But we do need to add one more connection in South Elkins. The details presented here give you a good picture of the Elkins rail activity. But my focus is on Elkins, West Virginia. The overall scope and history of the Western Maryland Railway is quite interesting, and much if it has captured my interest as a rail enthusiast. They now folded the WVC&P into the Western Maryland and connected the two parts with an extensive project along the Potomac River.īut I digress. The Gould Syndicate, led by rail baron George Gould, had previously bought the Western Maryland Railway that stretched from Baltimore to Hagerstown, Maryland. By the end of 1905, the WVC&P ended up with the Gould Syndicate, which was buying up railroads across the country to create a transcontinental rail line owned by one company. In 1902, Henry Gassaway Davis and his partners began the sale process of the West Virginia Central & Pittsburg to a group of investors known as the Fuller Syndicate. The amount of freight, plus the locomotive facilities and car repair shops made Elkins a bustling railroad town. Traffic ebbed and flowed from these branches, but much of the car loadings came through Elkins. The GC&E was owned by West Virginia Pulp and Paper, a major lumber company of that day. In the mid-1920’s, the Greenbrier, Cheat & Elk Railroad made a connection on the C&I near Bemis. A rich seam of coal was discovered near Bemis in the mid-1920’s, which provided even more car loadings for this line. Many sawmills set up along the C&I line and provided the railroad with a steady business of cut lumber, pulp, and other items into the mid-teens. The rails then followed the West Fork of the Greenbrier River to Durbin. The rails made another sharp turn east and went through a tunnel to reach the Glady Fork of the Cheat, which it followed south to the headwaters at Lynn Divide. It followed this river south to a point just beyond Bemis, then crossed the Shavers Fork and swung back north on the other side gaining elevation. From Elkins, the line headed east and crossed over into the Shavers Fork watershed. The Coal & Iron line was originally built as a separate railroad and connected Elkins with Durbin, West Virginia, a distance of forty-seven miles. The last branch built was the most extensive. The B&BC served some mines in Weaver, a few miles from Belington. This area was rich in coal deposits and offered a connection with the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad and the Belington & Beaver Creek, for interchange. The Belington Branch followed the Tygart River north seventeen miles to Belington. The narrow gauge Valley River Railroad interchanged at Huttonsville and Mill Creek. Lumber operations at Dailey, Mill Creek and Huttonsville kept this a busy branch. The rugged mountains that form the headwaters of the Tygart, Elk, and Shavers Fork of the Cheat rivers. Davis had hoped to extend this line further to Webster Springs, but the survey crews could not find an easy way to pass through The Huttonsville Branch follows the Tygart River south seventeen miles to Huttonsville. In fact, the Belington line is noted as the 'Main Line', while the others are marked as Huttonsville Branch and Durbin Branch. The C&I line from Durbin joined on a wye just south of the Tygart River bridge, but this junction had no name on the 1919 railroad valuation map. Elkins Junction was about one mile south of the Tygart River bridge and was where the Huttonsville and Belington lines met. South Elkins was the location of two junctions where WM branchlines joined the mainline.
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