Yes, the right of way in this video was originally the standard gauge Atlantic & St. Lawrence Railroad, and later become the Grand Trunk Railroad. Portland never had any original 2-footer lines. The most prominent 2-footer lines in Maine were the Monson Railroad, the Sandy River & Rangely Lakes Railroad, the Bridgton & Saco River Railroad, and the Wiscasset, Waterville & Farmington Railroad. Most of these were logging RRs, but they also had passenger and general freight services in their heyday.
awesome video 5*****
dutchtrainmanserie22 2 years ago
IS this rebuilt trackage? Where in ME did they 2 footers run?
CPR3716 2 years ago
Yes, the right of way in this video was originally the standard gauge Atlantic & St. Lawrence Railroad, and later become the Grand Trunk Railroad. Portland never had any original 2-footer lines. The most prominent 2-footer lines in Maine were the Monson Railroad, the Sandy River & Rangely Lakes Railroad, the Bridgton & Saco River Railroad, and the Wiscasset, Waterville & Farmington Railroad. Most of these were logging RRs, but they also had passenger and general freight services in their heyday.
maineboy1979 2 years ago
wow thats really narrow
acelaboy123 2 years ago
It certainly is! 2 feet from rail to rail.
maineboy1979 2 years ago
It looks like a tractor haha, it's cute XD
MclarencarV 2 years ago