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The Erie Railroad was a that operated in the Northeastern United States, originally connecting in Jersey City, New Jersey, with at Dunkirk, New York. The railroad expanded west to following its 1865 merger with the former Atlantic and Great Western Railroad, also known as the New York, Pennsylvania and Ohio Railroad (NYPANO RR).

The mainline route of the Erie Railroad proved influential in the development and economic growth of the of New York state, including the cities of Binghamton, Elmira, and Hornell. The Erie Railroad repair shops were located in Hornell and was Hornell's largest employer. Hornell was also where Erie's mainline split into two routes with one proceeding northwest to Buffalo and the other west to Chicago.

On October 17, 1960, Erie Railroad merged with its former rival, Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad, to form the Erie Lackawanna Railway. The Hornell repair shops were closed in 1976, when took over, and repair operations moved to the Lackawanna's facility in Scranton, Pennsylvania. Some of the former Erie line between Hornell and Binghamton was damaged in 1972 by , but the damage was quickly repaired and today this line is a key link in the Norfolk Southern Railway's Southern Tier mainline. What was left of the Erie Lackawanna became part of Conrail in 1976. In 1983, remnants of the Erie Railroad became part of New Jersey Transit rail operations, including parts of its Main Line, and most of the surviving Erie Railroad routes are now operated by the Norfolk Southern Railway.


History

New York and Erie Railroad: 1832–1861
The New York and Erie Rail Road was chartered on April 24, 1832, by New York governor Enos T. Throop to connect the at Piermont, north of New York City, west to at Dunkirk. On February 16, 1841, the railroad was authorized to cross into the northeast corner of on the west side of the , a few miles west of Port Jervis, NY, as the east side was already occupied by the Delaware and Hudson Canal to a point several miles west of Lackawaxen, PA. Construction began in 1836 and was opened in sections until reaching the full length to Dunkirk on May 19, 1851. At Dunkirk, continued across to . The line crossed the Kittatinny Mountains at 870 feet.

When the route was completed in May, 1851, President and several members of his cabinet, including Secretary of State , made a special, two-day excursion run to open the railway. It is reported that Webster viewed the entire run from a rocking chair attached to a flatcar, with a steamer rug and jug of high-quality Medford .

(1995). 9781557530660, Purdue University Press.
(1999). 9780415921404, Psychology Press.
At stops, he would step off the flatcar and give speeches.

The line was built at wide gauge; this was believed to be a superior technology to standard gauge, providing more stability.

In 1848, the railroad built the Starrucca Viaduct, a stone railroad bridge over in Lanesboro, Pennsylvania, which has survived and is still in use today. In fact, current owner Central New York Railroad spent $3.2 million in 2021 centering its single remaining track, re- and repairing masonry. The viaduct is long, high and wide at the top. It is the oldest stone rail bridge in still in use.

As stated in the introduction, the shops in Hornell, New York were the largest on the Erie system beginning in the late 1920s, processing about 350 locomotives per year with "classified" (heavy) repairs. However, the first major repair facilities were built in Susquehanna, Pennsylvania in 1848, which were enlarged in 1863 to employ 700 workers. The primary car shops were located in Meadville, Pennsylvania in the western part of the state, employing 3,500 in 1912.Starr, Timothy. (2022). The Back Shop Illustrated, Vol. 1.


Erie Railway: 1861–1878
In August 1859, the company went into due to inability to make payments on the debts incurred for the large costs of building, and, on June 25, 1861, it was reorganized as the Erie Railway. This was the first of a major trunk line in the U.S.

In the of the 1860s, four well-known financiers struggled for control of the company; Cornelius Vanderbilt versus , James Fisk and . Gould ultimately triumphed in this struggle, but was forced to relinquish control in 1872–73 due to unfavorable public opinion following his involvement in the 1869 gold-rigging scandal and to his loss of $1 million of Erie Railroad stock to the British con-man Lord Gordon-Gordon. Investors in the railroad were also weary of Gould's financial wars with Vanderbilt that caused wild stock price fluctuations and operating losses from rate battles. Upon leaving the Erie he managed to take $4 million, which he claimed was the railroad's "debt" to him.Halstead, Murat. Life of James Gould. 1892.Starr, Timothy. Railroad Wars of New York State. The History Press, 2012.

In 1869, the railroad moved its main shop facilities from Dunkirk to Buffalo. Rather than demolishing the shops in Dunkirk, the facility was leased to Horatio G. Brooks, the former chief engineer of the NY&E who was at the controls of the first train into Dunkirk in 1851.Dunkirk Evening Observer. "Brooks Locomotive Works History. Nov. 1, 1939 ed. Horatio Brooks used the facilities to begin Brooks Locomotive Works, which remained in independent business until 1901 when it was merged with seven other locomotive manufacturing firms to create ALCO. ALCO continued new locomotive production at this facility until 1934, then closed the plant completely in 1962.

The cost of breaking bulk cargo in order to interchange with lines led the Erie to introduce a line of cars designed to operate on both broad gauge and standard gauge .The Erie Railway Report, The Railroad Gazette, Jan. 6, 1872; page 422. See final two paragraphs, column 2. Beginning in 1871, the railroad interchanged traffic by means of , including through passenger and freight connections to St. Louis, Missouri, using a Nutter car hoist in Urbana, Ohio.L. U. Reavis, St. Louis, Vandalia, Terre Haute, and Indianapolis R. R., The Railway and River Systems of St. Louis, Woodward, Tiernan and Hale, St. Louis, 1879; page 58.The Urbana Hoist, American Railroad Journal, Vol. XXXIII, No. 1 (Jan. 6, 1877); page 30.No. 1737, Grafton T. Nutter, Jersey City, New Jersey., U.S., November 2, 1872, for 10 years: "A Railway Wagon Lifting Machine", The Canadian Patent Office Record, Vol. 1, No. 1 (March 1873); page 8. Beginning in 1876, the Erie carried out their plans to convert their trackage to standard gauge, since it was deemed that the standard gauge-broad gauge interchange operations could not justify the costs. By 1878, the Erie built a third rail along the entire mainline from Buffalo to Jersey City. The third rail installation and standard-gauge conversion projects were so expensive, that the railroad was forced into bankruptcy.


New York, Lake Erie and Western Railroad: 1878–1895
The Erie still did not see profits, and was sold in 1878 via bankruptcy reorganization to become the New York, Lake Erie and Western Railroad. On June 22, 1880, the railroad’s standard-gauge conversion process was completed.

In 1886, it was reported that the Erie and the Philadelphia and Reading Railway shared ferry services between their two Jersey City terminals, the larger being , and Fulton Ferry in Brooklyn, New York for 11 round trips on weekdays and Saturdays, and four round trips on Sunday. In 1889, it opened a new bridge across the improving service to its terminals.


Erie Railroad: 1895–1960
By 1893, the New York, Lake Erie and Western Railroad went into bankruptcy reorganization again, and then the company emerged in 1895 as the Erie Railroad. By that time, the company began to obtain financial support from J. P. Morgan. In 1898, the Erie obtained a subsidiary, the New York, Susquehanna and Western Railroad (NYS&W), after Morgan purchased the majority of their shares, on the Erie's behalf.
(1991). 9780911868388, Carstens Publications.
The control of the NYS&W allowed the Erie to gain access to anthracite coal mines south of Scranton, Pennsylvania, competing with coal operations from the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad (DL&W).
(2025). 9781582480701, Morning Sun Books, Inc..
, ]] George W. Perkins brought Frederick D. Underwood into the Erie Railroad in 1910. During the eastern railroad strike of 1913 Underwood agreed to accept any ruling made by mediators under the Newlands Reclamation Act. One of the demands made by Erie employees was a 20% increase in wages. Erie management had refused a wage increase, but compromised by asking employees to wait until January, 1915 for any advance. Union leaders agreed to make this an issue which Erie management would settle with its own men. However, W.G. Lee, president of the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen, asserted that the only way "to deal with the Erie is through J.P. Morgan & Company, or the banks". Underwood responded from his home in Wauwatosa, Wisconsin, stating "I am running the Erie Railroad: not George W. Perkins, nor J.P. Morgan, nor anybody else."

In the mid-1920s, the Van Sweringen brothers of Cleveland, Ohio, assumed control of the Erie, and they installed a new president for the railroad, John Joseph Bernet. Bernet only served as the Erie's president from January 1927 to May 1929, but during that time, he initiated a reorganization and cost-cutting program to improve the company's operations and finances. He also arranged for the Erie to replace most of their steam locomotives and rolling stock with newly-built standardized equipment to speed up their freight operations, and it involved the introduction of the Erie's fleet of 2-8-4 "Berkshire" locomotives. In the mid-1930s, both Van Sweringen brothers died at an early age, before they could carry out any further plans they had for the Erie and their other railroads. Despite the ravages of the in the 1930s, the Erie managed to continue operations on their own, until they filed for bankruptcy again, on January 18, 1938. That same year, the Erie was involved in the U.S. Supreme Court case, the Erie Railroad Co. v. Tompkins. The , which governs the application of state common law in federal courts, is still taught in American , as of 2024. By December 1941, the Erie emerged from bankruptcy, following a reorganization process, which involved the purchase of the leased Cleveland and Mahoning Valley Railroad, swapping high rent for lower interest payments, and the purchase of formerly-subsidized and leased lines. In 1940, the NYS&W became disbanded from the Erie's control, as part of their own bankruptcy reorganization, and in the process, the Erie was entrusted ownership of their Susquehanna Connecting Railroad. The Erie's reorganization was deemed a success, since the railroad managed to pay dividends to their shareholders. On September 15, 1948, the Cleveland Union Terminal Company allowed the Erie to use the Union Terminal adjacent to in lieu of its old station. That same year, the Erie purchased a share of the Niagara Junction Railway, along with the New York Central and the Lehigh Valley.

(1985). 9780890240724, Kalmbach Publishing Company.
On March 17, 1954, the Erie completely dieselized its locomotive roster, when K-1 class 4-6-2 No. 2530 hauled the railroad's final steam-powered commuter train between Jersey City and Spring Valley, New York.
(1987). 9780517304884, Bonanza Books, a division of Crown Publisher's, Inc.. .
Later that same year, the railroad launched trailer-on-flatcar (TOFC) services.
(1999). 9780760306123, MBI Pub. .

Erie Railroad prospered throughout the mid-1950s, but its profits were simultaneously on a decline. The company's 1957 income was half of that of 1956; by 1958 and 1959, Erie Railroad posted large deficits. The Erie's financial losses resulted in them entering negotiations to merge with the nearby Delaware, Lackawanna and Western. The proposed merger led to the abandonment of duplicate freight facilities in Binghamton and Elmira, New York. Between 1956 and 1957, the Erie shifted its passenger trains from its Pavonia Terminal to the DL&W's newer . The DL&W also abandoned most of their mainline between Binghamton and Elmira, in favor of the Erie's parallel mainline, in 1958. The merger negotiations subsequently accelerated, and they briefly considered including the Delaware and Hudson Railroad (D&H); on October 17, 1960, the Erie and the DL&W merged together to create the Erie Lackawanna Railway.

(1994). 9780890240724, Kalmbach Publishing.
However, the merged railroad only operated for sixteen years, before their financial decline forced them to be absorbed into in 1976. Some former Erie trackage between Hornell and Binghamton were damaged in 1972 by . The Erie's large repair facility in Hornell was closed following Conrail's takeover, and operations were consolidated at the Lackawanna's Scranton facility.


Lines operated
Erie RailroadOriginal Main LinePiermontDunkirk 1841 - 1960Construction began in 1836, and opened from Piermont to Goshen on September 23, 1841. After some financial problems, construction resumed in August, 1846, and the next section, to Port Jervis, opened on January 7, 1848. Further extensions opened to Binghamton December 27, 1848, Owego January 1, 1849, and the full length to Dunkirk May 19, 1851. At Dunkirk continued across to .
Main Line at Greycourt near ChesterNewburgh January 8, 1850 - 1960 (Except five miles at the east end)The Erie's charter was amended on April 8, 1845, to allow the building of the branch. This amendment was later used to spur the construction of a railroad line to the bustling port city of Newburgh, NY. Newburgh was once the site of coal piers owned by the Pennsylvania Coal Company and later served as a connection to the New York and New England Railroad via a operation across the river to Beacon, New York. When opened in 1850, it was Newburgh's first railroad. Today, the line is completely abandoned except for a small portion between Newburgh and Vails Gate that is used as an industrial spur.
Newburgh and New York Railroad (Newburgh Shortcut)Newburgh Junction, near HarrimanNewburgh Branch at Vails Gate July 1869 - 1936Known as "the shortcut" because it was a more direct link between Newburgh and the southern section of the mainline when compared to the Newburgh Branch. When the Graham Line was constructed between 1906 and 1909, the first two to three miles of the "Shortcut" right of way were utilized and elevated to eliminate any grade crossings. Due to the decline of Newburgh's coal industry, the line was formally abandoned between 1936 and 1937. Parts of it remain in service today as Metro North's Port Jervis line and a short industrial spur in Vails Gate, NY, while others, like a small section in Highland Mills, NY, remain intact but abandoned.
(2025). 9781467120968, Arcadia Publishing. .
Newburgh Junction, near HarrimanOtisville 1909 - 1960Due to the steep grades, sharp curves, and numerous grade crossings of the Erie mainline between Harriman and Otisville, NY, the Graham Line was constructed between 1906 and 1909 as a freight bypass. In order to eliminate any grade crossings, the line was elevated considerably. Numerous local railroad marvels were built as a part of the Graham Line, such as the and the . The line remains in service today as the Port Jervis Line.
Paterson and Ramapo RailroadNew Jersey LineNew York Line at MahwahPaterson 1852 - 1960Opened as an independent company in 1848. Through ticketing began in 1851, with a required change of cars at Ramapo due to the . A third gauge rail was built by 1853.
New York Line: Union RailroadNew Jersey Line at SuffernMain Line in Suffern
Paterson and Hudson River RailroadPatersonNew Jersey Rail Road in Jersey City 1852 - 1960Opened as an independent company in 1833. Through ticketing began in 1851. In November 1853, Erie stock began operating to the New Jersey Rail Road's Jersey City terminal after a for was finished.
Buffalo and New York City RailroadHornellsvilleBuffalo Leased November 17, 1852 – 1857; owned October 31, 1857 – 1859Founded as the Attica and Hornellsville Railroad in 1845. In 1852, bought the Buffalo and Rochester Railroad's old alignment from Buffalo to Attica, and subsequently renamed itself to the Buffalo and New York City Railroad, and converted to the Erie's . The Buffalo and New York City began leasing their track to the Erie upon the completion of their extension from Attica southeast to Hornellsville, opened on November 17, 1852, giving the Erie access to Buffalo, a better terminal than Dunkirk- thus it became a branch of the Erie's mainline. Upon the Erie's bankruptcy, sold line from Buffalo to Attica to the Buffalo, New York, and Erie.
HorseheadsWatkins Leased 1850–1853; 1857-1859Upon independence of Canandaigua and Elmira, the Erie subleased the Chemung Railroad to the Canandaigua and Elmira. Reverted to the Erie in 1858 during the C&E's bankruptcy.
Elmira, Canandaigua and Niagara Falls RailroadWatkinsCanandaigua Leased 1851–1853; 1859-1866Founded as the Canandaigua and Corning Railroad on May 14, 1845. Upon completion, was renamed to the Canandaigua and Elmira Railroad, and immediately leased to Erie. Upon independence from Erie, began subleasing the Chemung. Renamed to EC&NF 1857. Went bankrupt from 1858 to 1859, during which time the Chemung was leased to Erie. Reorganized in 1859 as Elmira, Jefferson and Canandaigua Railroad, at which time the Erie leased it again. In 1866 transferred to the Northern Central, and a was built to allow the Northern Central's trains to operate over it.
Canandaigua and Niagara Falls RailroadCanandaiguaNorth Tonawanda Leased 1853 - 1858Leased by the Canandaigua and Elmira to continue it beyond Canandaigua. When the line went in 1858, it was reorganized as the Niagara Bridge and Canandaigua Railroad and was leased by New York Central Railroad. The NYC converted it to and blocked the Erie from it.
Buffalo and Niagara Falls RailroadNorth TonawandaNiagara Falls Suspension Bridge in Niagara Falls Trackage rights 1853 - 1858Trackage rights obtained by C&NF
Buffalo, Bradford and Pittsburgh Railroad CompanyErie Main Line at CarrolltonGilesville (later Buttsville) in southeast Lafayette February 26, 1859Formed by the merger of two earlier railroads in northwest Pennsylvania for the Erie to acquire a source of fuel for its locomotives. Extended from Bradford to Gilesville, the site of a mine, by January 1, 1866.
New York, Lake Erie, and Western Coal and RailroadBB&P in LafayetteJohnsonburg 1882-This section encompassed the once significant : partially destroyed by a microburst "tornado" in by 2003.
Section of Pennsylvania RailroadJohnsonburgBrockway, Pennsylvania Trackage rights 1897-1907
Section of Buffalo, Rochester, and Pittsburgh RailwayClarion Junction, north of JohnsonburgEleanora Junction (later Cramer), northeast of Stump Creek Leased 1907-
Eriton RailroadEriton Junction, SE of West LibertyEriton Mines, south of West Liberty 1908-(1940s)
Buffalo, New York and Erie RailroadOriginal Main LineErie Main Line at CorningBuffalo Leased 1863-Created during the Erie's bankruptcy in 1858. Took over the Buffalo and New York City from Attica to Buffalo in 1859. Acquired the Buffalo, Corning and New York Railroad the same year and connected the two lines. Leased the Rochester and Genesee Valley Railroad in 1858.
Rochester and Genesee Valley RailroadBNY&E at AvonRochester Completed 1853; leased to Buffalo, NY, and then Erie in 1858.
Avon, Geneseo and Mt. Morris RailroadBNY&E at AvonMount Morris Leased 1872-Founded as Genesee Valley Company. Acquired land initially bought by Rochester and Genesee Valley in 1856. In 1859, reorganized as the AG&MM.
Atlantic and Great Western RailroadErie and New York City RailroadErie main line at SalamancaPennsylvania Line near Niobe in Harmony 1868–1880, 1874–1880, 1883-1960Founded in 1862, as all three railroads merged were renamed in their respective states as the A&GW Rail way. Reorganized as the New York, Pennsylvania and Ohio Railway in 1880
Meadville RailroadNew York Line in Freehold TownshipOhio Line in South Pymatuning Township
Franklin and Warren RailroadPennsylvania Line in OrangevilleDayton
Oil City BranchAt Meadville near MeadvilleOil City
Suspension Bridge and Erie Junction RailroadBuffaloNiagara Falls Suspension Bridge in Niagara Falls 1871-Chartered by Erie in 1868 to restore access to the Niagara Falls Suspension Bridge
Erie International RailwayInternational Junction in BuffaloInternational Bridge Erie-chartered in 1872
Lockport and Buffalo RailwayTonawandaLockport 1879Erie-chartered in 1871
Jefferson RailroadMain LineLanesboroCarbondale 1870-1960As far back as 1840, there had been a number of attempts to build a railroad from the Erie mainline to the of Pennsylvania. The Jefferson was incorporated in 1851 by the Pennsylvania legislature, which squashed local attempts to build a line on that route.
Edgerton BranchMayfieldCoal mines of Hosie and Park 1884-1910Abandoned 1910
Honesdale BranchErie and Wyoming Valley at HawleyHonesdale 1869-1960Built to create a more direct connection from the Jefferson's southern terminus at Carbondale to points east via the E&WV and the Delaware and Hudson Gravity Railroad (though the two companies' rails were not explicitly linked)
Erie and Wyoming Valley RailroadMain LineLackawaxenPlains Junction in Wilkes-Barre 1863-1960
Jefferson Railroad ConnectionE&WV MainlineJessup
DL&W and WB&E ConnectionPlains Junction in Wilkes-BarreAshley
Scranton BranchE&WV main lineScranton
Jones Lake RailroadManning JunctionLake Ariel 1888-
Susquehanna Connecting RailroadSuscon JunctionOld Forge June, 1938 -Consolidated from existing railroads
Delaware and Hudson RailroadCarbondaleMoosic 1900(?)-Connected the Erie and Wyoming Valley and the Jefferson
Moosic Mountain and Carbondale RailroadThroopJessup 1888-
Buffalo and Jamestown RailroadJamestownBuffalo 1881-Chartered in 1872 to connect the A&GW with the Erie mainline. Soon after the line was completed in 1873, the company was reorganized as the Buffalo and Southwest Railroad.
Chicago and Erie RailroadMain LineMarionIllinois Line at Hammond 1895-Founded in 1871 as the Chicago and Atlantic Railway and went into bankruptcy in 1890.
Chicago and Western Indiana RailroadIndiana Line at Calumet City Already owned by C&E in joint ownership with 4 other companies
New York, Susquehanna, and Western RailwayMain LineJersey CityStroudsburg 1898-1940American financier J.P. Morgan began to take notice of the railroad, which by the 1890s had become a rapidly expanding coal-hauler; he quietly bought up its stock on behalf of the Erie. The railroad was leased, and soon after took over complete operation of the line. The depression caused the bankruptcy of the NYSW, which was spun off as a private company in 1940, working closely with the NYO&W.
RidgefieldEdgewater
Middletown BranchOgdensburgMiddletown
Wilkes-Barre and Eastern RailroadStroudsburgPlains 1898-1939Since the Erie chose to send all of its traffic along the Erie and Wyoming Valley, the line was doomed to failure, and was abandoned in 1939.
Lodi Branch RailroadTeterboroLodi 1883- 1898
Hackensack and Lodi RailroadHackensackLodi 1898-1940
Macopin RailroadMacopin Lake Junction in CharlottesburgMacopin Pond (Echo Lake) in West Milford 1887-1940
Bath and Hammondsport RailroadBathHammondsport 1903-1935After a flood in 1935, the line was purchased by locals who renamed it the B&H Railroad.
Cleveland and Mahoning RailroadMain LineYoungstown 1941-
Hubbard BranchYoungstownPennsylvania Line in Masury
Niles and New Lisbon RailroadNilesLisbon
Sharon RailwayMain LineWest MiddlesexPymatuning Township C&MV ownedDuring construction absorbed Sharpsville, Wheatland, Sharon and Greenfield Railroad in 1881
Westerman Coal and Iron RailroadOhio Line in SharonWheatland
New Castle and Shenango Valley RailroadWest MiddlesexNew Castle 1900-
Tioga RailroadNorthern ExtensionPennsylvania Line in LindleyCorning 1876-
Corning and Blossburg RailroadNew York Line in LawrencevilleBlossburg 1882-Chartered under the Tioga Navigation Company
Southern ExtensionBlossburgMorris Run 1853-
Goshen and Deckertown RailwayGoshenPine Island 1872-Operated independently 1869-1872
Wallkill Valley RailroadMontgomeryKingston 1866-1876
New York and Greenwood Lake RailroadMain LineJersey CitySterling Forest 1878-Company formed under Erie as reorganization of the Montclair and Greenwood Lake Railway. Parts were realigned due to the creation of the Wanaque Reservoir
Ringwood BranchMain LineRingwood
Arlington RailroadMain LineNewark and Hudson near Hackensack River 1890-Built to offer a more direct connection with Jersey City" Erie Railroad" (PDF). Inventory June 1918. June 30, 1918. Retrieved 2012-06-06.
Orange BranchNewarkOrange 1895-Founded as Watchung Railway
Caldwell BranchLittle FallsCaldwell 1897-Founded as Caldwell Railway and the Roseland Railway
Jersey CityPaterson 1869-Founded 1864 as Erie subsidiary
New Jersey and New York RailroadRutherfordNanuet 1896-Founded as Hackensack and New York Railroad in 1856
SparkillJersey City 1859-Founded 1854 as Erie subsidiary
Nyack and Southern RailroadNyackPiermont 1870-
Middletown and Crawford RailroadMiddletownPine Bush 1882-Chartered 1868. Completed in 1872 under lease of the New York and Oswego Midland Railroad; spun off as a private company 1875.
Montgomery and Erie RailroadGoshenMontgomery 1872-Built to connect to the Wallkill Valley Railroad
Arnot and Pine Creek RailroadArnotHoytville 1883-
Bergen County RailroadMain LineGlen RockEast Rutherford 1883-
Bergen and Dundee RailroadGarfieldPassaic 1885-
Columbus and Ohio RailroadColumbusNiobe 1908-
Conesus Lake RailroadAvonLakeville 1882-
Long Dock CompanyCroxtonDocks at Jersey City 1861-
Docks Connecting Railroad New Jersey Junction Railroad in Jersey City 1886-
New York and Fort Lee RailroadLong Dock Tunnel in Jersey CityWest New York 1870-1886Assumed part of the former Morris and Essex line from the Long Dock Tunnel. The line was transferred to the New Jersey Junction Railroad in 1886, with the Erie keeping a lease on the former Fort Lee line south of Weehawken. Connection to the Long Dock Tunnel was kept as the Docks Connecting Railroad
New York, Lake Erie and Western Docks and Improvement CompanyNew Jersey Junction Railroad in WeehawkenHudson River 1881-Track composed entirely of siding; maximum distance from junction with NJJ is just over half a mile. Accessed via the Docks Connecting Railroad and a lease over the New Jersey Junction Railroad
Elmira State Line RailroadElmiraPennsylvania Line in Pine City 1876-
Erie and Black Rock RailroadBlack Rock Junction in Black RockDocks at Black Rock 1883-
Jersey Avenue in Jersey CitySeacaucus 1910-
West Clarion RailroadBrockwayWest Clarion 1898-1925
Youngstown and Austintown RailroadMain LineYoungstownAustintown 1882-Parts constructed by the Youngstown Railroad Company and the Wicks and Wells Railroad
Manning BranchMain Line in AustintownTippecanoe Shaft in Austintown
A map from 1960 shows that the Erie had some control over the former Cleveland, Columbus, Cincinnati and Indianapolis Railway and the New York Central from Lawrenceville to Newberry Junction, near Williamsport, PA.


Passenger service
The Erie Railroad operated a number of named passenger trains, although none were as well-known or successful as others like the Pennsylvania Railroad's or New York Central Railroad's 20th Century Limited. Some of the Erie's most well known trains included the , Lake Cities, Pacific Express, Atlantic Express, Midlander, Southern Tier Express and Mountain Express. All of these had their western termini in Chicago, except the Mountain Express which terminated in Hornell, in the of New York.

The Erie operated an extensive network of commuter routes in northern New Jersey and the lower of New York. Most of these routes became part of Conrail along with the rest of Erie Lackawanna's rail operations in 1976. The New Jersey routes are now part of NJ Transit's Hoboken Division, originating and terminating at Hoboken Terminal. The Hudson Valley routes are now part of Metro-North Railroad.

In addition to its steam and diesel services the Erie also operated an electric commuter rail line to its terminal station in Rochester, New York. The station was one of the Erie's few electrified railroad stations, and the railroad became one of the first to provide electric commuter services in 1907.


Company officers
  • (1833–35), (1839–41), (1844–45)
  • James Gore King (1835–1839)
  • James Bowen (1841–1842)
  • William Maxwell (1842–1843)
  • (1843–1844)
  • (1845–1853)
  • (1853–1857)
  • Charles Moran (1857–1859)
  • Samuel Marsh (1859–1861), (1864)
  • (1861–1864)
  • Robert H. Berdell (1864–1867)
  • John S. Eldridge (1867–1868)
  • (1868–1872)
  • John A. Dix (1872)
  • Peter H. Watson (1872–1874)
  • Hugh J. Jewett (1874–1884)
  • John King (1884–1894)
  • Eben B. Thomas (1894–1901)
  • Frederick Douglas Underwood (1901–1926)
  • John Joseph Bernet (1927–1929)
  • Charles Eugene Denney (1929–1939)
  • Robert Eastman Woodruff (1941–1949)
  • Paul W. Johnston (1949–1956)
  • Harry W. Von Willer (1956–1960)


Heritage unit
As part of the 30th anniversary of Norfolk Southern Railway being formed, NS decided to paint 20 new locomotives into the paint scheme of predecessor railroads. NS #1068, an EMD SD70ACe, was painted into Erie Railroad's green passenger scheme. It was released on May 25, 2012.

In October 2023, as part of the 40th Anniversary of Rail Operations, EMD GP40PH-2B No. 4210 was painted into the Erie Railroad's black-and-yellow scheme.


See also
  • List of Erie Railroad locomotives
  • List of Erie Railroad structures documented by the Historic American Engineering Record


Notes

Further reading


Primary sources


External links

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