Pontiac's Railroad Station, Post Office, Politics, and Potholes.
A great deal of Pontiac's life during the early twentieth century
revolved around the railroad station, which was built in 1882. The
small, 1 story structure occupied the northeast corner of Greenwich
Avenue and Reed Street until 1964. It was moved at that time to 2245
Post Road, where it is had been used as a lounge at the former Great
House restaurant.
The railroad
During the 19th and early twentieth centuries, when transportation was
difficult, the railroad was very significant to Pontiac's mill and
villagers. Oliver P. Fuller, in his 1875 History of Warwick, notes,
"...in 1873, the company (B. B. & R. Knight Co.) obtained a charter
from the General Assembly to lay rails along this road from the
Hartford Railroad to their village for carrying freight and
passengers." Fuller tells us that by 1875, "The rails have been laid,
and railway communication established between this village and the rest
of the world...." While this may seem to be exaggeration, what Fuller
says is true as this was before automobiles and airplanes made us a
nation on the move.
The Rhode Island Historical Preservation Report K W 1 explains that the
railroad station "was a stop on the Pawtuxet Valley Branch Railroad, a
line which connected Pontiac to the New York, Providence and Boston
Railroad at Auburn and to the Providence, Hartford and Fishkill
Railroad at a junction north of Natick."
Freight Agent McCabe
Nearly everyone who lived in the village during the pre-World War II
era has fond memories of the station and of Jack McCabe, the freight
agent and postmaster at Pontiac. McCabe began his career early in the
1900s and continued it for half a century. For decades, one of the
prime targets at Halloween was the outhouse at the station. Trying to
turn the building over as their brothers had done was the ambition of
many a teenager during those years.
McCabe knew everyone in the village and all knew him. One of his
daughters, Monica, now Mrs. Francis O'Neill, recently noted, "I came
from an all girl family and whenever we went to our proms or got
married all the neighbors turned out to see us off in all our finery!"
As she recalled Pontiac, Mrs. O'Neill remarked, "Everyone shared in the
joys and sorrows, the highs and lows of each other's lives."
The Mayoral race of 1958
One of Pontiac’s most memorable events occurred in 1958. In that year,
the McCabes and the O'Neills attracted national attention because of
the peculiarities of the mayoral race in Warwick.. John J. McCabe, the
endorsed Democratic candidate, was opposed by his son in law Francis J.
O'Neill. McCabe had been granted leave from the railroad station in
1954 to become city clerk under Mayor Joseph Mills. When Mills decided
against running for mayor in 1956, Mc Cabe became the endorsed
Democratic candidate. As the favorite candidate, McCabe felt confident
in taking a very strong stand in favor of getting a sewerage system for
Warwick and adopting a modern zoning ordinance.
A confident McCabe was shocked when his son in law took a different
stand and opposed him. The intensity of the struggle became apparent as
O’Neill came within twenty six votes of upsetting McCabe in the
Democratic primary. The struggle and controversy between the followers
of McCabe and O’Neill seriously weakened the Democratic party.
As a result, on November 6, 1956, McCabe was defeated by a relative
newcomer in Warwick politics, Raymond E. Stone, a Republican.
Lambert Lind
The one Democratic politician who seemed to weather all Republican
victories was Lambert Lind, long time Councilman from Ward Eight.
Lind's commitment to Pontiac and Warwick's highway system has earned
him the honor of having part of Route Five called the Lambert Lind
Highway. One of the favorite stories concerning Lind was recorded in
1958. Lind was 30 minutes late in arriving at the council meeting. The
reason was that a constituent informed him of a large "pot hole" at
Central and Knight Streets in Pontiac. Lind decided it needed immediate
attention. The story says, "He rolled a couple of good sized stones
into the crater, got a shovel from his car, threw in gravel and then
ran his car wheels 'steamroller fashion' over it until the road was
fairly smooth."
The story of Pontiac will be continued.
1.
The old Railroad Station in Pontiac during the early 20th century was
not only a major stop for freight, it was also a meeting place for
Pontiac’s political leaders. Here, McCabe, O’Neill and Lind helped make
policy for the Democratic party.
From the Bob Byrnes Collection
2.
In 1964, the old station was moved to Post Road where it became part of
the Great House Restaurant. It has been beautifully restored and
returned to Pontiac.
Photo (2006) by Don D’Amato