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Connecting Railway

The Connecting Railway was a subsidiary of the Pennsylvania Railroad, incorporated to build a connection between the Philadelphia and Trenton Railroad and the PRR in the city of Philadelphia.

Pennsylvania Railroad, Connecting Railway Bridge over Schuylkill River, Fairmount Park, Philadelphia
Map

Construction and assembly edit

Connecting Railway edit

The PRR controlled the Philadelphia & Trenton, and had originally intended to directly connect the two lines through the heart of Philadelphia. However, attempts to buy out and demolish buildings in the right-of-way led to riots, and the Philadelphia & Trenton was forced to end at Kensington. To resolve the problem, Connecting Railway Company was incorporated May 15, 1863, and between 1864 and June 1867, constructed a 6.75-mile (10.86 km) connecting line between Frankford Junction on the Philadelphia & Trenton and Mantua Junction (now Zoo interlocking) on the PRR mainline, passing through what is now North Philadelphia.

Bustleton Branch edit

 
The Bustleton Branch splits from the Philadelphia & Trenton Line at Holmesburg Junction.

On July 18, 1863, the Frankford and Holmesburg Railroad was incorporated to build a line from Frankford to Holmesburg. This would have paralleled the Philadelphia & Trenton between those points. The charter was amended on April 10, 1867, to allow it to build from the Philadelphia & Trenton at Holmesburg Junction to the nearby town of Bustleton instead. It built 4.16 miles (6.69 km) of line between the two points about 1870. On January 1, 1871, it was leased to the Philadelphia & Trenton to operate as their Bustleton Branch. The company subsequently went bankrupt and was sold at foreclosure on November 18, 1890, and was reorganized on January 12, 1891 as the Bustleton Railroad and leased to PRR. Passenger service on the Bustleton Branch ended on February 13, 1926 due to high competition.[1]

Chestnut Hill Branch edit

On January 2, 1883, the Philadelphia, Germantown and Chestnut Hill Railroad was incorporated, to construct a line between Germantown Junction (now North Philadelphia) and Chestnut Hill. This project was directed by Henry H. Houston. This line of 6.75 miles (10.86 km) was built between 1883 and 1884, closely paralleling the Chestnut Hill Railroad (controlled by the Reading), and now forms the basis of SEPTA's Chestnut Hill West Line. Between 1892 and 1893, two additional branches were built: the Midvale Branch, running 0.85 miles (1.37 km) from Midvale to the Midvale Steel Company plant, and the Fort Washington Branch or Cresheim Branch, running 6.27 miles (10.09 km) from Allen Lane to Fort Hill, where it connected with the Trenton Cutoff.

Kensington & Tacony Branch edit

On March 26, 1884, the Kensington and Tacony Railroad was incorporated. From a connection with the Philadelphia & Trenton at Tioga Street and Delaware Avenue, it built 1.65 miles (2.66 km) along Delaware Avenue between 1886 and 1887. The Frankford Creek Railroad was incorporated March 17, 1890, and built 0.62 miles (1.00 km) of track from the Philadelphia & Trenton down Butler Street and towards Frankford Creek. It was merged on April 14, 1891 into the Kensington & Tacony as the Frankford Street Branch. The K&T built 2.85 miles (4.59 km) further along Delaware Avenue in 1891–1892 to connect to the Philadelphia & Trenton just east of Tacony, and extended the Frankford Street Branch 1.16 miles (1.87 km) across and parallel to Frankford Creek 1893–1894. At some point it also bought the connecting Philadelphia & Trenton line of 1.23 miles (1.98 km) from the P&T main down Tioga Street.

Oxford Road Branch edit

The Philadelphia and Bustleton Railway was incorporated on March 17, 1892 to build from Front Street and Erie Avenue, on the Connecting Railway mainline, to Bustleton. The Bustleton and Eastern Railroad was incorporated on January 27, 1893 to extend the Philadelphia & Bustleton from Bustleton to Fallsington, just west of Morrisville on the Trenton Cut-Off. The two were consolidated into the Philadelphia, Bustleton and Trenton Railroad on May 1, 1893.

The Philadelphia & Bustleton had done only a little grading and built several cuts and viaducts. The cuts and viaduct work that were performed can be seen today, as they are used as a bridle path through the Pennypack Park that run about 1/2 mile that runs from Krewstown Road to about 1/4 of a mile west of Bustleton Avenue on the south side of the Pennypack Creek. On the north and south sides of the creek, there is evidence of approach work for a trestle over the Pennypack Creek.

The Philadelphia, Bustleton & Trenton, after completing 3.55 miles (5.71 km) of the line in December 1896, built no further towards Fallsington. It crossed the Philadelphia and Frankford Railroad (Reading) about a mile south of its terminus.

Fairhill Branch edit

On June 13, 1892, the Fair Hill Railroad was incorporated, and built 0.78 miles (1.26 km) of line from the Connecting Railway mainline near Rosehill Street to Cambria Street 1895–1896.

Engelside Branch edit

On September 22, 1892, the Engelside Railroad was incorporated, and built 0.17 miles (0.27 km) of line from the Connecting Railway mainline near 32nd and Jefferson Streets to near 32nd and Thompson Streets, where it connected with the Reading (former Philadelphia and Columbia Railroad trackage).

On January 1, 1902, these seven corporations were consolidated into The Connecting Railway Company. This company and all its predecessors were directly or indirectly controlled by the PRR throughout their history. On December 9, 1956, the Pennsylvania, Ohio and Detroit Railroad, an agglomeration of certain PRR Lines West, was merged into the corporation. This was solely for the sake of corporate bookkeeping and had no effect on operations.

Operations edit

 
"HOLMES" Block Station (Holmesburg Junction), late 1970s

The Connecting Railway mainline was operated as part of the PRR mainline from Philadelphia to New York, providing through and local passenger service and extensive freight service to the many industries located in northern Philadelphia. The main passenger station on the line was North Philadelphia station. Because of the northern alignment of the Connecting Railway, passenger trains between New York and Pittsburgh would stop there only, bypassing 30th Street Station. The Chestnut Hill, Fort Washington and Bustleton Branches also saw passenger service; the other lines were exclusively freight lines. In particular, the Kensington & Tacony Branch served the upper Philadelphia waterfront and the Frankford Arsenal, and the Oxford Road Branch served a Sears distribution center near its crossing of the Reading.

Passenger service on the Bustleton Branch was discontinued in 1926, but the Chestnut Hill and Fort Washington Branches became part of the PRR suburban electrification program. Electrified service from Chestnut Hill to Broad Street Station began in 1918 and over the Fort Washington Branch in 1924. The rest of the mainline was electrified by 1935 to allow electric service to New York.

The Bustleton Branch diverged here (center of picture) and the K&T Branch diverged from the track leading the crossover at the bottom left. The tower closed in 1992.

Abandonment edit

The little-used Fort Washington Branch was de-electrified, and passenger service discontinued in 1952. In 1953, the upper section of the branch from the Trenton Cutoff connection at Fort Hill to Wyndmoor was abandoned. In the 1960s, part of the right-of-way was used for Pennsylvania Route 309. The remaining section from Wyndmoor to Allen Lane continued to see freight service until the late 1970s; this remnant was abandoned and removed in the early 1980s.

The loss of industry in Philadelphia began to take its toll, and many of the freight branches became little-used. In 1973, the Oxford Road Branch was abandoned north of the Reading crossing. The Connecting Railway survived as a separate corporation through the Penn Central merger, but all its tracks were sold to Conrail and Amtrak in 1976 and the corporation was subsequently dissolved.

The main line became part of the Northeast Corridor, and the Chestnut Hill Branch was sold to SEPTA in 1983 (although Conrail continued switching industries along the line). The Bustleton Branch, Frankford Street Branch and Engelside Branch are still operated by Conrail Shared Assets Operations. The Fairhill Branch, Oxford Road Branch, Midvale Branch and the Kensington and Tacony Branch were abandoned during the 1980s. The Kensington and Tacony right-of-way has been converted to a rail trail. [2]

Gallery edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Bustleton Trains Stop". The Philadelphia Inquirer. February 14, 1926. p. 4. Retrieved August 23, 2020 – via Newspapers.com.  
  2. ^ Boyle, John (2017-05-22). "The K&T Trail Opens Along the Delaware River". Bicycle Coalition of Greater Philadelphia. Retrieved 2020-09-13.
  • Netzlof, Robert T. (2001-03-28). . PRR Corporate History. Archived from the original on 2016-03-05. Retrieved 2016-04-30.
  • Taber, Thomas T. III (1987). Railroads of Pennsylvania Encyclopedia and Atlas. Thomas T. Taber III. ISBN 978-0-9603398-5-3.

connecting, railway, subsidiary, pennsylvania, railroad, incorporated, build, connection, between, philadelphia, trenton, railroad, city, philadelphia, pennsylvania, railroad, bridge, over, schuylkill, river, fairmount, park, philadelphia, contents, constructi. The Connecting Railway was a subsidiary of the Pennsylvania Railroad incorporated to build a connection between the Philadelphia and Trenton Railroad and the PRR in the city of Philadelphia Pennsylvania Railroad Connecting Railway Bridge over Schuylkill River Fairmount Park Philadelphia Map Contents 1 Construction and assembly 1 1 Connecting Railway 1 2 Bustleton Branch 1 3 Chestnut Hill Branch 1 4 Kensington amp Tacony Branch 1 5 Oxford Road Branch 1 6 Fairhill Branch 1 7 Engelside Branch 2 Operations 3 Abandonment 4 Gallery 5 ReferencesConstruction and assembly editConnecting Railway edit The PRR controlled the Philadelphia amp Trenton and had originally intended to directly connect the two lines through the heart of Philadelphia However attempts to buy out and demolish buildings in the right of way led to riots and the Philadelphia amp Trenton was forced to end at Kensington To resolve the problem Connecting Railway Company was incorporated May 15 1863 and between 1864 and June 1867 constructed a 6 75 mile 10 86 km connecting line between Frankford Junction on the Philadelphia amp Trenton and Mantua Junction now Zoo interlocking on the PRR mainline passing through what is now North Philadelphia Bustleton Branch edit nbsp The Bustleton Branch splits from the Philadelphia amp Trenton Line at Holmesburg Junction On July 18 1863 the Frankford and Holmesburg Railroad was incorporated to build a line from Frankford to Holmesburg This would have paralleled the Philadelphia amp Trenton between those points The charter was amended on April 10 1867 to allow it to build from the Philadelphia amp Trenton at Holmesburg Junction to the nearby town of Bustleton instead It built 4 16 miles 6 69 km of line between the two points about 1870 On January 1 1871 it was leased to the Philadelphia amp Trenton to operate as their Bustleton Branch The company subsequently went bankrupt and was sold at foreclosure on November 18 1890 and was reorganized on January 12 1891 as the Bustleton Railroad and leased to PRR Passenger service on the Bustleton Branch ended on February 13 1926 due to high competition 1 Chestnut Hill Branch edit On January 2 1883 the Philadelphia Germantown and Chestnut Hill Railroad was incorporated to construct a line between Germantown Junction now North Philadelphia and Chestnut Hill This project was directed by Henry H Houston This line of 6 75 miles 10 86 km was built between 1883 and 1884 closely paralleling the Chestnut Hill Railroad controlled by the Reading and now forms the basis of SEPTA s Chestnut Hill West Line Between 1892 and 1893 two additional branches were built the Midvale Branch running 0 85 miles 1 37 km from Midvale to the Midvale Steel Company plant and the Fort Washington Branch or Cresheim Branch running 6 27 miles 10 09 km from Allen Lane to Fort Hill where it connected with the Trenton Cutoff Kensington amp Tacony Branch edit On March 26 1884 the Kensington and Tacony Railroad was incorporated From a connection with the Philadelphia amp Trenton at Tioga Street and Delaware Avenue it built 1 65 miles 2 66 km along Delaware Avenue between 1886 and 1887 The Frankford Creek Railroad was incorporated March 17 1890 and built 0 62 miles 1 00 km of track from the Philadelphia amp Trenton down Butler Street and towards Frankford Creek It was merged on April 14 1891 into the Kensington amp Tacony as the Frankford Street Branch The K amp T built 2 85 miles 4 59 km further along Delaware Avenue in 1891 1892 to connect to the Philadelphia amp Trenton just east of Tacony and extended the Frankford Street Branch 1 16 miles 1 87 km across and parallel to Frankford Creek 1893 1894 At some point it also bought the connecting Philadelphia amp Trenton line of 1 23 miles 1 98 km from the P amp T main down Tioga Street Oxford Road Branch edit The Philadelphia and Bustleton Railway was incorporated on March 17 1892 to build from Front Street and Erie Avenue on the Connecting Railway mainline to Bustleton The Bustleton and Eastern Railroad was incorporated on January 27 1893 to extend the Philadelphia amp Bustleton from Bustleton to Fallsington just west of Morrisville on the Trenton Cut Off The two were consolidated into the Philadelphia Bustleton and Trenton Railroad on May 1 1893 The Philadelphia amp Bustleton had done only a little grading and built several cuts and viaducts The cuts and viaduct work that were performed can be seen today as they are used as a bridle path through the Pennypack Park that run about 1 2 mile that runs from Krewstown Road to about 1 4 of a mile west of Bustleton Avenue on the south side of the Pennypack Creek On the north and south sides of the creek there is evidence of approach work for a trestle over the Pennypack Creek The Philadelphia Bustleton amp Trenton after completing 3 55 miles 5 71 km of the line in December 1896 built no further towards Fallsington It crossed the Philadelphia and Frankford Railroad Reading about a mile south of its terminus Fairhill Branch edit On June 13 1892 the Fair Hill Railroad was incorporated and built 0 78 miles 1 26 km of line from the Connecting Railway mainline near Rosehill Street to Cambria Street 1895 1896 Engelside Branch edit On September 22 1892 the Engelside Railroad was incorporated and built 0 17 miles 0 27 km of line from the Connecting Railway mainline near 32nd and Jefferson Streets to near 32nd and Thompson Streets where it connected with the Reading former Philadelphia and Columbia Railroad trackage On January 1 1902 these seven corporations were consolidated into The Connecting Railway Company This company and all its predecessors were directly or indirectly controlled by the PRR throughout their history On December 9 1956 the Pennsylvania Ohio and Detroit Railroad an agglomeration of certain PRR Lines West was merged into the corporation This was solely for the sake of corporate bookkeeping and had no effect on operations Operations edit nbsp HOLMES Block Station Holmesburg Junction late 1970sThe Connecting Railway mainline was operated as part of the PRR mainline from Philadelphia to New York providing through and local passenger service and extensive freight service to the many industries located in northern Philadelphia The main passenger station on the line was North Philadelphia station Because of the northern alignment of the Connecting Railway passenger trains between New York and Pittsburgh would stop there only bypassing 30th Street Station The Chestnut Hill Fort Washington and Bustleton Branches also saw passenger service the other lines were exclusively freight lines In particular the Kensington amp Tacony Branch served the upper Philadelphia waterfront and the Frankford Arsenal and the Oxford Road Branch served a Sears distribution center near its crossing of the Reading Passenger service on the Bustleton Branch was discontinued in 1926 but the Chestnut Hill and Fort Washington Branches became part of the PRR suburban electrification program Electrified service from Chestnut Hill to Broad Street Station began in 1918 and over the Fort Washington Branch in 1924 The rest of the mainline was electrified by 1935 to allow electric service to New York The Bustleton Branch diverged here center of picture and the K amp T Branch diverged from the track leading the crossover at the bottom left The tower closed in 1992 Abandonment editThe little used Fort Washington Branch was de electrified and passenger service discontinued in 1952 In 1953 the upper section of the branch from the Trenton Cutoff connection at Fort Hill to Wyndmoor was abandoned In the 1960s part of the right of way was used for Pennsylvania Route 309 The remaining section from Wyndmoor to Allen Lane continued to see freight service until the late 1970s this remnant was abandoned and removed in the early 1980s The loss of industry in Philadelphia began to take its toll and many of the freight branches became little used In 1973 the Oxford Road Branch was abandoned north of the Reading crossing The Connecting Railway survived as a separate corporation through the Penn Central merger but all its tracks were sold to Conrail and Amtrak in 1976 and the corporation was subsequently dissolved The main line became part of the Northeast Corridor and the Chestnut Hill Branch was sold to SEPTA in 1983 although Conrail continued switching industries along the line The Bustleton Branch Frankford Street Branch and Engelside Branch are still operated by Conrail Shared Assets Operations The Fairhill Branch Oxford Road Branch Midvale Branch and the Kensington and Tacony Branch were abandoned during the 1980s The Kensington and Tacony right of way has been converted to a rail trail 2 Gallery edit nbsp Abandoned K amp T Branch Behind Frankford Arsenal 2006 Note rails disappearing into roadway for river access point nbsp Abandoned K amp T Branch Behind Frankford Arsenal 2006 Switch buried in weeds is one siding leading into the old arsenal complex nbsp Abandoned K amp T Right of Way looking North just above Frankford Arsenal Power lines followed the branch from Port Richmond to Tacony nbsp Abandoned K amp T Bridge over Frankford Creek behind Frankford Arsenal looking towards Kensington nbsp Abandoned Tioga Street trackage linking the Philadelphia and Trenton to the Kensington and Tacony Branch tank cars are on the old P amp T nbsp Tioga Street trackage curved to the right and up a ramp to the P amp T The old roadbed ramp is now weed covered and new curbing and railing blocks the old right of way nbsp Repurposing of K amp T Branch right of way as a rail trail at Lardner s Point in 2022References edit Bustleton Trains Stop The Philadelphia Inquirer February 14 1926 p 4 Retrieved August 23 2020 via Newspapers com nbsp Boyle John 2017 05 22 The K amp T Trail Opens Along the Delaware River Bicycle Coalition of Greater Philadelphia Retrieved 2020 09 13 Netzlof Robert T 2001 03 28 Corporate Genealogy The Connecting Railway PRR Corporate History Archived from the original on 2016 03 05 Retrieved 2016 04 30 Taber Thomas T III 1987 Railroads of Pennsylvania Encyclopedia and Atlas Thomas T Taber III ISBN 978 0 9603398 5 3 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Connecting Railway amp oldid 1154882793, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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