Loudoun Branch of the Manassas Gap Railroad

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The Loudoun Branch of the Manassas Gap Railroad was a planned branch extension of the Manassas Gap Railroad that was to connect the Orange and Alexandria Railroad to Harpers Ferry and the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad.

The route was to diverge from the O&A at Centerville and head west through Loudoun County, crossing the Catoctin Mountain along the Goose Creek gap, then turning northward towards the village of Goose Creek (present day Lincoln) and Purcel's Store (present day Purcellville) before continuing on into the Between the Hills valley to the Potomac River, which it would cross to reach Harpers Ferry.

Work started on the line in 1851, the same year as the main line of the Manassas Gap Railroad. The railroad was graded as far as Purcel's Store, including the construction of a tunnel under the Catoctin Mountain along the Goose Creek. Tracks were laid as far as the Old Carolina Road (present day U.S. Route 15).

Construction was halted due to financial troubles of the railroad backers during the Panic of 1857. Any hope of resuming work and completing the line was erased when in 1861 when Confederate troops tore up the tracks as they abandoned Alexandria to establish a line at Manassas Junction.

Today the informed and dedicated historian can still find the railroad bed and tunnel. A well preserved section of roadbed exists between Centreville Road and State Road 28 in Fairfax County, just east of the Sully Plantation historical site.