|
 |
|
 |
|
Marion
River Carry Railroad
more >>>
|
|
1911
photo by E.E. Kellogg |
 |
|
|
|
Freight
car on barge behind steamer |
|
Boardwalk
to Upper Carry |
The barges did indeed carry freight
cars full of supplies for Blue Mountain Lake, but never passenger cars.
Instead, Dr. Thomas Durant engaged a fleet of rowboats and later his son had small steamers carry the
visitors. In 1879 he had horse-drawn wagons or ox carts carrying the baggage while people walked over a
wooden boardwalk from the Lower Carry to the Upper.
By
1900 the enterprising Durant procured a
locomotive and then passenger cars for the
Marion River
Carry Railroad from the New York City Elevated Line, both now at the Adirondack
Museum. From 1900-1929 this was the shortest full-gauge railroad in the world - 3/4 mile in
length. [See Richard Allen's The
Carry Railroad]
RAQUETTE LAKE RAILWAY
 |
|
 |
|
1909
Station & Steamer dock
more >>>
|
|
H.M.
Beach photo
NY
Central spur to Raquette Lake |
From
1900-1933 New
York City visitors arrived at the Raquette
Lake station from Clearwater (Carter), by way of an 18-mile spur of the New York Central Railroad originating
in Utica, nick-named the "Millionaires' Line." The Raquette Lake
Railway carried from 8,000-10,000 passengers each season during its
heyday.
 |
|
1900
Station at Clearwater
|
Many
guests stayed at the Raquette Lake House (1903) in the village,
Hunters' Rest, Brightside-on-Raquette (1891), Sunset
Camp on Woods Point (1895), Blanchard's Wigwams on Green Point (c1880), Rush Point Camp
(1881) and the Antlers (1887). Others travelled by motor launch to their private camps on the lake.
STEAMERS
|
|
 |
| Killoquah No.
One 1879-1891 |
|
Tuscarora
1902-1929 |
Beginning
in 1879 those passengers continuing east to Blue Mountain Lake boarded the steamers
Killoquah,
Sagamore or later the double-decked
Adirondack
for the Marion River Carry. At the Upper Landing they were met by the steamers
Tuscarora, Irocosia, Utowana or
Toowahloondah for travel through Utowana and Eagle Lakes to the many camps and
hotels on the shores of Blue Mountain Lake.
Harold
K. Hochschild recounts in his book, Adirondack Steamboats on Raquette and
Blue Mountain Lakes, how the spelling of
Toowahloondah/Towahloondah varied from year to
year depending on who did the refurbishing that spring.
RAQUETTE
LAKE AUTO FERRY
 |
|
 |
|
1920s
Taking on cars at
Forked
Lake Carry |
|
1931
Rough
portage on Raquette Lake |
In the early 1900s, as automobiles became more and more popular, "driving"
was considered a new leisure pastime. In June of 1916 the New York Times
reported that:
"Traveling by automobile is the dominant sport this Summer at the
expense of trout angling, rough camping, canoeing...."
"The honk-honk of the automobile has long since
replaced the crack of the whip and the clarion notes of the tally-ho bugle on
Adirondack highways, and the horse-drawn vehicle is yearly becoming more of a
rarity."
And so another form of transport was by car ferry from
the Forked Lake Carry at the north end of the lake, eight and a half miles across beautiful Raquette Lake to
the village. In 1901 Durant put the small double-decker Lillian into
service in as a towboat for the car floats.
Ralph
M. Carmichael
June 1969
(amendeded
2004, 2006
Fay
A. Carmichael)
to Adirondack Great
Camps >>>
|