Altoona and Beech Creek Railroad

{{Short description|Defunct narrow-gauge railroad in Pennsylvania}}

{{Use American English|date=February 2025}}

{{good article}}

File:AltoonaNorthernMap.svg

The Altoona and Beech Creek Railroad was a {{RailGauge|3ft|lk=on}} narrow gauge railroad in Pennsylvania that operated during the late ninteeth and early twentieth centuries. It carried passenger traffic from the vicinity of Altoona to Wopsononock and coal and timber from Wopsononock and Dougherty to Altoona.

Originally constructed to facilitate the development of coal mines and resorts atop the Allegheny Plateau, it became involved in a complicated and ultimately unsuccessful scheme to break the Pennsylvania Railroad's control over the Clearfield Coalfield.

Never very profitable, it went through several reorganizations, the last in 1913. Conversion to {{RailGauge|4ft8.5in|allk=on}} in 1916 did not improve the situation, and the railroad was abandoned in 1919.

Charter and construction

{{Infobox rail|

logo_filename=File:Altoona & Wopsononock Initials.gif|

railroad_name=Altoona and Wopsononock Railroad|

logo_size=75x75|

old_gauge=|

marks=|

locale=Blair County, Pennsylvania|

start_year=1891|

end_year=1892|

successor_line=Altoona, Clearfield and Northern Railroad|

gauge={{RailGauge|3ft|lk=on}}|

hq_city=Altoona, Pennsylvania

}}

{{Anchor|Altoona and Wopsononock Railroad}}The railroad was chartered on May 27, 1890, as the Altoona and Wopsononock Railroad. It was surveyed from Juniata, a northern suburb of Altoona, up Spring Run, and climbed a circuitous, twisting route up the Allegheny Front through Juniata Gap, to terminate at the newly established resort town of Wopsononock. By the time the first annual meeting of the stockholders was held on January 13, 1891, {{convert|5|mi|km}} of the road had been completed as a {{RailGauge|3ft}} narrow gauge line. The board ultimately decided to complete the remaining {{convert|4|mi|km}} to the same gauge. Frank G. Patterson, an Altoona attorney, was elected president, and William L. Shellenberger vice-president.{{sfn|Adams|1980|p=14}}

Rails were finished to the top of the Alleghenies on June 6, and the first train arrived in Wopsononock on June 11. The railroad was formally opened on July 2, 1891. An extension to Dougherty, {{convert|5|mi|km}} beyond Wopsononock, was begun on September 31, in order to serve mines of the newly formed Richland Coal Company, headed by Shellenberger.{{sfn|Adams|1980|p=14}} Patterson was also involved in the coal company, serving as its secretary.{{sfn|Wiley|1892|p=485}}

Conversion and abandonment

{{Infobox rail | gauge={{Track gauge|ussg|allk=on}}|

logo_filename=|

railroad_name=Altoona Northern Railroad|

logo_size=|

old_gauge=; originally {{RailGauge|3ft}} gauge|

marks=|

locale=Pennsylvania|

start_year=1913|

end_year=1919|

successor_line=abandoned|

hq_city=Altoona, Pennsylvania

}}

File:Altoona and Beech Creek Railroad topo.jpg

{{Anchor|Altoona Northern Railroad}}Andrew Kepple, one of the original Altoona & Wopsononock directors, was elected president of the newly organized company. The board remained largely unchanged, although Shellenberger finally severed his association with the railroad. It remained unprofitable, and Davis, in turn, sold the line to Sigmund Morris, of Altoona. Morris had incorporated the Altoona Northern Railroad on November 7, 1912, to acquire the line, and the Altoona, Juniata and Northern was merged into it on January 16, 1913.{{sfn|Adams|1980|p=31}} Morris planned to convert the railroad to {{RailGauge|4ft8.5in|allk=on}}, electrify it to make it an interurban, and extend it to connect with the Beech Creek Railroad (a subsidiary of the New York Central Railroad) at Patton. However, Morris was unable to execute these plans. A group of New York City investors took over the railroad about 1916.{{sfn|Adams|1980|p=31}} They converted the railroad to standard gauge, operating initially with ex-Pennsylvania Railroad 2-6-0s, but replacing them with Heislers when the 2-6-0s were found to be unsuitable for the track.{{sfn|Adams|1980|p=32}}

The conversion failed to make the railroad pay, and the company went into receivership again on August 8, 1918. The last passenger train was operated on July 16, 1919, and the last coal train on July 30. Negotiations with the bondholders to resume service were not successful, and the rails were removed in 1921.{{sfn|Adams|1980|p=32}}

Equipment

=Locomotives=

The Altoona & Wopsononock initially owned two engines. #1 was a National {{whyte|2-6-0}}, and #2 a Baldwin {{whyte|4-4-0}}, both of which were purchased used from the Pittsburgh and Western Railroad. In 1892, the Altoona, Clearfield & Northern bought #3, a Baldwin {{whyte|4-6-0}}.{{sfn|Taber|1987|p=46}} However, due to the depleted state of the railroad's finances, it was unable to pay for #3. Samuel Langdon forestalled legal proceedings by having the locomotive transferred to his United Collieries Co., which paid Baldwin in coal.{{sfn|Adams|1980|p=15}} Nothing is known of #4, if it ever existed. The Altoona & Beech Creek bought #5 and #6, both Baldwin {{whyte|2-6-0}}s, in 1901, while still under Pittsburg, Johnstown, Ebensburg & Eastern control. After the PJE&E lost its lease on the railroad, litigation ensued over the ownership of #3; by the time the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania declared in favor of the A&BC in 1903, United Collieries had sold it to the Surry, Sussex and Southampton Railroad. #5 and #6 were sold to the Ohio River and Western Railroad and the Tacajo Sugar Company, respectively, when the railroad was converted to standard gauge in 1916.{{sfn|Taber|1987|p=46}}

The Altoona Northern initially purchased three ex-PRR {{whyte|2-6-0}}s (built at Juniata Shops), numbered #101–103. They were found to be unsuitable for the light track and steep grades, and were sold in 1917. They were replaced by #104 and #105, new two-truck Heislers, and the railroad bought #106, a three-truck Heisler, in 1918. They were sold to various lumber companies when the railroad was abandoned.{{sfn|Taber|1987|p=46}}

=Passenger and freight equipment=

Details of the railroad's rolling stock are obscure. In 1891, it owned five passenger and three freight cars. In addition to the coaches that supported passenger runs to Wopsononock and Dougherty (fourteen trains per day during the 1899 season), the railroad had at least one parlor car and several Brill-built observation cars. Contemporary photographs show that the railroad built some of its own open-air cars for excursion service.{{sfn|Adams|1980|p=17}} Photographs taken after the destruction of the Wopsononock Hotel and the decline in passenger traffic show a number of gondola cars for coal traffic. The railroad continued to maintain a standard gauge gondola fleet in the last years of its existence.{{sfn|Adams|1980|p=34}}

Stations

The following stations existed along the line, going from south to north:1913 Timetable, published in the Altoona Tribune

class="wikitable"
NameNotes
JuniataAcross from PRR's Juniata Shops
Coleman
IvysideSite of an amusement park; now the Penn State Altoona campus
Gwin
Parks
Juniata Springs
Homer
WopsononockSite of the Wopsononock Hotel, a popular resort
Richland
Highland
Walker
DoughertySite of coal mines

Scenic points along the road included Mule Shoe Curve, the trestles and cut at Sandy Gap Bend, and the high bluffs along the right-of-way at Butcher Knife Point.

Mines

Unlike most coal mines in Pennsylvania, which used 42" gauge, the Richland Mine near Dougherty was a drift mine that used a 36" gauge mule-powered tramway.{{Cite book|url=https://archive.org/details/coalminingcatalo1922newy|title=Coal mining catalogs, including directory of manufacturers|publisher=New York McGraw-Hill [etc.]|others=Engineering - University of Toronto|pages=845–846}} Given that the mine's gauge was the same that of the railroad, and was accessible by a horizontal adit, it is possible that they shared trackage or equipment, although likely only for short distances.

Notes

{{Reflist|2}}

References

  • {{citation | last=Adams | first=Richard D. | title=The Alley Popper | year=1980 | publisher=Richard D. Adams | location=Victor, New York}}
  • {{citation | last=Hilton | first=George W. | title=American Narrow Gauge Railroads | publisher=Stanford University Press | place=Stanford, California | orig-year=1990 | year=1997 | isbn=0804717311 | author-link=George Hilton (historian)}}
  • Sanborn Fire Insurance Maps (digital)
  • {{citation | last=Taber | first=Thomas T. III | year=1987 | title=Railroads of Pennsylvania Encyclopedia and Atlas | publisher=Thomas T. Taber III | isbn=0-9603398-5-X}}
  • {{citation | title=Biographical and Portrait Cyclopedia of Blair Co, PA | first=Samuel T. | last=Wiley | place=Philadelphia | year=1892 | url=http://files.usgwarchives.org/pa/blair/bios/wiley/wiley19.txt | access-date=2008-09-27 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101202021017/http://files.usgwarchives.org/pa/blair/bios/wiley/wiley19.txt | archive-date=2010-12-02 | url-status=dead }}