Vintage Train Excursion Steams Through Connecticut River Valley
To view our videos, you need to
enable JavaScript. Learn how.
install Adobe Flash 9 or above. Install now.
Then come back here and refresh the page.
Visitors to the Connecticut River Valley this summer can get a taste of old time travel. NY1's Valarie D'Elia filed the following report.There's no mistaking the Essex Steam Train for your regular commute, but some of the vintage cars - as much as 100 years old - were part of the daily grind in New Jersey while the Great Republic had a more graceful life as one of New Haven Railroad’s premier express trains.
"Very few places where you can actually experience what it was like to ride behind a train pulled by a living, breathing, steam locomotive," says Essex Steam Train Conductor Paul Goodman.
One of those places is about a two hour drive from New York City where you will find the Essex Steam train chugging and hugging the pretty Connecticut River Valley.
"I’ve never been on a train that old, I’m used to MTA trains," says Train Passenger Sankha Ghatak.
One of the many options the steam train offers is a riverboat combo, connecting at Deep River Landing where the Becky Thatcher glides across a portion of the Connecticut River.
"It’s actually a little bit longer than the Hudson River by about a hundred miles and much less developed," says Riverboat Captain Paul Costello.
Popular with children and families, the boat passes sites such as Goodspeed Opera House, a breeding ground for Broadway shows and the remains of Gillette Castle, a former residence of actor William Gillette, now a state park.
The Essex Steam Train and Riverboat is a two and a half hour combo tour. It runs three times a day through Labor Day costing $26 for adults and $17 for kids 2 to 11.
For more information, visit www.essexsteamtrain.com.