"'Considering the large sum which the Commonwealth has already invested in this work, which must be sunk if it is not completed; the reasonable protection from loss which is offered by the other companies interested in the line; the more intimate relations it may promote between Massachusetts and the West; and the benefits which such a facility promises to the city and State, we are of opinion that the work should be undertaken by the Commonwealth, and completed as early as it can be with due regard to economy.'"
The surrender of the road by the directors to the Commonwealth, was followed by the following vote, passed January 7, 1863:—
Voted, That Mr. Stevenson, formerly State Engineer of the Troy and Greenfield Railroad, be requested to return an estimate of the payments and credits to which Haupt & Co. were entitled, under their contract, at the time of the suspension of the work, and that the amount allowed by such estimate be passed to the credit of H. Haupt & Co.; also, that the stock and bonds to which they are entitled be issued without further order, when legal impediments are removed.
Under the vote, Mr. Stevenson made the following report:—
Engineer's Office, Bunker Hill Bank Building,;}
Charlestown, Mass., Feb. 10, 1863.}
D. N. Carpenter, Esq., President, pro tem., T. & G. R. R; Co.
Dear Sir:—By a vote passed on the 7th of January last, I am requested to return an estimate of the payments and credits to which H. Haupt & Co. were entitled under their contract at the time of the suspension of the work on the Troy and Greenfield Railroad.
The contract thus alluded to recites that "The compensation to be allowed to H. Haupt & Co. shall be as provided in the resolutions of the board of directors of the Troy and Greenfield Railroad Company, passed July 10, A. D. 1857, to wit:
"The whole of the State bonds that may be issued in aid of the Troy and Greenfield Railroad Company shall be exclusively appropriated to work done, or to be done, upon the tunnel, in compliance with the terms and conditions of the Act authorizing the loan of credit; and any State scrip that may,' at any time, be delivered to the treasurer of the company shall be promptly handed to the contractors.