fbpx
Wikipedia

Shenandoah Valley Railroad (1867–1890)

Shenandoah Valley Railroad was a line completed on June 19, 1882, extending up the Shenandoah Valley from Hagerstown, Maryland through the West Virginia panhandle into Virginia to reach Roanoke, Virginia and to connect with the Norfolk and Western Railway (N&W). The development of this railroad had considerable backing from the Pennsylvania Railroad. In September 1890 it went into bankruptcy and was reorganized as the Shenandoah Valley Railway. In December 1890, it became part of N&W. Today the tracks are a major artery of the Norfolk Southern system.

Shenandoah Valley Railroad
Overview
HeadquartersRoanoke, Virginia
LocaleMaryland, West Virginia and Virginia
Dates of operation1867–1890
SuccessorNorfolk and Western Railway
Technical
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge

South of Harrisonburg, Virginia, a former part of the Norfolk Southern System a few miles west was a parallel line originally called the Valley Railroad. It was built in the late 19th century by Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, a fierce competitor of the Pennsylvania Railroad. The line was purchased in 1942 by the Chesapeake Western Railway. A portion extending northward from Staunton, Virginia in Augusta County and Rockingham County became a new short-line railroad formed late in the 20th century by several major shippers. The historic name of the once rival was adopted for the current privately owned intrastate Shenandoah Valley Railroad.

Planning

The organizers of the SVRR planned to construct a railroad from the Pennsylvania Railroad (PRR) station in Hagerstown, Maryland (a branch out of Harrisburg, PA called the Cumberland Valley Railroad) to the Virginia and Tennessee Railroad (V&T) in Salem, Virginia. The route called for 243 miles (391 km) of new construction. The line follows closely the great iron ore belt along the western slope of the Blue Ridge Mountains.

Peter Bouck Borst of Page County, Virginia introduced a charter for the railroad for a bill before the Virginia General Assembly in 1866. The ambitious plan was to build a railroad from Harpers Ferry, West Virginia, to the Virginia Central Railroad somewhere near Staunton, to a connection with the V&T around Salem, and finally to somewhere near the southwest corner of Virginia to meet the East Tennessee and Virginia Railroad at Bristol, Virginia.

Since the route traversed three states (Maryland, West Virginia, and Virginia) three legislative authorizations were required. Virginia provided approval on February 23, 1867. West Virginia approved the construction idea on February 25, 1870. Maryland provided the final approval needed on April 4, 1870.

On March 14, 1870, the company was formed and the first president, Peter Bouck Borst, was elected.

Rival railroads

After Maryland approved construction of a bridge over the Potomac river anywhere between Harpers Ferry and Williamsport, the Pennsylvania Railroad (PRR) took notice. There could be link with rival B&O railroad, as well as a link with its own Cumberland Valley Railroad, just north of Williamsport in Hagerstown. This new north/south line would be the key to capturing the traffic on numerous just-acquired southern lines and directing it to the port of Philadelphia. The competing B&O wanted to divert the riches of the area to the port of Baltimore and expand into the south. Each tried to cut off the other from the south. Meanwhile, Virginia really didn’t want either to succeed so that traffic would be directed to the Norfolk port.

The PRR began purchasing stock in the SVRR, and took effective control of it. B&O took control of a competing north/south line called the Valley Railroad. The plans showed the railroads were to run parallel to each other through the valley, sometimes just a few miles apart. The race was on.

Main line construction (1870–1882)

The Central Improvement Company (a subsidiary of Pennsylvania Railroad) was awarded a contract to construct 224 miles (360 km) of the SVRR from Shepherdstown to Salem for $35,000 a mile. The work was to be completed by August 1872. The major source of capital came from the sale of 6% mortgage bonds backed by the Pennsylvania Railroad.

In 1871, Thomas A. Scott was elected as the second president of SVRR; he was also a Vice President of the Pennsylvania Railroad. Peter B. Borst was forced out because of his involvement with a competing plan for a similar rail line called the Luray Valley Railroad Company that was pushed through the Virginia General Assembly in 1870.

In August 1871, the Central Improvement Company submitted a proposal to cancel the construction contract, asking for payment only for work completed. The proposal was rejected by SVRR. In 1872, the deadline for completion of the railroad was extended to January 1875 and 94 miles (151 km) of work south of the C&O railroad in Staunton eliminated. Service began between Shepherdstown, WV and the Shenandoah River on December 15, 1879.

In September 1872, the Cumberland Valley Railroad (a subsidiary of Pennsylvania Railroad) was asked to construct the tracks from their station in Hagerstown, MD to Shepherdstown, WV. Service began on that stretch in 1880.

Problems with PRR escalated over the inability to obtain a traffic contract with the Cumberland Valley Railroad. SVRR sent a team of surveyors during the summer of 1880 into Pennsylvania indicating a desire to build a line to Harrisburg to connect with the competing Philadelphia and Reading Railroad line. The bluff worked and a contract was worked out. But the split with PRR was now inevitable.

Also in 1880, service began on the section south of the Shenandoah River between Elkton and Waynesboro. In 1881 the north and south sections were connected. Finally, in 1882, it stretched south to meet the Norfolk and Western Railroad in the new railroad town of Roanoke, Virginia. The track was now complete.

Meanwhile, rival Valley Railroad (VRR) was trying to raise capital. With Robert E. Lee as its spokesman, it convinced Baltimore to authorize $1,000,000 to secure funding by other Virginia counties. Baltimore was to gain considerably by having the traffic from the richest parts of the south directed its way. Many delays occurred, particularly after the recession on the 1870s, but traffic finally began between Harrisonburg and Staunton in 1883. The southern section was never constructed.

Recession, strikes and bankruptcy (1882–1890)

The financial panic of 1873 brought a deep recession that suppressed business into the 1880s. In 1882 SVRR received a loan of $79,000 from Philadelphia financiers E.W. Clark & Co. to cover that year’s shortfall. The life of all the bridges was ending and significant funds would be needed in the coming years.

In 1882, N&W made a deal with PRR to swap the SVRR share capital for N&W common stock. SVRR got a loan from N&W of $600,000, plus up to $200,000 per year for 3 years. PRR kicked in $150,000 as advanced payment for highly discounted future traffic contracts. Control of SVRR stock was now with N&W. In 1883, SVRR floated $1.8 million of income bonds. Revenues continued to be far below forecast due to the bad economy.

In early 1885, SVRR defaulted on its loan interest, taxes, payrolls, and bills. A Roanoke judge put the line in a receivership, but in December, the mortgage company holding its notes filed suit for liquidation of the road’s assets. The Norfolk and Western Railroad fought a legal battle for the next four years to regain control. On September 30, 1890, the SVRR was reorganized as the Shenandoah Valley "Railway", with stockholders approval to sell to N&W. On December 2, the Shenandoah Valley Railway acquired the rights to the franchise of the Washington and Western Railroad. On December 15, 1890, N&W purchased the company outright for $6,000,000 of stock and added the rails to its system.

The competing Valley Railroad ran out of capital to build in 1884 and struggled until it went into receivership in 1896. The final length of that line was 36 miles (58 km) from Staunton to Lexington, the southern 51 miles (82 km) to Salem never finished. The line was never profitable.

Stations

 
1882 Station map. Source: Library of Congress
Mile Location
0.0 Hagerstown, (Washington County) MD
5.9 Saint James, MD
9.0 Grimes, MD
14.1 Antietam, MD
16.9 Shepherdstown, (Jefferson County) WV
19 Morgans Grove, WV
23.1 Shenandoah Junction, WV
28.4 Charlestown, WV
32.5 Wheatland, WV
33.7 Rippon, WV
36.2 Gaylord, (Clarke County) VA
39.9 Berryville, VA
46.2 Boyce, VA
49.2 White Post, VA
53.2 Ashby, (Warren County) VA
56.4 Cedarville, VA
59.2 Riverton, VA
62.1 Front Royal, VA
66.4 Manor, VA
72.9 Bentonville, VA
75.6 Overall, (Page County) VA
79.8 Rileyville, VA
Mile Location
83 Vaughn’s Summit
85.1 Kimball, VA
86 Elgin, VA
88.8 Luray, VA
95.6 Marksville (Stanley), VA
101.9 Ingham, VA
104.0 Grove Hill, VA
106.7 Milnes, VA
112.5 Elkton, (Rockingham County) VA
?? Sellers
127.2 Port Republic
130 Grottoes
129.1 Weyer’s Cave, (Augusta County) VA
132.1 Patterson
133 Harriston
136.9 Crimora, VA
141 Dooms, VA
143.2 Waynesboro Junction, VA
148.0 Lyndhurst, VA
150.0 Lipscomb, VA
153.0 Stuart’s Draft, VA
159.4 Greenville, VA
Mile Location
162.7 Lofton, VA
167.6 Vesuvius, (Rockbridge County) VA
174.9 Midvale, VA
179.7 Riverside, VA
186 Buena Vista, VA
186 Loch Laird, VA
188.7 Thompson, VA
191.0 Buffalo Forge, VA
197 Glasgow, VA
198.6 Natural Bridge, VA
207 Solitude
208.9 Arcadia, (Botetourt County) VA
214.2 Buchanan, VA
219.2 Lithia, VA
224.6 Houston, VA
225 Nace, Virginia
227.9 Troutville, VA
232.2 Cloverdale, VA
234 Hollins, (Roanoke County) VA
236.5 Tinker Creek
239.3 Roanoke, VA

Historical timeline

1867
  • Shenandoah Valley Railroad chartered 2/23/1867
1870
  • Shenandoah Valley Railroad organized as a subsidiary of the Pennsylvania Railroad.
  • Work on the road (railroad track) begins.
1873
  • Work is suspended because of difficulty with contractor
1879
  • Construction resumes in the spring of 1879.
  • Train service begins between Shepherdstown and the Shenandoah river on 12/15/1879 (42 miles).
1880
  • Service extended southward from Shenandoah River to Front Royal on 4/1/1880.
  • Service extended southward to Bentonville on 5/10/1880.
  • Service extended northward to Hagerstown on 8/19/1880.
  • Service extended southward to Milford (now Overall) on 9/6/1880.
  • Separate section of service between Elkton and Waynesboro (area now called Basic City) begins on 11/22/1880.
  • The northern section extended south to Shenandoah Iron Works on 12/20/1880.
1881
  • Elsewhere: Norfolk & Western Railroad Company (N&W) formed from purchase of Atlantic, Mississippi, and Ohio Railroad.
  • Virginia, Tennessee, Georgia Air Line was formed via a contract between SVRR, N&W, and the East Tennessee, Virginia, and Georgia Railroad. The Air Line was between Hagerstown, MD and Norfolk, VA.
  • The northern and southern sections of track are connected on 4/18/1881. Service is now from Hagerstown MD to Waynesboro VA.
1882
  • Track completed southward from Waynesboro (Basic), VA to Roanoke, VA on 6/19/1882. Connection with Norfolk & Western Railroad is established.
  • A contract between SVRR and N&W is signed on 12/29/1882 (ratified by stockholders on 2/12/1883). The majority of SVRR share capital was traded for N&W common stock. N&W agreed to loan SVRR up to $200,000 per year, for a maximum of 3 years from 1/2/1883, if it loses money.
1883
  • First-ever annual report is published. It is called the "Third Annual Report" to coincide with the N&W numbering scheme.
  • Loss of $183,648.16 is covered by $200,000 loan from N&W for year 1883.
1884
  • The Southern Despatch Line is formed between Pennsylvania Railroad, Cumberland Valley Railroad, Western Maryland Railroad, SVRR, N&W, and East Tennessee, Virginia and Georgia Railroad.
  • $135,000 loan from N&W for year 1884.
1885
  • Shenandoah Valley Railroad forced into receivership 04/01/1885.
1890
  • In September, Shenandoah Valley Railroad sold under foreclosure and reorganized as the Shenandoah Valley Railway; in December, Shenandoah Valley Railway is acquired and absorbed by Norfolk & Western Railroad.

Passenger service

Into the mid-20th century the new owners, the Norfolk & Western, operated two passenger trains a day in each direction.[1] The #1 (southbound) and the #2 (northbound), Roanoke-New York City via Hagerstown and Harrisburg, were part of a pooled long distance night train in cooperation with the Pennsylvania Railroad, complete with Pullman service and lounge car service. Passenger service ended by summer, 1963.[2][3]

See also

References

  1. ^ 'Official Guide of the Railways,' August 1949, Norfolk & Western section, Table 2
  2. ^ 'Official Guide of the Railways,' June 1961, Norfolk & Western section, Table 3-Shenandoah Valley Route
  3. ^ 'Official Guide of the Railways,' June 1963, Norfolk & Western section

Sources

  • SVRR Annual Report 3 (Fiscal Year 1883, first report)
  • SVRR Annual Report 5 (Fiscal Year 1885)
  • SVRR Annual Report 6 (Fiscal Year 1886)
  • SVRR Annual Report 9 (Fiscal Year 1889)
  • SVRR Annual Report 10 (Fiscal Year 1890, last report)
  • Iron Horses in the Valley, The Valley and Shenandoah Valley Railroads, 1866-1882 by John R. Hildebrand, 2001 ISBN 978-1-57249-232-5
  • Norfolk & Western's Shenandoah Valley Line by Mason Y. Cooper, 1998 ISBN 978-0-9633254-7-1
  • The Mineral Wealth of Virginia, 1884 by Andrew S. McCreath. Printed in Harrisburg PA by Lane S. Hart. Copy located in the history room of the Charles Town West Virginia library.
  • When Trains Came to Shepherstown, 200 by Johnna Armstrong for The Station at Shepherdstown.

shenandoah, valley, railroad, 1867, 1890, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, shenandoah, valley, railro. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Shenandoah Valley Railroad 1867 1890 news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message Shenandoah Valley Railroad was a line completed on June 19 1882 extending up the Shenandoah Valley from Hagerstown Maryland through the West Virginia panhandle into Virginia to reach Roanoke Virginia and to connect with the Norfolk and Western Railway N amp W The development of this railroad had considerable backing from the Pennsylvania Railroad In September 1890 it went into bankruptcy and was reorganized as the Shenandoah Valley Railway In December 1890 it became part of N amp W Today the tracks are a major artery of the Norfolk Southern system Shenandoah Valley RailroadOverviewHeadquartersRoanoke VirginiaLocaleMaryland West Virginia and VirginiaDates of operation1867 1890SuccessorNorfolk and Western RailwayTechnicalTrack gauge4 ft 8 1 2 in 1 435 mm standard gaugeSouth of Harrisonburg Virginia a former part of the Norfolk Southern System a few miles west was a parallel line originally called the Valley Railroad It was built in the late 19th century by Baltimore and Ohio Railroad a fierce competitor of the Pennsylvania Railroad The line was purchased in 1942 by the Chesapeake Western Railway A portion extending northward from Staunton Virginia in Augusta County and Rockingham County became a new short line railroad formed late in the 20th century by several major shippers The historic name of the once rival was adopted for the current privately owned intrastate Shenandoah Valley Railroad Contents 1 Planning 2 Rival railroads 3 Main line construction 1870 1882 4 Recession strikes and bankruptcy 1882 1890 5 Stations 6 Historical timeline 7 Passenger service 8 See also 9 References 10 SourcesPlanning EditThe organizers of the SVRR planned to construct a railroad from the Pennsylvania Railroad PRR station in Hagerstown Maryland a branch out of Harrisburg PA called the Cumberland Valley Railroad to the Virginia and Tennessee Railroad V amp T in Salem Virginia The route called for 243 miles 391 km of new construction The line follows closely the great iron ore belt along the western slope of the Blue Ridge Mountains Peter Bouck Borst of Page County Virginia introduced a charter for the railroad for a bill before the Virginia General Assembly in 1866 The ambitious plan was to build a railroad from Harpers Ferry West Virginia to the Virginia Central Railroad somewhere near Staunton to a connection with the V amp T around Salem and finally to somewhere near the southwest corner of Virginia to meet the East Tennessee and Virginia Railroad at Bristol Virginia Since the route traversed three states Maryland West Virginia and Virginia three legislative authorizations were required Virginia provided approval on February 23 1867 West Virginia approved the construction idea on February 25 1870 Maryland provided the final approval needed on April 4 1870 On March 14 1870 the company was formed and the first president Peter Bouck Borst was elected Rival railroads EditAfter Maryland approved construction of a bridge over the Potomac river anywhere between Harpers Ferry and Williamsport the Pennsylvania Railroad PRR took notice There could be link with rival B amp O railroad as well as a link with its own Cumberland Valley Railroad just north of Williamsport in Hagerstown This new north south line would be the key to capturing the traffic on numerous just acquired southern lines and directing it to the port of Philadelphia The competing B amp O wanted to divert the riches of the area to the port of Baltimore and expand into the south Each tried to cut off the other from the south Meanwhile Virginia really didn t want either to succeed so that traffic would be directed to the Norfolk port The PRR began purchasing stock in the SVRR and took effective control of it B amp O took control of a competing north south line called the Valley Railroad The plans showed the railroads were to run parallel to each other through the valley sometimes just a few miles apart The race was on Main line construction 1870 1882 EditThe Central Improvement Company a subsidiary of Pennsylvania Railroad was awarded a contract to construct 224 miles 360 km of the SVRR from Shepherdstown to Salem for 35 000 a mile The work was to be completed by August 1872 The major source of capital came from the sale of 6 mortgage bonds backed by the Pennsylvania Railroad In 1871 Thomas A Scott was elected as the second president of SVRR he was also a Vice President of the Pennsylvania Railroad Peter B Borst was forced out because of his involvement with a competing plan for a similar rail line called the Luray Valley Railroad Company that was pushed through the Virginia General Assembly in 1870 In August 1871 the Central Improvement Company submitted a proposal to cancel the construction contract asking for payment only for work completed The proposal was rejected by SVRR In 1872 the deadline for completion of the railroad was extended to January 1875 and 94 miles 151 km of work south of the C amp O railroad in Staunton eliminated Service began between Shepherdstown WV and the Shenandoah River on December 15 1879 In September 1872 the Cumberland Valley Railroad a subsidiary of Pennsylvania Railroad was asked to construct the tracks from their station in Hagerstown MD to Shepherdstown WV Service began on that stretch in 1880 Problems with PRR escalated over the inability to obtain a traffic contract with the Cumberland Valley Railroad SVRR sent a team of surveyors during the summer of 1880 into Pennsylvania indicating a desire to build a line to Harrisburg to connect with the competing Philadelphia and Reading Railroad line The bluff worked and a contract was worked out But the split with PRR was now inevitable Also in 1880 service began on the section south of the Shenandoah River between Elkton and Waynesboro In 1881 the north and south sections were connected Finally in 1882 it stretched south to meet the Norfolk and Western Railroad in the new railroad town of Roanoke Virginia The track was now complete Meanwhile rival Valley Railroad VRR was trying to raise capital With Robert E Lee as its spokesman it convinced Baltimore to authorize 1 000 000 to secure funding by other Virginia counties Baltimore was to gain considerably by having the traffic from the richest parts of the south directed its way Many delays occurred particularly after the recession on the 1870s but traffic finally began between Harrisonburg and Staunton in 1883 The southern section was never constructed Recession strikes and bankruptcy 1882 1890 EditThe financial panic of 1873 brought a deep recession that suppressed business into the 1880s In 1882 SVRR received a loan of 79 000 from Philadelphia financiers E W Clark amp Co to cover that year s shortfall The life of all the bridges was ending and significant funds would be needed in the coming years In 1882 N amp W made a deal with PRR to swap the SVRR share capital for N amp W common stock SVRR got a loan from N amp W of 600 000 plus up to 200 000 per year for 3 years PRR kicked in 150 000 as advanced payment for highly discounted future traffic contracts Control of SVRR stock was now with N amp W In 1883 SVRR floated 1 8 million of income bonds Revenues continued to be far below forecast due to the bad economy In early 1885 SVRR defaulted on its loan interest taxes payrolls and bills A Roanoke judge put the line in a receivership but in December the mortgage company holding its notes filed suit for liquidation of the road s assets The Norfolk and Western Railroad fought a legal battle for the next four years to regain control On September 30 1890 the SVRR was reorganized as the Shenandoah Valley Railway with stockholders approval to sell to N amp W On December 2 the Shenandoah Valley Railway acquired the rights to the franchise of the Washington and Western Railroad On December 15 1890 N amp W purchased the company outright for 6 000 000 of stock and added the rails to its system The competing Valley Railroad ran out of capital to build in 1884 and struggled until it went into receivership in 1896 The final length of that line was 36 miles 58 km from Staunton to Lexington the southern 51 miles 82 km to Salem never finished The line was never profitable Stations Edit 1882 Station map Source Library of Congress Mile Location0 0 Hagerstown Washington County MD5 9 Saint James MD9 0 Grimes MD14 1 Antietam MD16 9 Shepherdstown Jefferson County WV19 Morgans Grove WV23 1 Shenandoah Junction WV28 4 Charlestown WV32 5 Wheatland WV33 7 Rippon WV36 2 Gaylord Clarke County VA39 9 Berryville VA46 2 Boyce VA49 2 White Post VA53 2 Ashby Warren County VA56 4 Cedarville VA59 2 Riverton VA62 1 Front Royal VA66 4 Manor VA72 9 Bentonville VA75 6 Overall Page County VA79 8 Rileyville VA Mile Location83 Vaughn s Summit85 1 Kimball VA86 Elgin VA88 8 Luray VA95 6 Marksville Stanley VA101 9 Ingham VA104 0 Grove Hill VA106 7 Milnes VA112 5 Elkton Rockingham County VA Sellers127 2 Port Republic130 Grottoes129 1 Weyer s Cave Augusta County VA132 1 Patterson133 Harriston136 9 Crimora VA141 Dooms VA143 2 Waynesboro Junction VA148 0 Lyndhurst VA150 0 Lipscomb VA153 0 Stuart s Draft VA159 4 Greenville VA Mile Location162 7 Lofton VA167 6 Vesuvius Rockbridge County VA174 9 Midvale VA179 7 Riverside VA186 Buena Vista VA186 Loch Laird VA188 7 Thompson VA191 0 Buffalo Forge VA197 Glasgow VA198 6 Natural Bridge VA207 Solitude208 9 Arcadia Botetourt County VA214 2 Buchanan VA219 2 Lithia VA224 6 Houston VA225 Nace Virginia227 9 Troutville VA232 2 Cloverdale VA234 Hollins Roanoke County VA236 5 Tinker Creek239 3 Roanoke VAHistorical timeline Edit1867 Shenandoah Valley Railroad chartered 2 23 18671870 Shenandoah Valley Railroad organized as a subsidiary of the Pennsylvania Railroad Work on the road railroad track begins 1873 Work is suspended because of difficulty with contractor1879 Construction resumes in the spring of 1879 Train service begins between Shepherdstown and the Shenandoah river on 12 15 1879 42 miles 1880 Service extended southward from Shenandoah River to Front Royal on 4 1 1880 Service extended southward to Bentonville on 5 10 1880 Service extended northward to Hagerstown on 8 19 1880 Service extended southward to Milford now Overall on 9 6 1880 Separate section of service between Elkton and Waynesboro area now called Basic City begins on 11 22 1880 The northern section extended south to Shenandoah Iron Works on 12 20 1880 1881 Elsewhere Norfolk amp Western Railroad Company N amp W formed from purchase of Atlantic Mississippi and Ohio Railroad Virginia Tennessee Georgia Air Line was formed via a contract between SVRR N amp W and the East Tennessee Virginia and Georgia Railroad The Air Line was between Hagerstown MD and Norfolk VA The northern and southern sections of track are connected on 4 18 1881 Service is now from Hagerstown MD to Waynesboro VA 1882 Track completed southward from Waynesboro Basic VA to Roanoke VA on 6 19 1882 Connection with Norfolk amp Western Railroad is established A contract between SVRR and N amp W is signed on 12 29 1882 ratified by stockholders on 2 12 1883 The majority of SVRR share capital was traded for N amp W common stock N amp W agreed to loan SVRR up to 200 000 per year for a maximum of 3 years from 1 2 1883 if it loses money 1883 First ever annual report is published It is called the Third Annual Report to coincide with the N amp W numbering scheme Loss of 183 648 16 is covered by 200 000 loan from N amp W for year 1883 1884 The Southern Despatch Line is formed between Pennsylvania Railroad Cumberland Valley Railroad Western Maryland Railroad SVRR N amp W and East Tennessee Virginia and Georgia Railroad 135 000 loan from N amp W for year 1884 1885 Shenandoah Valley Railroad forced into receivership 04 01 1885 1890 In September Shenandoah Valley Railroad sold under foreclosure and reorganized as the Shenandoah Valley Railway in December Shenandoah Valley Railway is acquired and absorbed by Norfolk amp Western Railroad Passenger service EditInto the mid 20th century the new owners the Norfolk amp Western operated two passenger trains a day in each direction 1 The 1 southbound and the 2 northbound Roanoke New York City via Hagerstown and Harrisburg were part of a pooled long distance night train in cooperation with the Pennsylvania Railroad complete with Pullman service and lounge car service Passenger service ended by summer 1963 2 3 See also EditList of defunct Maryland railroads List of defunct Virginia railroads List of defunct West Virginia railroadsReferences Edit Official Guide of the Railways August 1949 Norfolk amp Western section Table 2 Official Guide of the Railways June 1961 Norfolk amp Western section Table 3 Shenandoah Valley Route Official Guide of the Railways June 1963 Norfolk amp Western sectionSources EditSVRR Annual Report 3 Fiscal Year 1883 first report SVRR Annual Report 5 Fiscal Year 1885 SVRR Annual Report 6 Fiscal Year 1886 SVRR Annual Report 9 Fiscal Year 1889 SVRR Annual Report 10 Fiscal Year 1890 last report Iron Horses in the Valley The Valley and Shenandoah Valley Railroads 1866 1882 by John R Hildebrand 2001 ISBN 978 1 57249 232 5 Norfolk amp Western s Shenandoah Valley Line by Mason Y Cooper 1998 ISBN 978 0 9633254 7 1 The Mineral Wealth of Virginia 1884 by Andrew S McCreath Printed in Harrisburg PA by Lane S Hart Copy located in the history room of the Charles Town West Virginia library When Trains Came to Shepherstown 200 by Johnna Armstrong for The Station at Shepherdstown Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Shenandoah Valley Railroad 1867 1890 amp oldid 1130619667, 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.