Pinsly Railroad Company, based in Westfield, Massachusetts, was an American short line railroad holding company. It was one of the oldest such companies in the United States, and has owned railroads continuously since its founding in 1938. Pinsly's sole railroad subsidiary is the Pioneer Valley Railroad in Massachusetts.
History
Born in Cambridge, Massachusetts in 1899, Samuel M. Pinsly received degrees in engineering and law from Northwestern University before briefly serving in the U.S. Army during World War I. Pinsly founded his shortline operating company in 1938 with the purchase of the Hoosac Tunnel and Wilmington Railroad from his father-in-law, fellow shortline operator H.E. Salzberg. While the line was rebuilt and turned a profit, extensive line relocations due to a new dam forced the railroad to be abandoned in 1971. Pinsly went on to acquire a number of lines throughout New England and the Southeast until his death in 1977. He was succeeded by Marjorie "Maggie" Silver, one of the first women to own a railroad company in the United States. Pinsly's business development manager stated in 2022 that the company sold off its other subsidiaries to focus exclusively on the Pioneer Valley Railroad.
- Florida Central Railroad - (1986-2019)
