Gettysburg and Harrisburg Railway


The Gettysburg and Harrisburg Railway was a Pennsylvania line from near Carlisle southward to Gettysburg operated by a of the Reading Company. The line also included the Round Top Branch over the Gettysburg Battlefield to Round Top, Pennsylvania until.

History

The Gettysburg and Harrisburg Railway was formed when the "Reading Railroad" took control of the South Mountain Railroad and on May 22, 1891, the Gettysburg and Harrisburg Railroad. On May 18, 1897, on the north side of the railroad’s station at Gettysburg, the "Reading Railway" had finished another siding across Washington St. By 1904, the Gettysburg yards had 5 sidings, including 3 over Washington St and 1 toward Pennsylvania College's Attached to the Washington St siding south of the station was the sole westward siding to the turntable and the roundhouse, which was on the northeast corner of the crossing. The crossing was the site of a 1909 Reading and Western Maryland collision of freight trains.
Just prior to the 1913 Gettysburg reunion, additional passing sidings on the "Gettysburg & Harrisburg branch of the Philadelphia and Reading Railway company" were constructed between and Gettysburg, and a switch from Round Top Branch connected :File:1913 Gettysburg reunion map.png|westbound onto the Western Maryland. The state health department operated reunion comfort stations at both Gettysburg depots, and President Woodrow Wilson used the Round Top Branch to depart the Great Camp on his special train. Similarly, President Franklin D. Roosevelt's southbound train passed the Eternal Light Peace Memorial and stopped at a special station from where he motored to Oak Hill to dedicate the memorial during the 1938 Gettysburg reunion. In 1924, the land for the Idaville station was sold.
One of the railroad’s last excursion trains was a May 7, 1939, Reading Railroad train with 400 from Philadelphia over the Round Top Branch. Except for special occasions, e.g., Bethlehem students in 1958, Reading passenger service to Gettysburg ceased in 1941; and a 1942 application was made to abandon nearly the entire Round Top Branch. The station was repainted in 1946, and the turntable and 3-engine roundhouse had been removed before 1970. The Gettysburg spur south of the east-west Western Maryland RR crossing and that had been part of the Round Top Branch remained until at least 1962.

Subsequent companies

The Reading Company filed for bankruptcy in 1971 and the railway line was owned by Conrail in 1976 from April 1-October. The line was purchased by the Blairsville & Indiana Railroad which changed its name to Gettysburg Railroad and used the line for freight and, under its Gettysburg Passenger Services subsidiary, tourist excursions. In 1996 the line was purchased by the RailAmerica subsidiary, Delaware Valley Railroad Company, which created a new operating company, Gettysburg Railway, that included Gettysburg Scenic Rail Tours. The line was sold October 1997 to John H. Marino, who operated the line until 2001. The station was purchased by Gettysburg College and was used by the Pioneer Lines Scenic Railway for diesel excursions on the line by 2007.
The remaining G. & H. tracks are part of the Gettysburg & Northern Railroad which transports ”canned goods, pulpboard, soda ash, grain, and scrap paper” and connects via 6 stations to the Norfolk Southern Railway at Mount Holly Springs and CSX Transportation at Gettysburg.