Highland Falls, NY
When traveling east by car or train across New York State on
occasional rail oriented safaris, talk inevitably gets around to the
"West Shore". You can see its remnants still, and its
influence on the history of railroads in New York State is a source of
interesting conversation. The sale of Conrail to CSX included the West
Shore line south from Albany to New Jersey. That line continues to be a
vital link in Northeast railroading, and ironically, is the only piece
of the West Shore that should ever have been built.
The New York, West Shore & Buffalo Railroad was formed in
1881. The financial twists and turns that led up to the formation of the
company are a story in itself. It is a story of rail barons and Wall
Street tycoons, of rough and tumble railroad men, and grandiose schemes
and speculations.
The trail west across New York State has a long history. Even
before the coming of the railroad or the Erie canal, the only natural
break in the great chain of mountains across Eastern North America south
of Canada is the water level route formed by the Hudson and Mohawk River
valleys of New York State. For eons, Native American knew of the natural
trail west to the Great Lakes. A rough road in the late 18th
Century began to be hacked out of the wilderness and the coming of the
Erie Canal truly exploited the natural trail west. Only a few years
later, railroads too would make their mark, and the huge successes the
early lines generated fueled development of more. Such was the case of
the West Shore.
The New York Central consolidated several of the smaller lines
from Albany to Buffalo in the years prior to the Civil War. Enter
Commodore Vanderbilt in 1867 and the manipulations that joined the NYC
to his Hudson River railroad, forming the mainline we know today from
New York City to Buffalo. But railroad fever had struck in the early
1880�s, and it was felt a second competing route to Buffalo following
the west shore of the Hudson River to Albany and then further west was
justified. By 1882, some $7 million had been raised for a well
engineered line. The various entanglements and perhaps somewhat shady
financial techniques used to advance the railroad in those early years,
coupled with cutthroat competition from the Central, forced the line
into bankruptcy the same month it finally reached Buffalo, January 1884.
"While the NYWS&B�s promoters were still permitted to dream,
they envisioned a splendid terminal in Buffalo of steel and pressed
brick. After the flamboyant fashion of the eighties it was to have a
clock tower, a port cochere and a train shed 600 feet long arching over
eight platform tracks."1
Soon however, the realities of two parallel railroads and a
limited amount of freight and passenger traffic forced the West Shore
deeper into ruin. At the same time a complicated series of maneuvers in
the New York Central versus Pennsylvania RR "wars" involving a
parallel railroad to the PRR named the South Pennsylvania were taking
place in the back offices and executive suites of Wall Street. Seeing
such cutthroat competition as unproductive, J.P. Morgan arranged a
meeting. On July 7, 1885, aboard Morgan�s yacht Corsair, as it
steamed up the East River to Long Island Sound the basic scheme was laid
out. In exchange for the PRR purchasing the mostly unbuilt South
Pennsylvania, the Central would acquire the West Shore line. Again
further legal entanglements ensued. In the end, the NYWS&B was sold
under foreclosure to a new West Shore corporation bankrolled by the New
York Central and leased to it for 474 years. Thus did NYC acquire a
parallel mainline from New Jersey all the way to Buffalo. After the 1930�s
Depression, the West Shore would be used primarily for freight traffic.
Since it tended to bypass major bottlenecks on the mainline, it served
as a valuable way to expedite through traffic. When needed the line
provided an alternate route if wrecks blocked the mainline, as
occasionally did occur. In Syracuse, NY the West Shore route would be
extensively rebuilt in the 1930�s as the main passenger route through
the city.
As one of the few original wooden West Shore depots still
standing, Highland Falls is a unique survivor. Vintage postcards turn up
now and then of the West Shore depots of the 1880�s. They depict a
family appearance, and in the high Victorian style of the times often
resemble popular home designs. Located just south of West Point,
Highland Falls is a great place to watch trains. CSX�s former Conrail
River Line, as it is known today, is a vital freight link between the
Albany gateway to New England and western New York and the New Jersey
gateway to all points south. And that is just as the builders of the
West Shore had envisioned over 100 years ago.

Highland Falls, NY. One of the very few still
existing classic style Victorian wood stations of the "NYWS&B"
Railroad. The line, now CSX, was Conrail, which itself played out it�s
final chapter in the continuing story of the "West Shore."
Here we catch a southbound freight on a beautiful June 9, 1998 morning.
[JCD photo.]