The directors also voted as they had previously done, to rescind all the assessments heretofore voted, except the assessment of three per cent. laid April 11, 1849, and then voted an assessment of ten per cent. upon each and every share in the capital stock of the company, payable in thirty days. Between this date and September 14, 1859, nine other assessments were voted, the whole amounting to eighty-eight per cent. of the par value of the stock.
By another entry upon the records, under date of November 3, 1858, it appears that Williamstown and Adams subscribed to the capital stock of the Troy and Greenfield Railroad, ninety-three thousand dollars, upon condition that the payment should be made in town scrip, maturing in thirty years, and to be issued whim the road was completed between Adams and Troy; half the interest on the scrip to be paid by the Troy and Boston Railroad Company. Mortgage bonds of the Troy and Greenfield Railroad Company, in amount equal to said subscription, were to be deposited in the Adams Bank as security against loss of stock from such a contingency as a sale of the road by the bona fide holders.
Immediately following this entry upon the records are recorded these votes:—
Voted, To accept the subscription on the condition stated, that the contract with the Troy and Boston Railroad Company be altered to allow said company to pay the interest on the scrip directly to the treasurers of the towns; that bonds to the amount of ninety-three thousand dollars be prepared ready for delivery, and that Mr. Haupt and the treasurer be a committee to carry this vote into effect, as also any change of contract with the Troy and Boston Railroad Company.
Voted, That the trustees of the mortgage bonds of this corporation be, and hereby are, requested to deliver to Mr. H. Haupt and the treasurer, ninety-three bonds of one thousand dollars each, to be deposited by them in the Adams Bank, in compliance with the conditions and requirements of the votes of towns of Adams and Williamstown, &c., &c.; sixty bonds to be appropriated as security for Adams, and thirty-three for Williamstown.
Under date of May 20, 1859, appears the following record:—
Whereas, satisfactory evidence has been afforded to the board of directors of the Troy and Greenfield Railroad Company that H. Haupt has, by an instrument of writing, duly executed, formally relinquished, for himself, his heirs, executors and administrators, all pecuniary interest in any profits that may be realized in the construction of the Troy and Greenfield Railroad and Hoosac Tunnel, and that the use of his name in connection with the firm is merely nominal, to avoid the inconvenience and embarrassment resulting from a change of title:
Voted, That in the opinion of this board, no impediment exists to prevent the said H. Haupt from performing the duties of chief engineer of the Troy and Greenfield Railroad Company, and that he be, and hereby is, appointed to said office.
1859, December 26. Voted, That the treasurer be, and hereby is, directed to hand over to H. Haupt & Co., as soon as received by him, the bonds of the Commonwealth, hereafter to be issued in aid of the road or tunnel, taking their receipt therefore.
In 1859, application was made to the legislature to reduce the size of the tunnel in order to facilitate its completion, and by chapter 117, of the Acts of that year, it was provided that the tunnel might be constructed of the height of eighteen feet, and fourteen feet wide, and the payments were changed so as to depend upon the construction of the railroad, the excavation of the tunnel, and also of the heading, which was to be driven of the width of fourteen feet at the bottom, and the height of six feet in the middle, with a proviso that no more than seventeen hundred thousand dollars (in addition to the six hundred thousand dollars of scrip,) of stock subscriptions, and the anticipated scrip from the towns before, mentioned, all of which was to be considered as unconditional subscriptions, should be paid until the whole of the tunnel through the Hoosac Mountain shall have been completed, and the payments by the State were not to commence until twenty per cent. of the stock subscription should "have been actually paid in." The provisions of this Act, in regard to advances by the State for progress actually made in excavating the tunnel and constructing the road, were substituted for those of the Act of 1854, the second section of which was repealed. By chapter 184 of the Acts of 1860, the city of Boston was authorized, with the consent of the legal voters, to subscribe five hundred thousand dollars to the capital stock of the Troy and Greenfield Railroad; but the consent was not given.