Path Valley Railroad Explained

Railroad Name:Path Valley Railroad
Start Year:1893
End Year:1895 (paper railroad)

The Path Valley Railroad was a proposed narrow gauge railroad in Perry and Franklin Counties, Pennsylvania, USA.

Intended as an extension of the Newport and Shermans Valley Railroad, it was to begin at that railroad's terminus in New Germantown and run southward along Shermans Creek and Big Spring Run. Around what is now Big Spring State Forest Picnic Area, the line would climb through a series of curves on a 4% grade and pass through a 2600feet tunnel under Conococheague Mountain[1] named Conococheague Mountain Tunnel to bring it into Burns Valley. It would run down Burns Valley into Path Valley and through the town of Doylesburg, ending at Fannettsburg. An extension through the Concord Narrows was also contemplated, which could have connected to the East Broad Top Railroad and the Tuscarora Valley Railroad.

Incorporated on October 24, 1893, grading began almost immediately. The line was graded for, with the anticipation that the N&SV would be converted from gauge. The grade soon reached Conococheague Mountain, and construction began on both portals of the tunnel. However, the rock formations of the mountain proved much more difficult to excavate than expected, and the tunnel contractor went bankrupt in September 1894 after excavating about 100feet at both ends. Most of the remaining grading was completed, but the tunnel proved impractically difficult to complete, and the railroad was given up as a failure in 1895.

Part of the grade from New Germantown to Big Spring was later used by the Perry Lumber Company for a gauge logging railroad from 1900 to 1905. Much of the grading is now preserved as hiking trails in Big Spring State Forest Picnic Area and Tuscarora State Forest. The north portal of the tunnel is still visible, but fenced off.

References

  1. Book: Hilton, George W. . George Hilton (historian)

    . American Narrow Gauge Railroads . . . 1990 . 1997 . 0-8047-1731-1 . George Hilton (historian).