The Nickel Plate Challenge
Construction of the Nickel Plate required only two years.
During that time William Vanderbilt and Jay Gould watched with interest.
If either person could acquire the new road, they could control its use
and end the threat to their railroads. If the line remained independent
it would be able to establish relationships with other independent lines
and create a substantial dent in both entrepreneurs' railroad earnings.
William Vanderbilt tried to lower the value of the line by organizing a
![[photo -- click to zoom]](nptrntbl-small.jpg) |
A Nickel Plate Turntable from the early 1900s
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thorough campaign to smear its reputation before a train ever ran on the
Nickel Plate's tracks. If the plan was successful Vanderbilt could
scare the Seney Syndicate into selling the road to him or drive the company
into bankruptcy, where he could buy it in foreclosure. However, Vanderbilt's
plan came with two important risks. If he slandered the line he risked
chasing the syndicate into an alliance with Gould, who also wanted to buy
them out. The other risk was that his plan to smear the line's reputation
might fail and it would quickly grow, stunting the growth of his own roads.
Trying to ruin the reputation of a railroad that had yet to run a train
Map of the Nickel Plate Line
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was difficult. Vanderbilt claimed the road was being built with substandard
materials and would use unsafe practices once completed. He succeeded
in creating long-standing rumors about the line, but failed to devalue
the company or scare the investors.
During the summer of 1882 the costs of construction were
running higher than expected and some of the many complex relations with
other railroads, necessary to assure the Nickel Plate with facilities such
as depots and passenger stations, were not yet secured. The syndicate
negotiated with Gould to purchase the road, but unlike Vanderbilt, Gould
![[photo -- click to zoom]](nprrndhs-small.jpg) |
A Nickel Plate Roundhouse during the 1950s
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lacked the capital to purchase the railroad company outright. Gould
desperately needed to buy the line, but he lacked the resources to make
a good bid. If he succeeded he would be able to mount a formidable
challenge against Vanderbilt's railroads. Frustrated at the failing
talks, Gould broke off negotiations and gave up on his attempt to break
Vanderbilt. Three days after the road opened in late October, 1882,
Vanderbilt made an offer to buy the road and the syndicate accepted.
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