fbpx
Wikipedia

Pittsburgh and Lake Erie Railroad

The Pittsburgh and Lake Erie Railroad (P≤ reporting mark PLE), also known as the "Little Giant", was formed on May 11, 1875. Company headquarters were located in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The line connected Pittsburgh in the east with Youngstown, Ohio in the Haselton neighborhood in the west and Connellsville, Pennsylvania to the east. It did not reach Lake Erie (at Ashtabula, Ohio) until the formation of Conrail in 1976. The P&LE was known as the "Little Giant" since the tonnage that it moved was out of proportion to its route mileage. While it operated around one tenth of one percent of the nation's railroad miles, it hauled around one percent of its tonnage.[1] This was largely because the P&LE served the steel mills of the greater Pittsburgh area, which consumed and shipped vast amounts of materials. It was a specialized railroad deriving much of its revenue from coal, coke, iron ore, limestone, and steel. The eventual closure of the steel mills led to the end of the P&LE as an independent line in 1992.[2]

Pittsburgh and Lake Erie Railroad
Pittsburgh and Lake Erie Railroad (red) and New York Central system (orange) as of 1918
Overview
HeadquartersPittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Reporting markPLE
LocalePittsburgh, Pennsylvania to Youngstown, Ohio
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania to Connellsville, Pennsylvania
Dates of operation1875–1993
SuccessorCSX
Technical
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge

At the end of 1970 P&LE operated 211 miles (340 km) of road on 784 miles (1,262 km) of track, not including PC&Y and Y&S; in 1970 it reported 1419 million ton-miles of revenue freight, down from 2437 million in 1944.

Route of the P&LE

 
Former P&LE trackage

The P&LE purchased many smaller railroads that operated in the areas of its main train line extending the line north to Youngstown and south to Connellsville. This provided a means of transportation from the steel centers of Pittsburgh to the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence Seaway area.

P&LE Division

 
Share of the Pittsburgh and Lake Erie Rail Road Company, issued 17 November 1924

The original line ran between Youngstown, Ohio (at Haselton) and 24th Street in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania near the Jones and Laughlin Iron Works, opened in 1879. The P&LE's passenger terminal in Pittsburgh was on the south bank of the Monongahela River, at the foot of the Smithfield Street Bridge.

The P&LE followed the left downstream bank of the Monongahela River past the terminal to the Golden Triangle, where that waterway meets the Allegheny River and becomes the Ohio River. The railroad continued northwest along the left downstream bank of the Ohio to the vicinity of Beaver, Pennsylvania, where it crossed the river on the Beaver Bridge. From there it followed the Beaver River to just south of New Castle, Pennsylvania, where it then followed the Mahoning River west-northwest, crossing into Ohio just east of Lowellville. From there it ran northwest into Youngstown, terminating at a junction with the New York Central known as Haselton.

In the table below, mileage is reckoned westbound from the P&LE Terminal in Pittsburgh. The original line continued east past that station for a little over two miles (3.2 km) (listed in Youghiogheny Branch table below) to near 24th Street in the South Side Flats neighborhood of Pittsburgh, where it met the Monongahela Connecting Railroad and the Pittsburgh, McKeesport & Youghiogheny (PM&Y).

State Milepost City Station Lat/long Old Telegraph Call Letters Connections and notes
OH 64 Haselton Interchange With NYC
Youngstown Youngstown Interchange With B&O
East Youngstown East Youngstown
60 Struthers Struthers JCT for LE&E and Y&S
Lowellville Junction
56 Lowellville Lowellville
Ohio-Pennsylvania state line
PA Robinson Robinson
52 Edinburg
Coverts-Crossing
48 New Castle New Castle (Mahoningtown)
New Castle Junction Branch to New Castle
West Pittsburg West Pittsburg Station B&O Trackage Rights over P&LE to Port Vue
Newport Newport
41 Wampum Wampum
Rock Point
36 West Ellwood Junction Station Branch to Ellwood City
Beaver Falls (College Hill) College Hill Station College Yard
Beaver Falls Beaver Falls
New Brighton New Brighton
Fallston Fallston
Beaver Bridgewater
Beaver & Monaca Beaver Bridge over Ohio River
24 Monaca Monaca
Aliquippa West Aliquippa
20 Aliquippa Aliquippa
18 Economy West Economy Station
16 South Heights South Heights Station
15 Glenwillard Glenwillard
14 Crescent Twp Stoops Ferry
11 Moon Twp Kendall
9 Coraoplis Coraopolis Interchange With Montour
8 Robinson Twp Montour Junction Station Montour Trackage Rights over P&LE to Coraopolis
4 McKees Rocks McKees Rocks Yard, Locomotive, Freight Car Shops and Maintenance. JCT with PC&Y.
2 Pittsburgh (West End). Interchange with P&WV West End
0 Pittsburgh P&LE Pittsburgh Terminal Pittsburgh Terminal and Smithfield Street Bridge

Youghiogheny Branch

 
Share of the Pittsburgh, McKeesport & Youghiogheny Railroad Company, issued 23. November 1908

The Pittsburgh, McKeesport and Youghiogheny Railroad ran from 24th Street in Pittsburgh, PA to Connellsville, Pennsylvania, in 1882. The PM&Y followed the Monongahela River to McKeesport, Pennsylvania, then the Youghiogheny River to Connellsville, Pennsylvania.

Mileage on this P&LE branch was reckoned from the passenger terminal back at the Smithfield Street Bridge.

State Milepost City Station Lat/long Connections and notes
PA 0 Pittsburgh P&LE Pittsburgh Terminal Original route of the Pittsburgh and Beck's Run Railroad (start)
Pittsburgh South Side 20th Street & 24th Street junctions: Interchange with MCRR
4 Pittsburgh Williamsburg
5 Pittsburgh Becks Run End of Pittsburgh and Becks Run Railroad
6 Homestead Homestead Site of Homestead Strike
Munhall P&LE Munhall Bridge over Monongahela River
8 Rankin Rankin
10 Braddock Braddock
11 McKeesport McKeesport Bridge over Youghiogheny River
16 Port Vue Port Vue Interchange With B&O. B&O had trackage rights over P&LE to West Pittsburgh.
17 Port Vue Sinn
18 Dead Man's Hollow Flemming Industrial single ended siding at the Union Sewer Pipe Company
19 Boston
22 Greenock
25 Stringtown Dravo Site of Methodist church that caught fire due to sparks of passing trains.
27 Buena Vista Buena Vesta
33 West Newton
37 Cedar Creek
41 Wickhaven
46 Kier
49 Sand Rock
53 Dickerson Run
56 Crossland
58 Connellsville Connellsville Interchange With B&O, WM, and NW

Monongahela Branch

The Pittsburgh, McKeesport & Youghiogheny Railroad also followed the Monongahela River to Brownsville, Pennsylvania.

State Milepost City Station Lat/long Old Telegraph Call Letters Connections and notes
PA 16 Port Vue Belle Vernon Junction
18 Glassport Glassport
20 Pollock
22 Elizabeth Wylie Elizabeth
27 Bunola
31 East Monongahela Monongahela
33 Manown
34 Sunnyside
36 Sheppler
40 Monessen Monessen
42 East Charleroi
43 Belle Vernon
45 Fayette City Fayette City
50 Newell
54 Brownsville Junction JCT with Monongahela Railway

History

 
View of men in line at the pay car of the Pittsburgh and Lake Erie Railroad Company

The Pittsburgh and Lake Erie Railroad was the creation of William McCreery, a prominent Pittsburgh businessman, merchant, and railroad builder. McCreery had suffered at the hands of the Pennsylvania Railroad in a business that had a loss or failed. The Pennsylvania Railroad at the time used discriminatory rates which became a hot issue in Pittsburgh. On May 11, 1870 McCreery and ten other people filed Articles of Association with the Pennsylvania Secretary of State. The stated length of the railroad was for 57 miles (92 km). After 2 years the starting group was not very successful at raising the required funds and in 1877 many of the directors were succeeded by a new group of Pittsburgh businessmen. The new group was James I. Bennett, David Hostetter, James M. Baily, Mark W. Watson and James M. Schoonmaker, all influential.

In the spring of 1877, the first rails were laid down in Beaver Falls, which had the largest population other than Pittsburgh. The other reason for this was around February 1877 Jacob Henrici of the Harmony Society had business there. Henrici would also become a director in 1877. On July 6, 1877, McCreery resigned and Bennett was elected to president with Jacob Henrici becoming a director. Henrici was the key due to his Harmony Society ties which was a communal religious group founded in 1805. In 1880, William Henry Vanderbilt's Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway bought stock to the tune of $200,000 in the P&LE. The P&LE would stay in the Vanderbilt's New York Central system until Conrail. Also in 1877, an agreement between the P&LE and the Atlantic & Great Western (Erie) and the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway was reached for routing traffic at Youngstown Ohio. The final track laying between Pittsburgh and Youngstown was on January 27, 1879. At the opening in 1879, the P&LE was a poorly built, single track line. Fortunately for the railroad it was an immediate success and money was soon available for improvements.

South Penn and Pittsburgh, McKeesport and Youghiogheny Railroad

In 1881, the P&LE became linked with the notorious South Pennsylvania Railroad (South Penn). This would lead to William Henry Vanderbilt to control of the P&LE as a link in the South Penn and the building of the Pittsburgh, McKeesport and Youghiogheny Railroad. The South Pennsylvania Railroad was planned to connect to the PM&Y.[3] Vanderbilt did this by buying Henry W. Oliver's and the Harmony Society's stock in the P&LE. Then Vanderbilt, aided by Andrew Carnegie, advanced the PM&Y all of the funds to build to Connellsville, Pennsylvania and then lease it to the P&LE for 99 years. The PM&Y in the end was the only part of the South Penn that was built, but it would be an important part of the P&LE. The PM&Y opened in 1883 and leased to the P&LE in 1884. Concurrently in 1883, to get the P&LE ready for the expected new business due to the South Penn linkage, the McKees Rocks shops were built.

Vanderbilt and the "Little Giant"

The company came under more formal control in the 1887 by the New York Central Railroad. Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway's president, John Newell, took over as president of the P&LE in 1887. Under Newell, Reed and Colonel Schoonmaker; the P&LE would become the "Little Giant". From 1887 to 1927, the P&LE would become a heavy duty railroad, with double track all the way from Pittsburgh to Youngstown. The P&LE operated as an independent subsidiary, even after New York Central and Pennsylvania Railroad merged to form Penn Central.

PM&Y and the Monongahela Railway

 
Pittsburgh and Lake Erie Railroad in Stoops Ferry, Pennsylvania, 1907

The making of coke in Connellsville had been a big part of P&LE traffic, but by the early 20th century it had lessened. The development of by-products distillation processing of coke had moved to the Pittsburgh area. The P&LE then extended up the Monongahela River to Brownsville, Pennsylvania in 1901. The Pennsylvania Railroad at the same time had extended to Brownsville. Both the PRR and the P&LE had plans to extend even further up the river into West Virginia coke fields. Most likely due to the South Penn, they decided to work together by using the Monongahela Railway. The Monongahela Railway then was extended south to Martin, Pennsylvania reaching the Kondike Coke fields. Later in 1915 it reached Fairmont, West Virginia.

Conrail and CSX

When Conrail was formed, the Pittsburgh and Lake Erie Railroad again became an independent company because P&LE was owed $15.2 million by Penn Central, and operated as such until its merger into CSX Transportation (CSX).

Starting in 1934, the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad (B&O) bought trackage rights over P&LE from McKeesport to New Castle. The B&O's route through Pittsburgh had excessive grades and curves. In the last years of the P&LE, CSX used the line more than P&LE leading to the merger. Most of the online customers had long been gone, with only the main line still intact. In 1993 the company was purchased by CSX.[4] The CSX designated the P&LE as a new subsidiary, the Three Rivers Railway. However, in 1993, CSX leased the TRR, and there is currently no de facto distinction between the former P&LE and any other portion of CSX's system.

Company officers

 
P&LE hopper with CRANDIC markings on the CRANDIC at Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Note ACI plate on the car.

Presidents of the railroad were as follows:

  • William McCreery 1875-1877
  • James I. Bennett 1877-1881
  • Jacob Henrici 1877-1885
  • John Newell 1887-1896

After Newell the presidency would be held by the president of the NYC with the active management of the local vice president.

Vice Presidents:

With Nash the active management went back to the president.

  • John W. Barriger III 1956-1964
  • Curtis D. Buford 1965-1969
  • Henry G. Allyn, Jr c. 1969-1983
  • Richard Thompson c. 1983-1986
  • Gordon Neuenschwander c. 1986-1993

Pittsburgh Terminal and P&LE passenger trains

 
 
Interior of former P&LE station in Pittsburgh

The P&LE's Pittsburgh passenger train station (interior seen in the lower right photo) sat adjacent the south bank of the Monongahela River at the foot of the Smithfield Street Bridge. The Pittsburgh Terminal was the railroad's headquarters, passenger train shed, and freight warehouse complex. In the upper photo, the terminal sits along the Monongahela river. The roof of the freight house is to the right of the terminal train shed. The former P&LE headquarters building at the bottom of the Monongahela Incline has been converted into a present-day shopping center, Station Square. The passenger station has been placed on a list of historic edifices, modernized and converted to a restaurant.

During 1910 - 1930, the P & LE operated 50 passenger daily trains on its 65-mile Pittsburgh - Youngstown portion of its system. Ticketing agreements with the Erie RR and the P & LE's parent New York Central, passengers boarding in Pittsburgh could ride coaches or sleepers west to Toledo, Detroit, Chicago, and St. Louis, and north to Cleveland, Buffalo, Toronto, Albany and Boston.

The Baltimore & Ohio RR obtained trackage rights in 1934 on the P&LE, and Chicago-New York trains such as the Capitol Limited (Chicago-Washington), Columbian (Chicago-Washington) and Ambassador (Detroit-Baltimore) operated over the P & LE between New Castle Junction and McKeesport. These trains stopped at the Terminal located in Pittsburgh's South Side. The trackage charing arrangement continued until Amtrak assumed responsibility for the nation's passenger rail service in 1971.[5]

P&LE operated commuter trains into Pittsburgh. In 1964, it ran one round-trip between Youngstown and Pittsburgh as well as one additional southbound and two additional northbound trains on the section between Beaver Falls and Pittsburgh. Latest by 1968, only the section between College Hill, Beaver Falls, Aliquippa and P&LE's Pittsburgh Terminal was served by one single roundtrip commuter train per day.[6][7] In 1978, P&LE tried to drop that last commuter train, which was met by fierce objections. With state support, P&LE continued to operate the commuter run but eventually ended the service on July 12, 1985, after passenger counts had dropped significantly.[8][9]

The PATrain commuter operation continued to use some P&LE-trackage until 1989.

Shops and Yards

Gateway Yard

The Youngstown Gateway Yard was a major hub location on the railroad, until the creation of Conrail. Gateway Yard was opened in October 1957, to be a modern hump yard. The yard was approximately 200 acres (0.81 km2) stretching for a distance of just over 5 miles (8.0 km) from Lowellville, Ohio to Center Street in Youngstown, Ohio. Gateway Yard was made up of three principal yards, and an assortment of smaller, special-purpose yards. The principal yards were arranged linearly, with the eastern limits of the Departure Yard in Lowellville. The Hump Yard was located in Struthers in the center of the facility, and the Receiving Yard was to the west. The special purpose yards were "Diesel Servicing Facilities", "Gorilla Park" and "Interchange" yards. The "Interchange" yard was made up of six tracks, four were for interchange to and from the B&O Railroad and two of which were for general use. The other interchange was with New York Central Railroad which was a direct interchange. The western yard limit was the end of track for the P&LE. Beyond the western end of the Yard was the NYC mainline that continued to Ashtabula, Ohio. The yard was constructed when the P&LE was under the control of the New York Central Railroad. Conrail routing most of the traffic around P&LE facilities in the area. After the 1993 CSX takeover of P&LE, Gateway Yard was closed and most tracks have been removed. The yard tower still stands but has been heavily vandalized.

McKees Rocks
 
Pittsburgh and Lake Erie Railroad Locomotive Shops, built in 1903, at the end of Linden Avenue in McKees Rocks, Pennsylvania

The McKees Rocks Yard facility was home to a yard, major locomotive rebuilding and general maintenance, as well as freight car repair and maintenance. On the westernmost end of the McKees Rocks yard, the P&LE interchanged with the PC&Y. However, the PC&Y facilities were just behind the P&LE Locomotive facilities in the main yard, and trackage from the PC&Y crossed the P&LE Mainline at this point, servicing several local businesses in the Bottoms section of McKees Rocks, finally making the previously mentioned interchange. Most of the McKees Rocks facilities are now gone. The entire McKees Rocks locomotive facility, shops, and yard is to be replaced by a regional CSX intermodal facility.

In 1904, P&LE built the O'Donovan Bridge for easier automobile access from Island Avenue to The Bottoms without crossing the railroad tracks. This was replaced in 1931 by the McKees Rocks Bridge, which extended to Ohio River Boulevard but still provided access to The Bottoms via Helen Street exit.

The McKees Rocks Community Development Corporation has plans to adaptively reuse the building.

College

The College Hill neighborhood of Beaver Falls had a small yard located just below Geneva College along the Beaver River. There was also a small roundhouse on the property, plus the College Hill Station. Today, only the station remains.

Subsidiaries

See also

Notes

  1. ^ 1956 Transport Statistics shows 221 route-miles, 33.4 million revenue tons of freight and 1824 million ton-miles for P&LE. Total for Class I railroads was 223,336 miles, 2705 million tons and 647,077 million ton-miles. (The Class I tonnage total may include duplication when a shipment is carried by more than one railroad.)
  2. ^ Drury, George: "Historical Guide to North American Railroads Book," Kalmbach Publishing, WI. ISBN 9780890240724
  3. ^ "Engineering News and American Contract Journal". 1883.
  4. ^ "Guide to the Pittsburgh & Lake Erie Railroad Company Records, 1860-1999 AIS.1982.23 | Digital Pitt". digital.library.pitt.edu. Retrieved 2020-03-17.
  5. ^ Harold H. McKlean, "Pittsburgh and Lake Erie Railroad." 1980, Golden West Books.
  6. ^ "P&LE passenger timetable, effective 1964-10-24". Pittsburgh and Lake Erie Railroad. 1964-10-24. Retrieved 2020-05-01.
  7. ^ "P&LE passenger timetable, effective 1968-10-27". Pittsburgh and Lake Erie Railroad. 1968-10-27. Retrieved 2020-05-01.
  8. ^ Snedden, Jeffrey (2018-04-24). . The Beaver County Times. Beaver Falls. Archived from the original on 2018-04-27. Retrieved 2020-05-01.
  9. ^ Solomon, Brian (2014). North American Railroads: The Illustrated Encyclopedia. Voyageur Press. p. 243. ISBN 9781627885577. P&LE operated a single roundtrip commuter train between State College (Beaver Falls) and Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, until July 1985

References

  • McLean, Harold H. (1980). Pittsburgh and Lake Erie Railroad. Golden West Books.
  • December 1992 Trains has info on the CSX sale.

External links

  • Historic American Engineering Record (HAER) No. PA-641, "Pittsburgh & Lake Erie Railroad, Locomotive Repair Shops"
  • The Family Tree of North American Railroads
  • P&LE 1960 system map
  • Headquarters building
  • Finding Aid to Pittsburgh & Lake Erie Railroad Company Records at the Archives Service Center, University of Pittsburgh
  • Photographs from the Pittsburgh & Lake Erie Railroad Company Collection
  • CSX Baltimore Division Timetable

pittsburgh, lake, erie, railroad, reporting, mark, also, known, little, giant, formed, 1875, company, headquarters, were, located, pittsburgh, pennsylvania, line, connected, pittsburgh, east, with, youngstown, ohio, haselton, neighborhood, west, connellsville,. The Pittsburgh and Lake Erie Railroad P amp LE reporting mark PLE also known as the Little Giant was formed on May 11 1875 Company headquarters were located in Pittsburgh Pennsylvania The line connected Pittsburgh in the east with Youngstown Ohio in the Haselton neighborhood in the west and Connellsville Pennsylvania to the east It did not reach Lake Erie at Ashtabula Ohio until the formation of Conrail in 1976 The P amp LE was known as the Little Giant since the tonnage that it moved was out of proportion to its route mileage While it operated around one tenth of one percent of the nation s railroad miles it hauled around one percent of its tonnage 1 This was largely because the P amp LE served the steel mills of the greater Pittsburgh area which consumed and shipped vast amounts of materials It was a specialized railroad deriving much of its revenue from coal coke iron ore limestone and steel The eventual closure of the steel mills led to the end of the P amp LE as an independent line in 1992 2 Pittsburgh and Lake Erie RailroadPittsburgh and Lake Erie Railroad red and New York Central system orange as of 1918OverviewHeadquartersPittsburgh PennsylvaniaReporting markPLELocalePittsburgh Pennsylvania to Youngstown OhioPittsburgh Pennsylvania to Connellsville PennsylvaniaDates of operation1875 1993SuccessorCSXTechnicalTrack gauge4 ft 8 1 2 in 1 435 mm standard gaugeAt the end of 1970 P amp LE operated 211 miles 340 km of road on 784 miles 1 262 km of track not including PC amp Y and Y amp S in 1970 it reported 1419 million ton miles of revenue freight down from 2437 million in 1944 Contents 1 Route of the P amp LE 1 1 P amp LE Division 1 2 Youghiogheny Branch 1 3 Monongahela Branch 2 History 2 1 South Penn and Pittsburgh McKeesport and Youghiogheny Railroad 2 2 Vanderbilt and the Little Giant 2 3 PM amp Y and the Monongahela Railway 2 4 Conrail and CSX 3 Company officers 4 Pittsburgh Terminal and P amp LE passenger trains 5 Shops and Yards 6 Subsidiaries 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 External linksRoute of the P amp LE Edit Former P amp LE trackage The P amp LE purchased many smaller railroads that operated in the areas of its main train line extending the line north to Youngstown and south to Connellsville This provided a means of transportation from the steel centers of Pittsburgh to the Great Lakes and St Lawrence Seaway area P amp LE Division Edit Share of the Pittsburgh and Lake Erie Rail Road Company issued 17 November 1924 The original line ran between Youngstown Ohio at Haselton and 24th Street in Pittsburgh Pennsylvania near the Jones and Laughlin Iron Works opened in 1879 The P amp LE s passenger terminal in Pittsburgh was on the south bank of the Monongahela River at the foot of the Smithfield Street Bridge The P amp LE followed the left downstream bank of the Monongahela River past the terminal to the Golden Triangle where that waterway meets the Allegheny River and becomes the Ohio River The railroad continued northwest along the left downstream bank of the Ohio to the vicinity of Beaver Pennsylvania where it crossed the river on the Beaver Bridge From there it followed the Beaver River to just south of New Castle Pennsylvania where it then followed the Mahoning River west northwest crossing into Ohio just east of Lowellville From there it ran northwest into Youngstown terminating at a junction with the New York Central known as Haselton In the table below mileage is reckoned westbound from the P amp LE Terminal in Pittsburgh The original line continued east past that station for a little over two miles 3 2 km listed in Youghiogheny Branch table below to near 24th Street in the South Side Flats neighborhood of Pittsburgh where it met the Monongahela Connecting Railroad and the Pittsburgh McKeesport amp Youghiogheny PM amp Y State Milepost City Station Lat long Old Telegraph Call Letters Connections and notesOH 64 Haselton Interchange With NYCYoungstown Youngstown Interchange With B amp OEast Youngstown East Youngstown60 Struthers Struthers JCT for LE amp E and Y amp SLowellville Junction56 Lowellville LowellvilleOhio Pennsylvania state linePA Robinson Robinson52 EdinburgCoverts Crossing48 New Castle New Castle Mahoningtown New Castle Junction Branch to New CastleWest Pittsburg West Pittsburg Station B amp O Trackage Rights over P amp LE to Port VueNewport Newport41 Wampum WampumRock Point36 West Ellwood Junction Station Branch to Ellwood CityBeaver Falls College Hill College Hill Station College YardBeaver Falls Beaver FallsNew Brighton New BrightonFallston FallstonBeaver BridgewaterBeaver amp Monaca Beaver Bridge over Ohio River24 Monaca MonacaAliquippa West Aliquippa20 Aliquippa Aliquippa18 Economy West Economy Station16 South Heights South Heights Station15 Glenwillard Glenwillard14 Crescent Twp Stoops Ferry11 Moon Twp Kendall9 Coraoplis Coraopolis Interchange With Montour8 Robinson Twp Montour Junction Station Montour Trackage Rights over P amp LE to Coraopolis4 McKees Rocks McKees Rocks Yard Locomotive Freight Car Shops and Maintenance JCT with PC amp Y 2 Pittsburgh West End Interchange with P amp WV West End0 Pittsburgh P amp LE Pittsburgh Terminal Pittsburgh Terminal and Smithfield Street BridgeYoughiogheny Branch Edit Share of the Pittsburgh McKeesport amp Youghiogheny Railroad Company issued 23 November 1908 The Pittsburgh McKeesport and Youghiogheny Railroad ran from 24th Street in Pittsburgh PA to Connellsville Pennsylvania in 1882 The PM amp Y followed the Monongahela River to McKeesport Pennsylvania then the Youghiogheny River to Connellsville Pennsylvania Mileage on this P amp LE branch was reckoned from the passenger terminal back at the Smithfield Street Bridge State Milepost City Station Lat long Connections and notesPA 0 Pittsburgh P amp LE Pittsburgh Terminal Original route of the Pittsburgh and Beck s Run Railroad start Pittsburgh South Side 20th Street amp 24th Street junctions Interchange with MCRR4 Pittsburgh Williamsburg5 Pittsburgh Becks Run End of Pittsburgh and Becks Run Railroad6 Homestead Homestead Site of Homestead StrikeMunhall P amp LE Munhall Bridge over Monongahela River8 Rankin Rankin10 Braddock Braddock11 McKeesport McKeesport Bridge over Youghiogheny River16 Port Vue Port Vue Interchange With B amp O B amp O had trackage rights over P amp LE to West Pittsburgh 17 Port Vue Sinn18 Dead Man s Hollow Flemming Industrial single ended siding at the Union Sewer Pipe Company19 Boston22 Greenock25 Stringtown Dravo Site of Methodist church that caught fire due to sparks of passing trains 27 Buena Vista Buena Vesta33 West Newton37 Cedar Creek41 Wickhaven46 Kier49 Sand Rock53 Dickerson Run56 Crossland58 Connellsville Connellsville Interchange With B amp O WM and NWMonongahela Branch Edit The Pittsburgh McKeesport amp Youghiogheny Railroad also followed the Monongahela River to Brownsville Pennsylvania State Milepost City Station Lat long Old Telegraph Call Letters Connections and notesPA 16 Port Vue Belle Vernon Junction18 Glassport Glassport20 Pollock22 Elizabeth Wylie Elizabeth27 Bunola31 East Monongahela Monongahela33 Manown34 Sunnyside36 Sheppler40 Monessen Monessen42 East Charleroi43 Belle Vernon45 Fayette City Fayette City50 Newell54 Brownsville Junction JCT with Monongahela RailwayHistory Edit View of men in line at the pay car of the Pittsburgh and Lake Erie Railroad CompanyThe Pittsburgh and Lake Erie Railroad was the creation of William McCreery a prominent Pittsburgh businessman merchant and railroad builder McCreery had suffered at the hands of the Pennsylvania Railroad in a business that had a loss or failed The Pennsylvania Railroad at the time used discriminatory rates which became a hot issue in Pittsburgh On May 11 1870 McCreery and ten other people filed Articles of Association with the Pennsylvania Secretary of State The stated length of the railroad was for 57 miles 92 km After 2 years the starting group was not very successful at raising the required funds and in 1877 many of the directors were succeeded by a new group of Pittsburgh businessmen The new group was James I Bennett David Hostetter James M Baily Mark W Watson and James M Schoonmaker all influential In the spring of 1877 the first rails were laid down in Beaver Falls which had the largest population other than Pittsburgh The other reason for this was around February 1877 Jacob Henrici of the Harmony Society had business there Henrici would also become a director in 1877 On July 6 1877 McCreery resigned and Bennett was elected to president with Jacob Henrici becoming a director Henrici was the key due to his Harmony Society ties which was a communal religious group founded in 1805 In 1880 William Henry Vanderbilt s Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway bought stock to the tune of 200 000 in the P amp LE The P amp LE would stay in the Vanderbilt s New York Central system until Conrail Also in 1877 an agreement between the P amp LE and the Atlantic amp Great Western Erie and the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway was reached for routing traffic at Youngstown Ohio The final track laying between Pittsburgh and Youngstown was on January 27 1879 At the opening in 1879 the P amp LE was a poorly built single track line Fortunately for the railroad it was an immediate success and money was soon available for improvements South Penn and Pittsburgh McKeesport and Youghiogheny Railroad Edit In 1881 the P amp LE became linked with the notorious South Pennsylvania Railroad South Penn This would lead to William Henry Vanderbilt to control of the P amp LE as a link in the South Penn and the building of the Pittsburgh McKeesport and Youghiogheny Railroad The South Pennsylvania Railroad was planned to connect to the PM amp Y 3 Vanderbilt did this by buying Henry W Oliver s and the Harmony Society s stock in the P amp LE Then Vanderbilt aided by Andrew Carnegie advanced the PM amp Y all of the funds to build to Connellsville Pennsylvania and then lease it to the P amp LE for 99 years The PM amp Y in the end was the only part of the South Penn that was built but it would be an important part of the P amp LE The PM amp Y opened in 1883 and leased to the P amp LE in 1884 Concurrently in 1883 to get the P amp LE ready for the expected new business due to the South Penn linkage the McKees Rocks shops were built Vanderbilt and the Little Giant Edit The company came under more formal control in the 1887 by the New York Central Railroad Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway s president John Newell took over as president of the P amp LE in 1887 Under Newell Reed and Colonel Schoonmaker the P amp LE would become the Little Giant From 1887 to 1927 the P amp LE would become a heavy duty railroad with double track all the way from Pittsburgh to Youngstown The P amp LE operated as an independent subsidiary even after New York Central and Pennsylvania Railroad merged to form Penn Central PM amp Y and the Monongahela Railway Edit Pittsburgh and Lake Erie Railroad in Stoops Ferry Pennsylvania 1907 The making of coke in Connellsville had been a big part of P amp LE traffic but by the early 20th century it had lessened The development of by products distillation processing of coke had moved to the Pittsburgh area The P amp LE then extended up the Monongahela River to Brownsville Pennsylvania in 1901 The Pennsylvania Railroad at the same time had extended to Brownsville Both the PRR and the P amp LE had plans to extend even further up the river into West Virginia coke fields Most likely due to the South Penn they decided to work together by using the Monongahela Railway The Monongahela Railway then was extended south to Martin Pennsylvania reaching the Kondike Coke fields Later in 1915 it reached Fairmont West Virginia Conrail and CSX Edit When Conrail was formed the Pittsburgh and Lake Erie Railroad again became an independent company because P amp LE was owed 15 2 million by Penn Central and operated as such until its merger into CSX Transportation CSX Starting in 1934 the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad B amp O bought trackage rights over P amp LE from McKeesport to New Castle The B amp O s route through Pittsburgh had excessive grades and curves In the last years of the P amp LE CSX used the line more than P amp LE leading to the merger Most of the online customers had long been gone with only the main line still intact In 1993 the company was purchased by CSX 4 The CSX designated the P amp LE as a new subsidiary the Three Rivers Railway However in 1993 CSX leased the TRR and there is currently no de facto distinction between the former P amp LE and any other portion of CSX s system Company officers Edit P amp LE hopper with CRANDIC markings on the CRANDIC at Cedar Rapids Iowa Note ACI plate on the car Presidents of the railroad were as follows William McCreery 1875 1877 James I Bennett 1877 1881 Jacob Henrici 1877 1885 John Newell 1887 1896After Newell the presidency would be held by the president of the NYC with the active management of the local vice president Vice Presidents James H Reed 1892 1896 Colonel James M Schoonmaker 1886 1927 James B Yohe 1917 1919 WW1 Supervisor 1920 1929 V P Curtis M Yohe 1929 1953 John F Nash 1953 1956With Nash the active management went back to the president John W Barriger III 1956 1964 Curtis D Buford 1965 1969 Henry G Allyn Jr c 1969 1983 Richard Thompson c 1983 1986 Gordon Neuenschwander c 1986 1993Pittsburgh Terminal and P amp LE passenger trains EditMain article Pittsburgh amp Lake Erie Railroad Station Interior of former P amp LE station in Pittsburgh The P amp LE s Pittsburgh passenger train station interior seen in the lower right photo sat adjacent the south bank of the Monongahela River at the foot of the Smithfield Street Bridge The Pittsburgh Terminal was the railroad s headquarters passenger train shed and freight warehouse complex In the upper photo the terminal sits along the Monongahela river The roof of the freight house is to the right of the terminal train shed The former P amp LE headquarters building at the bottom of the Monongahela Incline has been converted into a present day shopping center Station Square The passenger station has been placed on a list of historic edifices modernized and converted to a restaurant During 1910 1930 the P amp LE operated 50 passenger daily trains on its 65 mile Pittsburgh Youngstown portion of its system Ticketing agreements with the Erie RR and the P amp LE s parent New York Central passengers boarding in Pittsburgh could ride coaches or sleepers west to Toledo Detroit Chicago and St Louis and north to Cleveland Buffalo Toronto Albany and Boston The Baltimore amp Ohio RR obtained trackage rights in 1934 on the P amp LE and Chicago New York trains such as the Capitol Limited Chicago Washington Columbian Chicago Washington and Ambassador Detroit Baltimore operated over the P amp LE between New Castle Junction and McKeesport These trains stopped at the Terminal located in Pittsburgh s South Side The trackage charing arrangement continued until Amtrak assumed responsibility for the nation s passenger rail service in 1971 5 P amp LE operated commuter trains into Pittsburgh In 1964 it ran one round trip between Youngstown and Pittsburgh as well as one additional southbound and two additional northbound trains on the section between Beaver Falls and Pittsburgh Latest by 1968 only the section between College Hill Beaver Falls Aliquippa and P amp LE s Pittsburgh Terminal was served by one single roundtrip commuter train per day 6 7 In 1978 P amp LE tried to drop that last commuter train which was met by fierce objections With state support P amp LE continued to operate the commuter run but eventually ended the service on July 12 1985 after passenger counts had dropped significantly 8 9 The PATrain commuter operation continued to use some P amp LE trackage until 1989 Shops and Yards EditGateway YardThe Youngstown Gateway Yard was a major hub location on the railroad until the creation of Conrail Gateway Yard was opened in October 1957 to be a modern hump yard The yard was approximately 200 acres 0 81 km2 stretching for a distance of just over 5 miles 8 0 km from Lowellville Ohio to Center Street in Youngstown Ohio Gateway Yard was made up of three principal yards and an assortment of smaller special purpose yards The principal yards were arranged linearly with the eastern limits of the Departure Yard in Lowellville The Hump Yard was located in Struthers in the center of the facility and the Receiving Yard was to the west The special purpose yards were Diesel Servicing Facilities Gorilla Park and Interchange yards The Interchange yard was made up of six tracks four were for interchange to and from the B amp O Railroad and two of which were for general use The other interchange was with New York Central Railroad which was a direct interchange The western yard limit was the end of track for the P amp LE Beyond the western end of the Yard was the NYC mainline that continued to Ashtabula Ohio The yard was constructed when the P amp LE was under the control of the New York Central Railroad Conrail routing most of the traffic around P amp LE facilities in the area After the 1993 CSX takeover of P amp LE Gateway Yard was closed and most tracks have been removed The yard tower still stands but has been heavily vandalized McKees Rocks Pittsburgh and Lake Erie Railroad Locomotive Shops built in 1903 at the end of Linden Avenue in McKees Rocks Pennsylvania The McKees Rocks Yard facility was home to a yard major locomotive rebuilding and general maintenance as well as freight car repair and maintenance On the westernmost end of the McKees Rocks yard the P amp LE interchanged with the PC amp Y However the PC amp Y facilities were just behind the P amp LE Locomotive facilities in the main yard and trackage from the PC amp Y crossed the P amp LE Mainline at this point servicing several local businesses in the Bottoms section of McKees Rocks finally making the previously mentioned interchange Most of the McKees Rocks facilities are now gone The entire McKees Rocks locomotive facility shops and yard is to be replaced by a regional CSX intermodal facility In 1904 P amp LE built the O Donovan Bridge for easier automobile access from Island Avenue to The Bottoms without crossing the railroad tracks This was replaced in 1931 by the McKees Rocks Bridge which extended to Ohio River Boulevard but still provided access to The Bottoms via Helen Street exit The McKees Rocks Community Development Corporation has plans to adaptively reuse the building CollegeThe College Hill neighborhood of Beaver Falls had a small yard located just below Geneva College along the Beaver River There was also a small roundhouse on the property plus the College Hill Station Today only the station remains Subsidiaries EditPittsburgh McKeesport and Youghiogheny Railroad Leased 1888 and merged in 1965 Pittsburgh Chartiers and Youghiogheny Railroad 1 2 P amp LE 1 2 CR Mahoning State Line Railroad Leased 1885 Monongahela Railway 1 3 P amp LE 1 3 B amp O 1 3 CR PR Montour Railroad Lake Erie and Eastern Railroad 1 2 P amp LE 1 2 CR Youngstown and Southern RailwaySee also Edit Railways portalWashingtonian B amp O train Shenandoah B amp O train Notes Edit 1956 Transport Statistics shows 221 route miles 33 4 million revenue tons of freight and 1824 million ton miles for P amp LE Total for Class I railroads was 223 336 miles 2705 million tons and 647 077 million ton miles The Class I tonnage total may include duplication when a shipment is carried by more than one railroad Drury George Historical Guide to North American Railroads Book Kalmbach Publishing WI ISBN 9780890240724 Engineering News and American Contract Journal 1883 Guide to the Pittsburgh amp Lake Erie Railroad Company Records 1860 1999 AIS 1982 23 Digital Pitt digital library pitt edu Retrieved 2020 03 17 Harold H McKlean Pittsburgh and Lake Erie Railroad 1980 Golden West Books P amp LE passenger timetable effective 1964 10 24 Pittsburgh and Lake Erie Railroad 1964 10 24 Retrieved 2020 05 01 P amp LE passenger timetable effective 1968 10 27 Pittsburgh and Lake Erie Railroad 1968 10 27 Retrieved 2020 05 01 Snedden Jeffrey 2018 04 24 Histories amp Mysteries The Legacy of The Pittsburgh amp Lake Erie Railroad The Beaver County Times Beaver Falls Archived from the original on 2018 04 27 Retrieved 2020 05 01 Solomon Brian 2014 North American Railroads The Illustrated Encyclopedia Voyageur Press p 243 ISBN 9781627885577 P amp LE operated a single roundtrip commuter train between State College Beaver Falls and Pittsburgh Pennsylvania until July 1985References EditMcLean Harold H 1980 Pittsburgh and Lake Erie Railroad Golden West Books December 1992 Trains has info on the CSX sale External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pittsburgh and Lake Erie Railroad Historic American Engineering Record HAER No PA 641 Pittsburgh amp Lake Erie Railroad Locomotive Repair Shops Pittsburgh amp Lake Erie Railroad Historical Society The Family Tree of North American Railroads P amp LE 1960 system map Headquarters building Finding Aid to Pittsburgh amp Lake Erie Railroad Company Records at the Archives Service Center University of Pittsburgh Photographs from the Pittsburgh amp Lake Erie Railroad Company Collection CSX Baltimore Division Timetable Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pittsburgh and Lake Erie Railroad amp oldid 1152203423, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.