Early postcard (date unknown) of the Emporium Lumber Company's Grasse River Railroad. [RCHM Photo
Collection]
Grasse River Railroad
"The first steam-operating railroad museum in the U.S.A."

Website owned and operated by the:
Rail City Historical Museum
162 Stanley Drive
Sandy Creek, NY 13145
Robert J Groman, Owner/Curator

The Grasse River Railroad was incorporated in 1915 as an Adirondack logging and
passenger rail line of William L. Sykes and his Emporium Lumber Company located in Conifer,
New York. The Emporium Lumber Company had its beginnings in Pennsylvania but after 25
prosperous years Sykes began buying land in the Adirondack Mountains of New York owing to
the scarcity of hardwood left in Pennyslvania. The first sawmill opened in 1911 and the
corporation name for the New York operation was changed a year later to the Emporium
Forestry Corporation. The slate of officers for the new corporation consisted primarily of
Sykes's three sons: President and General Superintendent - George W. Sykes, Vice President
and General Counsel - E. J. Jones, Vice President and Sales Manager - Roy. O. Sykes,
Treasurer - W. Clyde Sykes, and Secretary - Arthur L. Owen. The Emporium Forestry
Company became the largest hardwood operation in the east with Adirondack land holdings
peaking at 125,000 acres.

The Emporium Forestry Company would not be as profitable as the Pennsylvania
operation owing to the higher costs in the Adirondacks. The company not only had the
expenses of 100 employees but that of the houses, 'school' and other buildings in Conifer,
NY. When the depression years came, Sykes was forced to sell half of his land holdings.
William L. Sykes died in 1941 and in 1945 the last major forest land parcel was sold. Where
the Sykes used to log their own timber, now the logs were brought in from the outside adding
to the cost of the operation.
The GRR reached its peak of near 100 miles of track in 1937. But there was no need for
the expenses of the railroad without the land that provided the hardwood timber. Therefore,
most of the GRR was sold in 1945 except for about two miles of track from the village of
Conifer to the New York Central Railroad station in Childwood. The remaining properties of
the Sykes hardwood kingdom, consisting of the sawmill, village of Conifer and two miles of
track, were sold to the furniture maker Heywood-Wakefied Company in 1949. The operation
continued for eight more years under Heywood-Wakefield until November, 1957 when it
closed for good.

(1) Flat Car No. 322 - weight 28,900 lbs., 36' L, 9'8" W, 4' H
(2) Flat Car No. 323 - weight 28, 900 lbs., 36' L, 9'8" W, 4' H
(3) Box Car No. 208 - weight 32,600 lbs., 37' L, 9' W, 12'1" H
(4) Passenger/Baggage Coach No. 12 - weight 40,500 lbs., 45' L, 8.5' W, 11'9" H
(5) Speeder No. 11 - built by Roy Sykes from a White Bus
(6) Rolliam - built by Roy Sykes from a Model 31 Thomas Flyer Automobile
(7) Caboose No. 71 - "Perry's Pride"
(8) Yellow Hand Car - from a building along Dead Creek Siding
(9) Three one-man patrol hand speeders
(10) An assortment of items - lanterns, whistles, jacks, railroad drill, etc.



GRR Speeder No. 11 (right) and the "Rolliam" (in front of the speeder) on display at Rail City Museum in
1956. Both of these vehicles were constructed via the creative genius of Roy L. Sykes. The Speeder was
converted from a former White bus and the Rolliam was designed and built with a discarded 1906 Thomas
Flyer Model 31 Automobile engine for power. The name "Rolliam" had the first two letters of Roy and
"lliam" for the two Williams who founded the Emporium Lumber corporations (William Sykes and William
Caflisch) . [Photo by Stanley Groman, RCHM Photo Collection]

An acknowledgement on the backside of the brochure for the "Final Steam Passenger Run
from Syracuse, NY to Lacona, NY" on June 6, 1954 paid tribute to a select group of individuals
whom Dr. Groman felt went out of their way to assist him in acquiring equipment, structures or
other items of railroad antiquity for Rail City Museum. George and Clyde Sykes of the Grasse
River Railroad in Conifer, New York were noted in that select group.