Difference between revisions of "Railroads"

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==The Sandusky, Mansfield, and Newark Railroad Company==  
 
==The Sandusky, Mansfield, and Newark Railroad Company==  
  
The first railroad line built in Licking County in the early 1850s was part of a flurry of construction which would take place from 1852-1855.  <ref> Brister, E. Centennial History, 193 </ref>  The Columbus and Lake Erie railroad, founded in March 1845, connected Newark to Mansfield in 1852 and was the city's first rail line, but the company could not survive as a single line rail company. <ref> Winegardner, C. (1997) A Historical Account B and O Rail Lines 1830—1989, 3. </ref>  Many small rail companies found financial stability in the mid-19th century elusive, and tried to remedy their revenue and cost issues through consolidation.  In 1853, the Columbus and Lake Erie company merged with the Sandusky and Mansfield line and the Huron and Oxford company to form the Sandusky, Mansfield, and Newark rail company (SM&N). <ref> Brister, E. Centennial History, 194 </ref>  
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The first railroad line built in Licking County in the early 1850s was part of a flurry of construction which would take place from 1852-1855.  <ref> Brister, E. Centennial History, 193 </ref>  The Columbus and Lake Erie railroad, founded in March 1845, connected Newark to Mansfield in 1852 and was the city's first rail line, but the company could not survive as a single line rail company. <ref> Winegardner, C. (1997) A Historical Account B and O Rail Lines 1830—1989, 3. </ref>  Many small rail companies found financial stability in the mid-19th century elusive, and tried to remedy their revenue and cost issues through consolidation.  In 1853, the Columbus and Lake Erie company merged with the Sandusky and Mansfield line and the Huron and Oxford company to form the Sandusky, Mansfield, and Newark rail company (SM&N). <ref> Brister, E. Centennial History, 194 </ref>  
  
 
  This new business formation would stabilize the first rail lines in Licking County, yet the SM&N would face continued economic troubles and future consolidation. On February 13, 1869, the SM&N followed another local rail company, the Central Ohio Railroad Company, and merged with the growing B&O line. <ref> Brister, E. Centennial History, 195 </ref>  
 
  This new business formation would stabilize the first rail lines in Licking County, yet the SM&N would face continued economic troubles and future consolidation. On February 13, 1869, the SM&N followed another local rail company, the Central Ohio Railroad Company, and merged with the growing B&O line. <ref> Brister, E. Centennial History, 195 </ref>  

Revision as of 10:44, 24 October 2020

The railroad was a critical component to development and industrialization of the Newark and Licking County's in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The companies that built, managed and ran the railroads that connected the city and county to the wider world was an important facet of the region's economic, industrial and everyday life for a century. Beginning as several shorter lines under the names of smaller companies that became consolidated by Baltimore & Ohio, the rail lines would become a defining feature of life in Newark and Licking county in the late 19th and early 20th century.


The Sandusky, Mansfield, and Newark Railroad Company

The first railroad line built in Licking County in the early 1850s was part of a flurry of construction which would take place from 1852-1855. [1] The Columbus and Lake Erie railroad, founded in March 1845, connected Newark to Mansfield in 1852 and was the city's first rail line, but the company could not survive as a single line rail company. [2] Many small rail companies found financial stability in the mid-19th century elusive, and tried to remedy their revenue and cost issues through consolidation. In 1853, the Columbus and Lake Erie company merged with the Sandusky and Mansfield line and the Huron and Oxford company to form the Sandusky, Mansfield, and Newark rail company (SM&N). [3]

This new business formation would stabilize the first rail lines in Licking County, yet the SM&N would face continued economic troubles and future consolidation. On February 13, 1869, the SM&N followed another local rail company, the Central Ohio Railroad Company, and merged with the growing B&O line. [4] 

The Central Ohio Railroad Company

After four years of construction, the second rail line, that of the Central Ohio Railroad Company, arrived in Newark in 1854. The first leg connected Newark with Columbus with a planned route that would go from Columbus to Newark and Zanesville and then to a terminus at Bellaire on the Ohio River. The Central Ohio company faced financial strains in a fashion similar to the SM&N, and would merge with B&O in 1866. [5]


The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad

The B&O was founded in 1829 with the goal of connecting the eastern United States with the growing western parts of the country. Combined with the two smaller lines in central Ohio, the B&O expanded its business in the area and would connect Licking County to Chicago and Washington D.C. under the same rail service. B&O laid a second track between Columbus and Newark in 1885-1887 and placed another line between Central City and Outville in 1906. B&O controlled three of the four lines that fed into Newark. [6]

B & O became a critical part of the economy of Newark and Licking County. The refinery in Heath, and the American Bottle Company in Newark both needed large quantities of coal provided by the railroads. [7] Newark's location was beneficial both for a ready supply of coal from neighboring counties, and for water from the Licking River, both of which were critical to the maintenance of rail routes. [8] Not only did the rail company permit the fast flow of people and goods but it also was a leading employer in the city, to the degree that the east side of Newark was even referred to as "B & O City." [9]

The B & O rail depot in Newark was located at south First Street. The B&O freight station was on Clinton Street. Newark was the terminal and headquarters of its division which encompassed 425 miles of railroad in 1928. The Division employed around 3000 workers at the time with a monthly payroll around $400,000[10]

The prevalence of railroaders in Newark led the establishment of a local chapter of the Locomotive Firemen's organization and the Order of Railway conductors. [11]

If Newark was the meeting point of industry and rail in Licking County, then Avondale House, the resort at Buckeye Lake, was the confluence of passengers and luxury in the area; this line, known as the Straitsville Line or the "Shawnee Dinky," had four trains that possessed fine passenger coaches to deliver vacationers to the station at Buckeye Lake. [12]

The B&O Railroad ceased to exist as a distinct company after a series of mergers with other rial corporations that culminated in the merger with CSX corporation in 1997.


==Pittsburgh, Columbus, and Cincinnati Railroad


The Pittsburgh, Columbus, an Cincinnati Railroad, called the "Panhandle" route, was the last railway line to come to Newark. Called the "Panhandle" because of its route along the thin. Northern panhandle neck of West Virginia, the line became consolidated under the Pennsylvania Railroad Company. [13]. The Columbus and Newark Division ("C&N") owned the railroad but the land and track on which they ran, which remained in the possession of B & O. [14] The former depot of the "Panhandle" line still stands at 25 E Walnut Street in Newark at The Foundations building


References

  1. Brister, E. Centennial History, 193
  2. Winegardner, C. (1997) A Historical Account B and O Rail Lines 1830—1989, 3.
  3. Brister, E. Centennial History, 194
  4. Brister, E. Centennial History, 195
  5. Brister, E. Centennial History, 195
  6. Brister, E. Centennial History, 196
  7. Winegardner, C. (1997) A Historical Account B and O Rail Lines 1830—1989, 40
  8. Winegardner, C. (1997) A Historical Account B and O Rail Lines 1830—1989, 38-39
  9. Winegardner, C. (1997) A Historical Account B and O Rail Lines 1830—1989, 39
  10. Lewis, T. Southeastern Ohio and the Muskingum Valley, Vol. II, 148-149
  11. Brister, E. Centennial History, 513
  12. Winegardner, C. (1997) A Historical Account B and O Rail Lines 1830—1989, 47
  13. Brister, E. Centennial History, 197
  14. Winegardner, C. (1997) A Historical Account B and O Rail Lines 1830—1989, 38