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Early railroads in Lycoming
County
By Lou Hunsinger Jr.
The arrival of the railroads in Lycoming
County came fairly early but it was somewhat tentative.
The first railroad in the Williamsport area was the Williamsport
and Elmira Railroad, which was incorporated by the Pennsylvania
legislature on June 9, 1832. But it would not be until 1839
that the railroad was fully operational.
According to an article in the April 1986 edition of "Now
and Then," the journal of the Muncy Historical Society,
Matthew Ralston was named president of the railroad. He
obtained the financing for it, as well as supervised its
construction. The railroad would later pass through land
that Ralston acquired in the area of the town that would
bear his name.
Robert Faries, who had been chief engineer of the West Branch
Canal, was hired to locate the rails of the line and assist
in the administration of the railroad.
The railroad was used to transport coal from the northern
portion of Lycoming County and later lumber to various markets.
The first locomotive for the railroad was delivered to Williamsport
using the mode of transportation that it would supercede
-- a flat-bottomed canal boat.
On January 12, 1839 the Williamsport and Elmira Railroad
made its first 25-mile run from Williamsport to Ralston
in 68 minutes. The railroad would eventually make a complete
run from Williamsport to Elmira.
The W&E Railroad holds the dubious distinction of being
the first railroad in the state to go bankrupt in1849. It
reconstituted itself but by 1863 it was in financial peril
again and was acquired as part of the Northern Central Railroad,
which later became a part of the Pennsylvania Railroad's
system.
Another railroad in Lycoming County that served the eastern
part of the county was the Williamsport and North Branch
Railroad. According to a September 16, 2001 article in the
Sun-Gazette, the railroad was founded in 1864 and its first
president and the man who served as the catalyst for the
creation of the railroad was Michael Meylert, a resident
of Laporte in Sullivan County.
The railroad's purpose was the shipping of passengers and
freight back and forth between Hughesville, Halls, Picture
Rocks and north into Sullivan County. The freight the railroad
hauled, like the W&E, involved lumber and bituminous
coal.
In the mid-1870s there were two daily round trips between
Hughesville and Halls. By 1884, there three daily passenger
runs from Hughesville to Picture Rocks. Daily passenger
service later expanded to such Sullivan County towns and
hamlets such as Nordmont, Sonestown and Satterfield.
The first years of the 20th century were the high-water
mark for the Williamsport and North Branch Railroad's freight
hauling business.
Several factors precipitated the decline and the eventual
demise of the W&NB Railroad. First, was the decline
in lumber and wood-related products as a result of the over
harvesting of timber; the second factor was the coming of
the automobile. People were no longer as dependent upon
the railroad to make some of the short trips to nearby towns
that the railroad had provided.
The killing blow was the "Great Depression" and
the attendant economic woes it caused. The W&NB Railroad
declared bankruptcy in the late 1930s. The surviving rail
equipment was sold for scrap. The only thing left of the
W&NB is a portion of the original rail depot that exists
in Hughesville.
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