The Calais Branch is a mothballed railroad line in Maine that was operated by the Maine Central Railroad.
The Calais Branch is 127 miles (204 km) long and connects Brewer to Calais. It was constructed in 1898 and carried freight and passengers over the years. Passenger service was discontinued in 1957 and freight service was discontinued over the majority of the western end of the line in 1984. The line also includes a spur to Eastport which joins the Calais Branch at Ayers Junction.
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The Calais Railway was chartered in 1832 as one of the first railway charters granted by the State of Maine. Construction started in 1835. The company was reorganized as the Calais Railroad in 1838 and opened a 2 miles (3.2 km) railway from Calais to Salmon Falls in 1839. Horses pulled cars over the railway until it was abandoned in 1841. The railway was re-activated and extended to Baring in 1852 as the Calais and Baring Railroad. Lewy's Island Railroad was chartered in 1854, and extended the railway from Baring through New Brunswick to Princeton in 1857. The railway was reorganized as the Saint Croix and Penobscot Railroad in 1870. The Washington County Railroad was chartered in 1893 to take control of the Saint Croix and Penobscot and connect it to the Maine Central Railroad Bar Harbor branch at Washington Junction. The Washington County Railroad was completed in 1898, and became the Calais branch in 1911 after Maine Central gained controlling stock interest in 1904.[1]
The Calais branch was the longest of three Maine Central Eastern Division branches converging near Bangor. Trains leaving Bangor for Calais first traveled 31.5 miles (50.7 km) over the Bar Harbor branch. The Calais branch was considered to include the Bar Harbor branch after passenger service to Mount Desert Ferry was discontinued in 1937; and the first 1.2 miles (1.9 km) from Bangor to Brewer Junction have recently been considered part of the Bucksport branch.[2]
The last passenger train from Bangor to Calais ran on 25 November 1957.[3] Diesel-era freight service often used ALCO RS-2s, RS-3s and RS-11s between Bangor and Calais as long as those Maine Central locomotives remained operational. A GE 44-ton switcher working out of Calais over the light rail of the Eastport branch was believed to be the last use of that model locomotive in regularly scheduled freight service on a class I railroad until the Eastport branch was abandoned in 1978.[4] The paper mill at Woodland provided most of the traffic in the later years of operation. The mill originated or terminated over 6,000 carloads in 1973, while cumulative pulpwood and lumber loading at Ellsworth, Franklin, Cherryfield, Columbia Falls, Whitneyville, Machias, and Dennysville contributed less half that volume.[5]
The section from Brewer to St. Croix Junction is currently abandoned and was acquired by the Maine Department of Transportation (MaineDOT) in 1987 for the purpose of preserving the rail corridor. The tracks are still intact, however they and the roadbed have been sporadically maintained by the state over the past two decades and significant deterioration has occurred.
In January 2006 the 30 mi (48 km) segment of the Calais Branch from Brewer to Washington Junction, east of Ellsworth was leased by owner MaineDOT to the not for profit Downeast Rail Heritage Preservation Trust. The Trust is currently working on rehabilitation of the line to begin excursion service from Ellsworth to Green Lake that will be called the Downeast Scenic Railroad.
An isolated extreme eastern section of the Calais Branch is still in operation from St. Croix Junction to Milltown where a connection is made with the New Brunswick Southern Railway at the Milltown Railway Bridge into Canada. At St. Croix Junction the Woodland Spur continues northwest to Woodland, crossing into New Brunswick (Canada) for several miles along the way.
This operating section of the extreme eastern section of the Calais Branch and the entire Woodland Spur comprise a short, isolated section of former MEC trackage at the far eastern edge of Maine, running from a pulp mill in Woodland to the city of Calais. Once part of a much longer line that ran from Bangor to Calais, it has been cut back to the present trackage and for part of the way it runs through the neighboring province of New Brunswick, Canada where it interchanges with the New Brunswick Southern Railway. The spur is owned and operated by Pan Am Railways.