As
early as 1699 roads had been laid out on routes still used today. But where today those roads are now lined
with trees, in the mid-1700’s those trees were gone as most of southern
Fairfield county had been cleared to allow for farming.
In
the 1770’s the maintenance of Country Road (now known as The Boston Post Road)
was the responsibility of the locals.
Every able bodied man and beast could be drafted for two days each year
to keep the roads in good shape. But
traffic then consisted mostly of farm carts, horses and pedestrians.
At
the end of the 18th century it was clear that Connecticut needed
more roads and the state authorized more than a hundred privately-funded toll
roads to be built. Yes, friends… toll roads are part of our DNA.
The deal was that, after building the road and
charging tolls, once investors had recouped their costs plus 12% annual
interest, the roads were revert to state control. Of the 121 toll-road franchises authorized by
the legislature, not one met that goal.
One
of the first such toll roads was the original Connecticut Turnpike, now Route 1,
the Boston Post Road. Another was the Norwalk
to Danbury
‘pike, now Route 7.
On
the Post Road four toll gates were erected:
Greenwich, Stamford, the Saugatuck River Bridge and Fairfield. No tolls were collected for those going to
church, militia muster or farmers going to the mills. Everyone else paid 15 cents at each toll barrier,
about $4 in today’s money!
The
locals quickly found roads to bypass the tolls which were nicknamed
“shun-pikes”. Sound familiar?
Regular
horse-drawn coaches carried passengers from Boston to NY.
And three days a week there was a coach from coastal towns to Stamford,
connecting to a steamboat to New York.
The
last tolls were collected in 1854, shortly after the New York & New Haven
Railroad started service. An early
timetable showed three trains a day from Stamford to NYC, each averaging two
hours and ten minutes. Today Metro-North
makes the run in just under an hour.
The
one way fare was 70 cents vs. today’s $15.25 at rush hour.
In
the 1890’s the one-track railroad was replaced with four tracks, above grade, thereby
eliminating street crossings.
In
the 1890’s the trolleys arrived. The
Stamford Street Railroad ran up the Post Road connecting with the Norwalk
Tramway; the latter also offered open-air excursion cars to the Roton Point
amusement park in the summer.
Riders
could catch a trolley every 40 minutes for a nickel a ride. There were so many trolley lines in the state
that it was said you could go all the way from New York to Boston, connecting
from line to line, for just five cents apiece.
The
trolleys were replaced by buses in 1933.
Fast
forward to the present where we are still debating tolls on our roads, possible
trolley service in Stamford and T.O.D. (“transit oriented development”) is all
the rage. Have things really changed
that much over two hundred years?
Posted with permission of Hearst CT Media
No comments:
Post a Comment