Gettysburg Railroad (1976–1996) Explained

Railroad Name:Gettysburg Railroad
Marks:GETY/GPSX
Logo Filename:Gettysburg Railroad (1976–1996) logo.jpg
Locale:Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Start Year:1976
End Year:1996
Successor Line:Gettysburg Railway
Length:23.41NaN1
Hq City:Gettysburg, Pennsylvania

The Gettysburg Railroad was a short-line heritage railroad that operated in Pennsylvania from 1976 to 1996. The 23.4 mi (37.7 km) line ran from Gettysburg to Mount Holly Springs.

The railroad shipped freight for local companies and interchanged with CSX Transportation in Gettysburg and Conrail at Carlisle Junction in Mount Holly Springs. It also operated a tourist railroad under a subsidiary, Gettysburg Passenger Services.

History

The railroad was built in the late 19th century and opened in 1891 as the Gettysburg and Harrisburg Railway. The line was later leased to the Reading Railroad and operated as the "Gettysburg Branch." Following the Reading's bankruptcy in 1971, it sold portions of its assets to the new-formed Conrail in 1976, however the Gettysburg branch was not included in the transfer. The branch was acquired by the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation, which then sold the line to a new company, the Blairsville & Indiana Railroad, in 1976. The latter company subsequently changed its name to Gettysburg Railroad.[1] The Gettysburg Railroad was sold to Delaware Valley Railroad Company, a subsidiary of RailAmerica, in November 1996.[2] Delaware Valley created a new operating company, the Gettysburg Railway.[3] [4]

Locomotives

The Gettysburg Railroad went through a total of four steam locomotives in use, and they only had two by 1988.[5] Between January and June 1995, both locomotives were inspected by the Federal Railroad Administration (FRA) and deemed to be in good enough working order to remain in service.

NumberBuilderRailroadTypeBuild dateAt Gettysburg
3254Canadian Locomotive CompanyCanadian National RailwaySteam19171982–1987
1278Canadian Locomotive CompanyCanadian Pacific RailwaySteam19481987–1996
76Baldwin Locomotive WorksMississippian RailwaySteam19201976–1996
38Baldwin Locomotive WorksHuntingdon and Broad Top Mountain Railroad and Coal CompanySteam19271977–1986
39EMD GP9Western Maryland RailwayDiesel19571989–1996
28GE U30BPenn Central Transportation CompanyDiesel19671985–1989
56ALCO RS-3Long Island Rail RoadDiesel19551978–1988
70ALCO RS-36Norfolk and Western RailwayDiesel19621985–1996
407Baldwin S-12Norfolk and Western RailwayDiesel19531976–1985

Incident

On June 16, 1995, locomotive No. 1278 suffered a boiler backdraft explosion while hauling an excursion train, severely injuring the engineer and both firemen. None of the passengers were injured.[6] The excursion train was delayed 45 minutes until a diesel locomotive could be connected to complete the rest of the trip. The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) concluded that the explosion occurred because the crew had allowed the water level in the boiler to drop too low, causing the boiler's crown sheet to fail. The NTSB also determined that poor maintenance of the locomotive, as well as inadequate training, were contributing factors to the accident.[7]

After the incident, the Gettysburg Railroad stopped using steam locomotives for their excursions and only used diesel locomotives. The railroad itself was sold off the following year.

Notes and References

  1. Book: Lewis, Edward A. . American Short Line Railway Guide . 1996 . Kalmbach . Milwaukee, WI . 0-89024-290-9 . 134 . 5th .
  2. Cupper . Dan . February 1997 . Gettysburg cited; NTSB urges steam standards . limited . April 3, 2024 . Trains . Kalmbach Publishing . 18; 18A; 18B . 57 . 2.
  3. Web site: U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Report Form 10-K: RailAmerica, Inc.. 1996.
  4. July 1997 . Railroad News Magazine - Gettysburg gets F's, too . limited . April 3, 2024 . Trains . Kalmbach Publishing . 29 . 57 . 7.
  5. News: Gostomski. Christina. 1995-06-25. Inspection found flaws in most locomotives...except the one that blew. 11. York Sunday News. 2020-08-02.
  6. News: Kurish. J. P.. 1995-06-19. Gettysburg Railroad to re-open this week. 19. The York Dispatch. 2020-08-02.
  7. Web site: National Transportation Safety Board. 15 November 1996. www.ntsb.gov.