Black Rock Tunnel Explained

Black Rock Tunnel
Location:Phoenixville, Pennsylvania
Coordinates:40.1458°N -75.5156°W
System:Reading Railroad (original)
Norfolk Southern (current)
Status:Active
Opened:1838
Character:Freight
Construction:1835 - 1837
Length:1932feet
Notrack:Double (original)
Single (current)
Height:17feet

The Black Rock Tunnel is an active rail road tunnel of the old Reading Railroad. The 1835 tunnel was the third rail tunnel constructed in the United States, and is the third oldest still in use.[1] The tunnel is also notable as being the first for which shafts were sunk during construction.[2] The tunnel is cut through a hill in Phoenixville, Pennsylvania, United States. The tunnel and line are now owned by Norfolk Southern as part of its Harrisburg Line.

The Black Rock Tunnel was constructed between 1835 and 1837 and opened in 1838. W. Hasell Wilson was the resident engineer in charge.[2] The tunnel was originally 1932feet long, 19feet wide, and 17feet high.[3] The tunnel passes 122feet below the top of the hill.[1] A then-unique feature of the tunnel's construction was the sinking of six, 7feet diameter shafts, tangent to the tunnel cross section. These shafts were spaced at 100feet intervals to correct errors in the tunnel alignment.[2] Construction of the tunnel cost an estimated $178,992, equal to $ today.[4]

Noted local miner, geologist and palaentologist Charles M. Wheatley examined the rock excavated from the tunnel and identified many previously unknown fossilized species, some of which now bear his name.[5]

In 1858 and 1859 the Black Rock and Flat Rock Tunnels were widened to accommodate the wider rolling stock from the Lebanon Valley Branch. The spacing between the tracks was increased from 4feet to 6feet. The widening of the tunnel was the first project to employ electric detonation of multiple explosive charges.[6]

The northern end of the tunnel is high on a steep bank of the Schuylkill River so the rail line makes a dramatic transition from tunnel to bridge. The ends of the Black Rock Tunnel are located at 40.1475°N -75.5183°W and 40.1442°N -75.5129°W.

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Notes and References

  1. Book: Treese, Lorett . Railroads of Pennsylvania: fragments of the past in the Keystone landscape . 2003 . Stackpole Books . 0-8117-2622-3 . 41. 2009-11-07.
  2. Book: Drinker, Henry Sturgis . A Treatise on Explosive Compounds, Machine Rock Drills and Blasting . 1883 . . . 29–30. 2009-11-07.
  3. Book: Pennypacker, Samuel Whitaker . Annals of Phoenixville and Its Vicinity: From the Settlement to the Year 1871 . Samuel W. Pennypacker . 1872 . Bavis & Pennypacker, printers . Phoenixville, PA . 178.
  4. Book: Ringwalt, John Luther . Development of Transportation Systems in the United States . 1888 . Published by the author . Philadelphia . 87 . 2009-11-07 .
  5. Pennypacker, p. 179.
  6. May 2007. From Branch Line to Main Line: The Story of the Lebanon Valley Branch. The RSME Timetable. 5. Reading Society Model Engineers. 2009-11-07. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20081120120652/http://www.rsme.org/Timetable%20Issues/RSME%20Timetable%20May%202007.pdf. 2008-11-20.