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Cumberland Valley Railroad

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Early railroad in Pennsylvania, U.S.

Cumberland Valley Railroad
Map
CVRR station and offices in Chambersburg, Pennsylvania
Overview
HeadquartersChambersburg,Pennsylvania, U.S.
Reporting markCVRR
LocaleU.S. states ofPennsylvania,Maryland,Virginia andWest Virginia
Dates of operation1837–1919
SuccessorPennsylvania Railroad
Technical
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm)standard gauge
CVRR route map in 1919

TheCumberland Valley Railroad (reporting markCVRR)[1] was an early railroad inPennsylvania, United States, originally chartered in 1831 to connect with Pennsylvania'sMain Line of Public Works. Freight and passenger service in theCumberland Valley in south central Pennsylvania from nearHarrisburg toChambersburg began in 1837, with service later extended toHagerstown, Maryland, and then extending into theShenandoah Valley toWinchester, Virginia.[2][page needed] It employed up to 1,800 workers.[3]

During theAmerican Civil War the line had strategic importance in supplying Union troops in the Shenandoah Valley. It also ran the first passengersleeping car in the U.S. on the Chambersburg-Harrisburg route in 1839.[4][5] ThePennsylvania Railroad (PRR) gained control of the CVRR as early as 1859, and officially purchased it on June 2, 1919. The PRR's successor, thePenn Central, closed all railway facilities in Chambersburg in 1972 and its successor,Conrail, abandoned major pieces of the line in 1981.

History

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The Cumberland Valley Railroad Company was chartered by the Pennsylvania Legislature on April 2, 1831, to construct a railroad fromCarlisle to a point on theSusquehanna River at or near Harrisburg. This charter expired, but it was renewed on April 15, 1835, allowing the road to be built from the Susquehanna River to Chambersburg. On June 27, 1835,Thomas Grubb McCullough was elected as the first President of the road, and in August, William Milner Roberts was selected as Chief Engineer.

The initial cost of building the road, including a bridge across the Susquehanna, was estimated before construction at $564,064, and the average annual receipts of the road at $284,617.50, calculated at 100 passengers each way per day at 3 cents per mile, and 35,000 tons of through freight and 51,950 tons of local freight, at 4½ cents per ton per mile. $642,000 was raised by local stock subscription and construction began in the Spring of 1836.[2][page needed]

The railroad opened for travel from White Hill, near Harrisburg to Carlisle in August 1837, and through to Chambersburg in November, 1837. The first locomotive, built byWilliam Norris inPhiladelphia, had two driving wheels, wooden spokes, and was named "Cumberland Valley,"

The passenger cars carried 14 passengers each and were bought used from thePhiladelphia and Columbia Railroad, according to the 1887 "History of Franklin County Pennsylvania." The railroad track was constructed of cross ties laid 4.5 feet (1.4 m)apart without ballast, with 5 in × 9 in (130 mm × 230 mm) oak stringers serving as rails. Iron bar, 0.625 inches (15.9 mm) thick by 2.25 inches (57 mm) wide, was spiked to the top of the stringers. When service began to Chambersburg, the iron was not laid for the last 3 miles (4.8 km) and the cars were run in on the wooden stringers.[2][page needed]

The firstCumberland Valley Railroad Bridge across the Susquehanna was opened for travel on January 16, 1839. The first regular passenger service to Philadelphia, via theHarrisburg, Portsmouth, Mount Joy and Lancaster Railroad, began on February 1, 1839, with the following schedule:

Leave Chambersburg at 4 o'clock in the morning; Arrive at Harrisburg at 8, at Lancaster at 12, at Philadelphia before 6 P.M.Returning it will leave Harrisburg as soon as the cars from Philadelphia arrived, about 5 o'clock in the evening and arrive at Chambersburg at 10 P.M.[2][page needed]

Innovation

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The first American sleeping car, the "Chambersburg" started service on the CVRR in 1839

The Cumberland Valley Railroad pioneered the use of sleeping cars in the spring of 1839, a first on any American railroad, with a car named "Chambersburg." The berths were upholstered boards, in three rows, one above the other, held by leather straps, and in the daytime were folded back against the walls. A couple of years later a second car, the "Carlisle," was introduced into service.[4]

Passengers traveling from Pittsburgh to Philadelphia traveled by horse drawn stage for 36 hours to get to Chambersburg, arriving about midnight, then left by rail about 1 am, arriving at Harrisburg about 5 am, in time to catch a HPMt.J&L train to Philadelphia.

"The History of Franklin County Pennsylvania" also claims that the first locomotive cab was constructed in the CVRR shops in Chambersburg in 1841 for a Franklin Railroad locomotive, named "Washington."

Growth

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In 1839 the CVRR bought three locomotives for $21,250 and two passenger cars for $4,175, and ran two passenger trains and one freight train each day between Chambersburg and Harrisburg. They boasted that no passenger had been injured in the 2½ years that the road had been operated.

Frederick Watts was elected the third president of the CVRR in 1841 and served in the post for 32 years. He reported that total annual earnings were $70,116.82 for 1842. By 1849, annual earnings were $101,084.77, and tonnage hauled was reported for the first time, totaling 37,439 tons, including 7,818 tons of flour, 5,126 of iron ore, 4,247 of coal, 2,123 of grain, and 2,237 of lumber. In that year plans were made to reconstruct the track with heavy iron rails.[2][page needed]

External videos
The locomotive "Pioneer"
video iconB&O Railroad and the Civil War, 19:15-20:30,C-SPAN[6]
Hagerstown station, builtc. 1883

In March 1832, the Franklin Railroad was chartered by the Pennsylvania Legislature, and on January 16, 1837, by the Legislature of Maryland. The road was built from Chambersburg toGreencastle, Pennsylvania, in 1837, and to Hagerstown, Maryland in 1841. It owned its own steam locomotives, but these were sold about 1841, when the CVRR began operating the road. Horse power, rather than steam power, was used during the 1840s and 1850s. Ownership and operating rights changed hands several times, until 1860 when the track was rebuilt with heavy rails and the CVRR contracted to operate the track. In 1865 the two railroads were merged.

Daniel Tyler was hired in 1850 to supervise the line's rebuilding. He hired Alba Smith as superintendent of the machinery shop in 1850. Smith served as superintendent of the railway from 1851 to 1856, and helped introduce lighter-weight "single-wheel" locomotives on the line. These locomotives included thePioneer and theJenny Lind, bought in 1851, and theBoston andEnterprise bought in 1853–54.[7] In 1999, thePioneer was moved from its display at theSmithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C. to the as yet unopenedNational Museum of Industrial History in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. (The locomotive was later moved to theBaltimore and Ohio Railroad Museum in Baltimore, Maryland.)[8][9]

The CVRR timetable in 1916

In October 1862, the Confederate forces destroyed railway buildings in Chambersburg, and on June 15, 1863, during theGettysburg campaign, they destroyed all company property in the town, and tore up five miles (8.0 km) of Franklin Railroad. In July, 1864 Confederate raiders led byJubal Early returned and burned the greater part of Chambersburg including most railroad property.[3]

During the 1870s feeder lines such as theMont Alto Railroad were added in the Cumberland Valley to gain access to iron ore deposits. In 1873 the railroad extended south from Hagerstown to the Potomac River, and reachedMartinsburg, West Virginia via the Martinsburg and Potomac Railroad.[10] TheMechanicsburg Pennsylvania Railroad Station was built about 1875.[11] In 1889, the Martinsburg and Potomac's line was extended toWinchester, Virginia, at the head of theShenandoah Valley, under the Cumberland Valley and Potomac Railway, to be operated by the CVRR. The Cumberland Valley was to have a junction with theSouth Pennsylvania Railroad in Newville, but the ambitious South Penn ran into financial difficulties during its construction and was never completed.

In June 1882, theShenandoah Valley Railroad was opened from Hagerstown toRoanoke, Virginia. In conjunction with theNorfolk and Western Railway the CVRR operated the middle link of the New York-Harrisburg-Hagerstown-Roanoke, Va. passenger trains. Trains reportedly traveled at over 90 mph on parts of this route.

South Penn Branch Line

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The South Penn Branch was a line that connected the CVRR main line to an iron furnace near Cowans Gap. It left the line near Marion and went to Richmond Furnace, a distance of 26 miles (42 km). This route was one possible route for a cross-Pennsylvania main line, rejected in favor of the route along the Juniata River.

Demise

[edit]
Mechanicsburg Station, builtc. 1875
A combined passenger and baggage car, with particularly unusual side vestibule, built in 1855 in Chambersburg, now on theNational Register of Historic Places

Regular passenger train service on the CVRR ended in 1952, the last New York-Roanoke train ran in 1961. The PRR's successor, thePenn Central, closed all railway facilities in Chambersburg in 1972.

Its successor,Conrail, first renamed what had been known as the Cumberland Valley Branch with three names: Shippensburg Secondary Track (Harrisburg to PENNROAD, south-east of Shippensburg); Hagerstown Secondary Track (from theReading junction north-east of Shippensburg, through PENNROAD, to TOWN and HAGER towers in Hagerstown); and Winchester Secondary Track. Conrail later (1979–1980) abandoned the southern half of the Shippensburg Secondary (from the west side of Carlisle to Shippensburg, including street-running trackage on Earl St. in the latter town), opting instead to use the Reading connection for freight trains. Instrumental in this realignment was the placement of a wye track at CAPITOL interlocking in Harrisburg. Conrail also abandoned the trackage on the western portion of the CV bridge in Harrisburg, leaving a wye for Amtrak to turn power. The Winchester Secondary was sold to a short line. TheLurgan Branch name, originally used by Conrail for the ex-Reading trackage that passed through Shippensburg to a connection with theWestern Maryland, was retained.Norfolk Southern Railway operates the trackage since the 1999 breakup of Conrail.

The plannedCorridorOne commuter rail service between Harrisburg and Carlisle intended to use the oldCumberland Valley Railroad Bridge

References

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  1. ^Humphreys, Ken; Koski, Jesse (February 20, 2009)."Railroad Reporting Marks - Past & Present".Piedmont and Western Railroad Club. RetrievedMay 15, 2009.
  2. ^abcdeHistory of Franklin County Pennsylvania, Illustrated.
  3. ^abCumberland Valley Railroad Historical Marker - Behind the Marker
  4. ^abPhilip Berlin Historical Marker - Behind the Marker
  5. ^"St. Paul "Pullmans"".Time. June 6, 1927. Archived fromthe original on December 16, 2008. RetrievedMay 28, 2008.
  6. ^"B&O Railroad and the Civil War".C-SPAN. January 8, 2013. RetrievedDecember 31, 2017.
  7. ^White, John H. (1973)."American Single Locomotives and the "Pioneer""(PDF).Smithsonian Studies in History and Technology.25. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on October 9, 2012. RetrievedJuly 18, 2007.
  8. ^"The Great Locomotive Switch: Moving Historic Locomotives".American History. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution. Archived fromthe original on July 15, 2007. RetrievedJuly 18, 2007.
  9. ^"The Great Locomotive Switch: The Pioneer (1851)".American History. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution. Archived fromthe original on July 14, 2007. RetrievedJuly 18, 2007.
  10. ^"The Pennsylvania Railroad Company: The Corporate, Financial and Construction History of Lines Owned, Operated and Controlled To December 31, 1945, Volume II Lines East of Pittsburgh".Hagley Digital Archives. RetrievedJanuary 1, 2022.
  11. ^"National Historic Landmarks & National Register of Historic Places in Pennsylvania". CRGIS: Cultural Resources Geographic Information System. Archived fromthe original(Searchable database) on July 22, 2012.Note: This includesZacher, Susan M. (n.d.)."National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form: Cumberland Valley Railroad Station and Station Master's House"(PDF). RetrievedJanuary 21, 2012.[permanent dead link]

Bibliography

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See also

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Class I railroads of North America
Current
United States
Canada
Mexico
Former
1956–present
pre-1956
Timeline
Railroads initalics meet the revenue specifications for Class I status, but are not technically Class I railroads due to being passenger-only railroads with no freight component.
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