Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore Railroad
Encyclopedia : P : PH : PHI : Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore Railroad
The Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore Railroad was the Pennsylvania Railroad's main line from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania southwest to Baltimore, Maryland. It is now part of Amtrak's Northeast Corridor; freight is handled by Norfolk Southern.
History
Independent Operation
The Philadelphia and Delaware County Rail-Road Company was chartered in Pennsylvania on April 2, 1831, changing its name on March 14, 1836 to the Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore Railroad Company.Chapter 296 of the 1831 Session Laws of Maryland, passed March 14, 1832, chartered the Delaware and Maryland Rail Road Company to build from Port Deposit or any other point on the Susquehanna River to the Delaware state line. The Wilmington and Susquehanna Rail Road Company was chartered January 18, 1832 in Delaware to continue the line to Wilmington, and the two companies merged April 18, 1836 to form the Wilmington and Susquehanna Railroad Company.
The rest of the line to Baltimore, the Baltimore and Port Deposite Rail Road Company, was chartered in Maryland by Chapter 188 of the 1831 Session Laws of Maryland, passed March 5, 1832. On February 12, 1838, the three companies merged to form a new Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore Railroad Company, authorized to build a continuous line from Philadelphia to Baltimore.
The first section of line opened in 1836, forming part of the line in Pennsylvania; the rest of the line was completed in 1837. In Philadelphia, the line ended at Broad Street and Washington Avenue, where it connected with the Southwark Rail-Road (built in 1835), which was used to reach the Delaware River. In Baltimore, the PW&B ended at President Street. The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, which ended in Baltimore, worked closely with the PW&B to compete with the Pennsylvania Railroad for travel west from Philadelphia, hauling coaches by horse down Pratt Street to reach the PW&B station. By 1853 the Camden and Amboy Railroad and New Jersey Railroad were also part of this agreement, providing through service from New York City to the west. [link]
On March 15, 1839 the PW&B bought the New Castle and Frenchtown Turnpike and Rail Road. [link] The New Castle and Wilmington Railroad was chartered to connect the two railroads, but was not constructed until 1852. This provided a connection with the Delaware Railroad, which the PW&B began to operate on January 1, 1857. In 1859, the NC&F was abandoned west of Rodney, the junction with the Delaware Railroad.
The Darby Improvement, a new alignment from Philadelphia to Eddystone (just outside Chester), opened on November 18, 1872, avoiding the old route through swamps and serving more populated areas. [link] On July 1, 1873 the old alignment was leased to the Philadelphia and Reading Railway for 999 years. The Reading originally used the Junction Railroad to reach this branch and the connecting Chester and Delaware River Railroad, but later obtained trackage rights over the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad's Baltimore and Philadelphia Railroad (opened 1886).
The Pennsylvania Railroad (PRR) began running over the PW&B in 1873 with the opening of its Baltimore and Potomac Rail Road. On May 15, 1877, the New Castle & Frenchtown and New Castle & Wilmington were merged into the PW&B, forming a branch line from Wilmington to Rodney. On May 21, 1877, the Southwark RR was merged in, extending the main line to the Delaware River waterfront.
Fight for control
In 1880 a major coflict began between the PRR and the B&O, both of which operated over the PW&B. The B&O arranged to divert its New York-bound trains away from the PRR route to the new Reading-controlled "Bound Brook Route", which had recently broken the PRR's New Jersey monopoly on Philadelphia-New York rail travel. B&O trains now left the PW&B at Gray's Ferry and travelled over the Junction Railroad (jointly controlled by PW&B, Reading, and PRR) to Belmont, where they reached Reading rails. However, a mile of the Junction Railroad's track through Philadelphia was owned and used by the PRR, as well, and the PRR showed great ingenuity in arranging delays to B&O trains passing over this section of track.The irate John W. Garrett, president of the B&O, decided to counter-attack by quietly buying out the PW&B, cutting off the PRR from its Baltimore & Potomac subsidiary. However, his agent encountered unexpected difficulties in buying up a majority of the stock at the price specified. Meanwhile, the secret of Garrett's maneuver became known to the PRR, which quickly bought out a majority of the stock at a somewhat higher price and took control of the PW&B instead. Garrett was forced to charter the Baltimore and Philadelphia Railroad and construct an independent line to Philadelphia, while paying the PRR substantial fees to continue New York service over their lines.
PRR Subsidiary
A number of branches were built, bought and sold from 1881–1891, as described below. In 1895, the main line was realigned and straightened at Naaman's Creek. The old line would become sidings for Claymont Steel.The PRR's Baltimore and Potomac Rail Road was formally leased to the PW&B on November 1, 1891; the two companies merged on November 1, 1902 to form the Philadelphia, Baltimore and Washington Railroad.
The Elkton and Middletown Railroad, opened in 1895, was originally intended as a cutoff between the main line at Elkton, Maryland and the Delaware Railroad at Middletown, Delaware. However, only a short piece of track serving industries in Elkton was ever constructed. It was consolidated into the PB&W on September 15, 1916.
Branches
- Southwark
- 60th Street/Chester
- South Chester
- Edgemoor
- Augustine Mill
- Shellpot
- Delaware Branch
- New Castle Cut-off
- Delaware City
- Port Deposit
- Baltimore Union
[http://encycl.opentopia.com/ edit ] Pennsylvania Railroad subsidiaries
|
| Chartered 1846 - Main Line (1857) - Northern Central (1860s) - Baltimore and Potomac (1867) - Pan Handle (1860s) - United New Jersey (1871) - Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore (1880s) |
|- style="text-align: center;" |- style="text-align: center;" |- style="text-align: center;" |- style="text-align: center;" |- style="text-align: center;" |- style="text-align: center;" |- style="text-align: center;"
References
From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.
