When it was published in 1959, Hammond’s Family World Atlas, New Revised Edition, included rail lines on each of the 50 state maps. That atlas shows 5,500-square-mile Connecticut with just two railroads: The New York, New Haven & Hartford (better known simply as “the New Haven”) and Canadian National subsidiary Central Vermont Railway.
Connecticut, which had its first railroad in 1837, has been called The Land of Steady Habits. But that may not hold true for the state’s railroads. Sixty-five years after that atlas was printed, Connecticut is the same size, but the state’s list of railroad operations has grown to 13, which operate a total of 628 route-miles. Bankruptcies, mergers, abandonments, new short lines, and the creation of state and federal railroad operators all led to this expanded directory.…