Lurgan Branch

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Lurgan Branch is a railroad line owned by Pennsylvania Lines LLC and operated by the Norfolk Southern Railway in the U.S. states of Pennsylvania and Maryland. The line runs from Harrisburg, Pennsylvania southwest to Hagerstown, Maryland[citation needed] along former Reading Company and Pennsylvania Railroad lines. Its northeast end is at a junction with the Harrisburg Line, Pittsburgh Line, Royalton Branch, and Amtrak's Philadelphia to Harrisburg Main Line; its southwest end is at the beginning of the Hagerstown District. At Lemoyne it intersects the Enola Branch.

[edit] History

In 1837, the Cumberland Valley Railroad opened the line from Lemoyne to Chambersburg, including the Lurgan Branch southwest of Shippensburg.[1] The Franklin Railroad extended the line from Chambersburg to Greencastle in 1839[2] and Greencastle to Hagerstown in 1841.[3] This part of the line became part of the Pennsylvania Railroad through leases and mergers.

The Harrisburg and Potomac Railroad was built in the 1870s from Lemoyne to Shippensburg.[citation needed] It was later linked to Harrisburg via the Philadelphia & Reading Railroad Bridge,[citation needed] and became part of the Reading Company via leases and mergers. At Lurgan tower, just southwest of Shippensburg, Reading ownership ended and the Western Maryland Lurgan Subdivision began, continuing the rail connection to that railroad's Hagerstown, Md., classification yard. A connection was subsequently built in Shippensburg between the PRR line and the RDG line to allow for interchange coal traffic.

Conrail took over both companies in 1976. The PRR line was abandoned from Shippensburg to Carlisle, a portion that saw much street-running and -crossing, as this was the segment that was never significantly improved by the Cumberland Valley Railroad. The existing Cumbo connection was used to create the new hybrid line. The branch was assigned to Norfolk Southern in the 1999 breakup of Conrail. For similar reasons, the WM line south of Shippensburg, to Chambersburg, has been downgraded.

[edit] References

  1. ^ PRR Chronology, 1837PDF (98.8 KiB), June 2004 Edition
  2. ^ PRR Chronology, 1839PDF (82.7 KiB), June 2004 Edition
  3. ^ PRR Chronology, 1841PDF (60.7 KiB), May 2004 Edition