Lewisburg and Tyrone Railroad

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The Lewisburg and Tyrone Railroad (later Railway), previously the Lewisburg, Centre and Spruce Creek Railroad, was a subsidiary of the Pennsylvania Railroad in central Pennsylvania. Originally intended to connect the Susquehanna Valley with Tyrone and the ore lands to its northeast, it was built in two discontinuous and never-connected pieces, one from Tyrone to Fairbrook and one from Montandon to Lemont.

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[edit] Lewisburg, Centre and Spruce Creek

Lewisburg, Centre & Spruce Creek Railroad
Locale Central Pennsylvania
Dates of operation 1870–1879
Successor line Lewisburg and Tyrone Railroad
Track gauge ft 8½ in (1435 mm) (standard gauge)

The Lewisburg, Centre and Spruce Creek Railroad was chartered on April 1, 1853, to run westward from the vicinity of Lewisburg, on the west bank of the West Branch Susquehanna River, through the southern valleys of Centre County, Pennsylvania to Spruce Creek, on the main line of the Pennsylvania Railroad (PRR). Its charter was amended on March 3, 1854, allowing it to reach the PRR at Tyrone, a more developed industrial center than Spruce Creek.[1]

Funding was hard to come by, and construction slow in starting. The railroad was leased to the PRR on July 23, 1869,[1] and it was the PRR that would provide support for construction and operate the railroad.[2] By the next year, the railroad had been opened from Montandon, on the Philadelphia and Erie Railroad east of the Susquehanna, across the river into Lewisburg. In 1871, it was open as far west as Mifflinburg, about 10 miles (16 km) up the Buffalo Valley. The company continued grading west towards Laurelton[1] and did some work on the line east of Tyrone, but the Panic of 1873 slowed construction again. However, by 1877, the railroad had pushed its line through the narrow valley of Penns Creek to Rising Springs (now Spring Mills).[3] The twisting line required two tunnels, through Paddy Mountain and Tunnel Mountain, cutting across loops in the winding course of Penns Creek through the mountains and extending its total length to 43.18 miles (69 km). On December 13, 1879, the company defaulted on its bonds, and was reorganized on December 31, 1879 as the Lewisburg and Tyrone Railroad.[3] The new company was leased to the PRR as well on January 1, 1880.[1]

[edit] Lewisburg and Tyrone

Lewisburg & Tyrone Railroad
Locale Central Pennsylvania
Dates of operation 1880–1913
Successor line Lewisburg and Tyrone Railway
Track gauge ft 8½ in (1435 mm) (standard gauge)

For the time being, the controlling PRR saw little prospect of traffic from completing the railroad. The projected western division of the Lewisburg and Tyrone, however, had considerable promise. A line east from Tyrone to Scotia and the surrounding iron ore region held great potential, particularly when Andrew Carnegie invested in the Scotia deposits.[2] The new line left the PRR main line just east of Tyrone, in the Brush Mountain narrows of the Little Juniata River, and followed Logan Spring Run north to Eyer. Ambling up the broad valley between Bald Eagle Mountain and Tussey Mountain, it turned southeast at Marengo to pierce Gatesburg Ridge by the gap of Halfmoon Creek, which it followed to Spruce Creek below Pennsylvania Furnace. Running north along Spruce Creek and then the Beaver Branch, it ended in a station near Fairbrook by 1881, 19.9 miles (32 km) in all. No further construction in the direction of State College and the eastern division was undertaken, but the Scotia Branch swung through another gap in Gatesburg Ridge and ran another 5.3 miles (9 km) to reach the vast ore pits of Scotia. In 1882, another short line of 2.03 miles (3 km), the Juniata Branch, was built off of the Scotia Branch just north of Gatesburg Ridge to reach ore pits of the Juniata Mining Company west of Scotia.[3]

The PRR began to extend the Lewisburg and Tyrone again in 1884, laying rail west from Spring Mills along Sinking Creek and then out across Penns Valley to Centre Hall and Oak Hall, from which the new line followed Spring Creek to Lemont. The new line, 14.52 miles (23 km) long, was opened in 1885.[3] However, it was not now intended to reach the western division. Instead of connecting Lemont and Fairbrook, the PRR incorporated a new company, the Bellefonte, Nittany and Lemont Railroad, to build a line from Lemont to the PRR-owned Bald Eagle Valley Railroad at Bellefonte. The new line, from Montandon to Bellefonte (and on to Milesburg via the Bald Eagle Valley) became the Bellefonte Branch of the PRR, while the disconnected western division was operated as the Fairbrook Branch.

Several tributary branches were also built from the Lewisburg and Tyrone where it cut through the mountains. In 1880, a short branch was laid along Poe Creek to reach a sawmill at Poe Mills. After the area had been timbered and the sawmill burned, the branch was removed in 1904.[1]

[edit] Later years and abandonment

Lewisburg & Tyrone Railway
Locale Central Pennsylvania
Dates of operation 1913–1915
Successor line Pennsylvania Railroad
Track gauge ft 8½ in (1435 mm) (standard gauge)

The Lewisburg and Tyrone Railroad continued to operate as a PRR subsidiary. On June 16, 1913, it was again foreclosed on, and reorganized on December 30, 1915 as the Lewisburg and Tyrone Railway. However, in just over a year, on April 30, 1915, it was merged into the PRR. The two divisions continued to operate as the Fairbrook Branch and the Bellefonte Branch. The Juniata Branch was removed before 1920, and the Fairbrook and Scotia Branches were abandoned in 1927. The Bellefonte Central Railroad received permission to take over the Fairbrook Branch, building down from State College along the likely route of the unbuilt middle division of the L&T, but the PRR's manipulation of rate divisions ensured that the Bellefonte Central could not operate the branch except at a loss. It was embargoed in 1933, and rail was removed in 1941–1942, after a long series of unsuccessful legal proceedings by the Bellefonte Central.

Between 1923 and 1945, there was one significant addition to the former Lewisburg and Tyrone line: the Laurelton Branch was built north from Rutherton to serve Laurelton State Village, a state home for the mentally retarded. In 1970, Penn Central abandoned the middle of the Bellefonte Branch from Mifflinburg to Coburn, a section by then bereft of traffic potential. It has since become a rail trail. Further damage by Hurricane Agnes in 1972 resulted in the abandonment of the line from Lemont to Coburn. The remaining segment, from Montandon to Mifflinburg, was operated by Conrail until 1981. In 1983, Conrail sold it to the West Shore Railroad. (It was not sold to the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania as some have stated.) In 1988, the West Shore bought part of the old Reading line across the river, including a bridge at Milton and abandoned the now-redundant line from Lewisburg to Montandon. However, service ended on the line in 1997, and damage from Hurricane Floyd in 1999 rendered it impassable. As of 2007, none of the former Lewisburg and Tyrone Railroad remains in operation.

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d e Taber, Thomas T., III (1987). Railroads of Pennsylvania Encyclopedia and Atlas. Thomas T. Taber III, 402. ISBN 0-9603398-5-x. 
  2. ^ a b Bezilla, Mike; Jack Rudnicki (2007). Rails to Penn State: the story of the Bellefonte Central. Stackpole Books. ISBN 0811702316. 
  3. ^ a b c d (January 1929) Valuation Reports Vol. 22. Washington, DC: Interstate Commerce Commission. Retrieved on 2007-09-21.