By the legislation of 1862 and 1863, and the vote of the directors and of the corporation in the same years, the corporation surrendered to the State the road and tunnel, and the State took possession of the same with the express understanding on both sides, that they would proceed in the construction and completion of both works. The enterprise having fallen into the hands of the State, and the work having been assumed by the State government, no further vote of importance appears upon the records of the directors. Their last meeting was held August 30, 1865, when Alvah Crocker was chosen President, and Wendell T. Davis, Clerk and Treasurer.
Principal Acts of the Legislature relating to the Hoosac Tunnel and Troy and Greenfield Railroad.
[1848—Chapter 307.]
An Act to incorporate the Troy and Greenfield Railroad Company.
Be it enacted, &c.
Sect. 1. George Grennell, Roger H. Leavitt, Samuel H. Reed, their associates and successors, are hereby made a corporation, by the name of the Troy and Greenfield Railroad Company, with all the powers and privileges, and subject to all the duties, liabilities, and restrictions set forth in the forty-fourth chapter of the Revised Statutes, and in that part of the thirty-ninth chapter thereof relating to railroad corporations, and in all other general laws which have been, or shall be hereafter passed, relative to railroad corporations.
Sect. 2. Said company are hereby authorized to locate, construct, and maintain a railroad, with one or more tracks, from some convenient point on the Vermont and Massachusetts Railroad, at or near the termination of said railroad in Greenfield, through any or all of the following towns, viz.:—Greenfield, Deerfield, Conway, Shelburne, Buckland, Coleraine, Charlemont, Hawley, Rowe, and Monroe, in the county of Franklin, and Savoy, Florida, Adams, Clarksburg, and Williamstown, in the county of Berkshire, to some point on the line of the state of New York or of Vermont, convenient to meet, or connect with, any railroad that may be constructed from any point at or near the city of Troy, on the Hudson river, in the state of New York.