Pickering Valley Railroad
{{Infobox rail | gauge={{Track gauge|ussg|allk=on}}
|railroad_name = Pickering Valley Railroad|
|logo_filename =
|logo_size = 150
|system_map = {{maplink-road|from=Pickering Valley Railroad.map}}
|map_size = 300
|map_caption =
|image =
|image_caption =
|marks =
|length = {{convert|11.3|mi|abbr=off}}
|locale = Pennsylvania|
|start_year = 1871
|end_year = 1906
|successor_line = Reading Railroad|
|hq_city = Phoenixville, Pennsylvania
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
}}
The Pickering Valley Railroad was a short line railroad in Chester County, Pennsylvania. It ran from Phoenixville to Byers, near Eagle, in Upper Uwchlan Township, a distance of approximately {{convert|11|mi}},Greenwood, A.L., "[http://www.tehistory.org/hqda/html/v07/v07n4p086.html The railroads of Chester County]", History Quarterly, Tredyffrin Easttown Historical Society, February, 1955 Volume 7 Number 4, Pages 86–94. over which distance it gained {{Convert|316|ft}} in elevation.Persifor Frazer, "Report of a Geological Survey of Chester County", Chap. 1 in: J.P. Lesley, ed., The Geology of Chester County: After the Surveys of Henry D. Rogers, Persifor Frazer, and Charles E. Hall, Board of Commissioners for the Second Geological Survey, Harrisburg, 1883. Pp. 23, 26. Operated as a unit of the Reading Railroad, the Pickering Valley was not a great success; passenger service was discontinued in 1934, and most of the line was abandoned in 1948. The remainder of the line was closed in the 1980s; little remains today.
History
File:Pickering_Val_RR_share_cert.jpg in 1871.]]
File:Pickering_Val._RR_track_Pxvl.jpg.]]
The company was incorporated on June 4, 1869, under the provisions of a special act of the Pennsylvania government approved on April 3, 1869,[https://books.google.com/books?id=YHRVAAAAYAAJ&dq=logo+pickering+valley+railroad&pg=RA1-PA42 An Act to Incorporate the Pickering Valley Railroad Company], P.L. 1869, 686 (1869). and organized on June 22, 1869, with the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad Company subscribing to the bulk of the stock."[https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1955&dat=19120818&id=1cYhAAAAIBAJ&sjid=yJ0FAAAAIBAJ&pg=5959,5607638 Pickering Valley Railroad was Completed on Sept. 1, 1871; Leased by the Reading]", Reading Eagle, Aug 18, 1912, p. 18. In or about 1870, the still-unbuilt railroad was leased to the Philadelphia and Reading;{{efn|group=note|In the years shortly after the American Civil War, this was a common arrangement in the United States: a railroad contemplating building an extension or branch line, but reluctant to finance construction itself, would form a new railroad company, lease the prospective railroad to the existing railroad, sell stock in the new corporation to the public, and buy the remaining stock itself (to provide the capital that the public sale did not). The money raised by the stock sale would then be used for the construction of the new line, which was frequently operated as if it was an integral part of the "parent" company.John F. Meck, Jr., and John E. Masten, "[http://digitalcommons.law.yale.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=5123&context=fss_papers Railroad Leases and Reorganization: I]", Yale Law Journal 49:626-659, (1940) pp. 630-31.}} it opened its operations in September 1871.
The railroad's principal business was as a "milk run" line,East Pikeland Township Historical Commission, [http://www.eastpikeland.org/vertical/Sites/%7B3F7567AD-BA35-41A6-9117-FD7892D5A0DA%7D/uploads/Heritage_Action_Plan_Final_032912.pdf Kimberton Area Heritage Action Plan], 2012.{{rp|12}} transporting agricultural products from local farms to Phoenixville, for connections with other railroad lines and especially for shipment to Philadelphia; it also carried iron ore from nearby mines to the Phoenix Iron Company in Phoenixville.[http://www.abandonedrails.com/Pickering_Valley_Railroad The Pickering Valley Railroad], AbandonedRails.com; accessed 2014.01.27. It played a role in the development of the area's graphite mining industry as well.See Miller, Benjamin L., Graphite Deposits of Pennsylvania, Report No. 6, Topographic and Geological Survey of Pennsylvania, Harrisburg, 1912, pp. 96-110. The company was not a financial success: revenues barely covered operating costs, leaving nothing to pay to the investors (an 1882 newspaper editorial complained that the company's stock was "worthless"[http://courses.wcupa.edu/jones/his480/notes/rr-2.htm Editorial], Phoenixville Messenger, April 15, 1882.). When the lease expired in 1906, the line was more formally merged into the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad system, becoming known as the Pickering Valley Branch of the Reading.
The Montgomery and Chester Electric Railway, opened in 1899, provided local trolley service between Phoenixville and Spring City, to the northwest. The original line met with the Pickering Valley's at Ironsides, just west of Phoenixville; the Pickering Valley refused to allow the M&C's track to cross its own, requiring passengers to ride one trolley to Ironsides, cross the Pickering Valley's tracks on foot, and take another car to their destination. Not until 1908 was an arrangement made to permit building a trestle {{convert|517|ft}} long, bridging the railroad's right of way and allowing through trolley service.Herb Fry, "[http://www.tehistory.org/hqda/html/v30/v30n3p087.html The Amusement Park on the Trolley Line]", Tredyffrin Easttown Historical Society History Quarterly, Vol. 30, No. 3 (July 1992), pp. 87–100.
Passenger service on the Pickering Valley Branch was discontinued in 1934{{RP|20}} after it made only $13.10 in seven months, and the portion of the line from Kimberton to Byers was abandoned in 1948. The remaining track served the Phoenix steel mill (a portion was also briefly used by the Valley Forge Scenic Railroad"[http://www.wwrr.com/58/58history.aspx A History of No. 58]", Wilmington & Western Railroad; accessed 2014.01.28.) until abandoned by Conrail (successor to the Reading) in 1982.Delaware Valley Regional Planning Commission, [https://www.dvrpc.org/reports/97006.pdf Abandoned Railroad Inventory and Policy Plan], Philadelphia, 1997, p. 52.
Little remains of the line today.Tinsman, Mary Alfson, [http://search.paprojectpath.org/Documents/2412.pdf Memorandum: French Creek Parkway Project], May 16, 2011, CHRS, Inc.
File:Pickering Val. RR, Kimberton Sta..jpg
File:Pickering Val. RR, Chester Springs Sta..jpg
File:Pickering Valley Railroad, Anselma station.jpg
class="wikitable" style="text-align:right" | |||
rowspan=2|Station Name | colspan=2|Distance | rowspan=2|Notes | |
---|---|---|---|
mi{{cite book | title=The Official Railway Guide: North American Freight Service Edition | year=1902 | page=303 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FtlAydjQKkMC}} ||km | |||
align="left"|Phoenixville | 0.0 | 0.0 | align="left"| Connection with Reading Co. |
align="left"|Main Street (Phoenixville) | 0.5 | 0.8 | align="left"| |
align="left"|Phoenixville (freight spur) | align="left"| 425 Bridge StreetPennsylvania Railroad Stations, Past and Present, [http://www.west2k.com/pastations/chester.shtml Chester County]; accessed 2014.04.21. | ||
align="left"|Ironsides | 1.5 | 2.4 | align="left"| Near Schuylkill Road and Township Line Road; also called French Creek Sta. |
align="left"|French Creek Junction | 3.2 | 5.1 | align="left"| Connection with Delaware River & Lancaster Railroad |
align="left"|Kimberton | 3.7 | 6.0 | align="left"| [http://www.cochraneinc.com/old-kimberton-train-station-jac-inc-office/ 2205 Kimberton Road]Some 1969 footage, largely filmed at Kimberton, can be found on [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SoIq2R5CXuM YouTube]. |
align="left"|Hallman's | 5.5 | 8.9 | align="left"| At Old Kimberton Road, near present-day Pike Springs Road;Township of East Pikeland [map], Plate 1. Property Maps of Chester County, Pennsylvania, Vol. 2. Franklin Survey Co., Philadelphia. 1934. formerly called Hartman's Station |
align="left"|Pikeland | 7.0 | 11.3 | align="left"| At Pikeland Road |
align="left"|Chester Springs | 7.5 | 12.1 | align="left"| Served Yellow Springs |
align="left"|Camp | ? | ? | align="left"| Appears only on the oldest maps{{efn|group=note|"Camp Station" appears on the 1873 county atlas map of West Pikeland Township (Atlas of Chester Co., Pennsylvania, A.R. Witmer, Safe Harbor, Pa., 1873, map 48), but not the 1883 map (Breou's Official Series of Farm Maps: Chester County, W.H. Kirk & Co., Philadelphia, 1883).}} |
align="left"|Anselma | 9.0 | 14.5 | align="left"| Originally "Cambria"; the village was renamed "Anselma" in 1886.[http://explorepahistory.com/hmarker.php?markerId=1-A-3AB Lightfoot Mill (Mill at Anselma)]", [http://explorepahistory.com/index.php ExplorePAhistory.com]; accessed 2018.04.18. |
align="left"|Lionville | 9.8 | 15.8 | align= "left"| At Lionville Station Road |
align="left"|Byers | 11.0 | 17.7 | align="left"| Terminus; near Byers Road and Graphite Mine Road |
Accidents
The Pickering Valley Railroad was the scene of a significant wreck on the night of October 4, 1877. A torrential ("phenomenal"[https://books.google.com/books?id=ga8xAQAAMAAJ&dq=logo+pickering+valley+railroad&pg=PA1028 Verdict of the coroner's jury], reported in Railway World, Vol. 21, p. 1028, October 27, 1877.) rainstorm had washed out a portion of the track near Kimberton, and a passenger train from Phoenixville, carrying about 130 people, including many returning from a Pennypacker family reunion held on the hundredth anniversary of the Battle of Germantown,Eric Chandlee Wilson, "[https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/bit.listserv.railroad/zti0ZmcDegs The Great Wreck of 1877], Chester County Day, 1997. ran into the washout in the dark. The locomotive plunged thirty feet, the first passenger car fell on top of the locomotive, and the second passenger car landed atop the first. Seven passengers and crew were killed and dozens suffered varying degrees of injury."[https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1877/10/06/80663873.pdf Disasters on Railroads; Trains thrown into washouts]", The New York Times, October 6, 1877, p. 1. The wreck was the worst railroad accident in the history of Chester County.
A coroner's jury, investigating the accident, found that while the rainstorm was indeed phenomenal, the railroad had not allowed for sufficient drainage in the area. More dangerously, the railroad ran the train with the locomotive backwards, and the cars in improper order:
:First, the engine reversed, with tank foremost and engine running backward, with the head light upon the front end of the tank as it ran; second, the gentlemen's car, on the night in question, occupied by both sexes; third, the combination of ladies’ and baggage car in one; fourth, and last, the milk car . . . The train was run in this manner in violation of the rules of the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad Company, operators of the Pickering Valley Railroad . . .
The jury concluded that if the railroad had followed its own rules, and had ordered the consist so that the locomotive was first and the milk car second, followed by the two passenger cars, one of the passenger cars would have remained on the track. "[http://hoxsie.org/2016/08/26/phoenixville-phriday-the-pennypacker-tragedy/ Phoenixville Phriday: The Pennypacker Tragedy]", Hoxsie!; accessed 2018.02.28.
A lawsuit arising from the accident rose to the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, which affirmed the judgement for the plaintiff in the amount of $3,500.Philadelphia & Reading RR. Co. v. Anderson, 94 Pa. 351 (1880). That case became precedent, as the court formulated a rule that when a railroad accepts money and undertakes to transport a passenger, there arises an implied contract of care upon the part of the company, and if the passenger is injured by any accident arising from a collision or a defect in the track or equipment, negligence is presumed on the part of the railroad; the passenger needs only to prove the fact of the accident and the extent of the injury.Pennsylvania County Court Reports, Volume 3. T. & J.W. Johnson & Co., Philadelphia, 1887, p. 473.
On August 4, 1895, the evening train to Phoenixville, carrying members of the Salvation Army returning from a meeting, struck a cow near Kimberton and was derailed. The locomotive and several cars went down a steep embankment. The engineer was killed; the fireman and several passengers were seriously injured."All caused by a cow", San Francisco Call, August 5, 1895, reprinted in [http://hoxsie.org/2016/08/19/phoenixville-phriday-all-caused-by-a-cow/ Phoenixville Phriday: All Caused By A Cow]; accessed 2018.09.17.
Notes
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References
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External links
{{Commonscat|Pickering Valley Railroad}}
Category:Railway companies established in 1869
Category:Railway companies established in 1871
Category:Railway companies disestablished in 1906
Category:Standard-gauge railways in the United States
Category:Defunct Pennsylvania railroads
Category:Railroads transferred to Conrail
Category:Companies based in Philadelphia
Category:Predecessors of Conrail
Category:1869 establishments in Pennsylvania