Norfolk & Western Railway
Scioto Valley Railroad (1876)
The Norfolk &
Western Railway, in Columbus, was originally built as the Scioto Valley Railroad in 1876.
It started as a Columbus, Circleville, Chillicothe short line that was
extended to Portsmouth in 1878. At first it didn't have much on line
business and no interchange business to speak of. That all changed
when the little short line was purchased by the Norfolk & Western Railroad
in July 1890. This gave the N&W, still building westward through West
Virginia, an outlet to the west for its coal traffic. In the beginning it
supplied coal to the Sandusky Short Line (later to become the PRR's Sandusky
Branch). As time passed it also delivered coal to the PRR for the Logansport
(Piqua) line, to the Chesapeake and Ohio for the Toledo docks and to the
Toledo and Ohio Central (NYC) also for the Toledo docks.
The line entered
Columbus from the south passing through the city just west of Alum Creek to
its yard in the northeastern section of Columbus north of Fifth Avenue.
It terminated into the Joyce Avenue Yard, an "L" shaped yard that ended near
Joyce Avenue where the roundhouse and locomotive servicing facilities were
located. By the late 1920's the Joyce Avenue Yard had become too small and the many
long freight trains were tying up traffic crossing E. Broad Street and many other
Columbus east-west arteries. The Joyce Avenue yard and the PRR Grogan
Receiving Yard (renamed Pennor Yard), located adjacent to the N&W yard, were
greatly expanded and a high fill was built elevating the tracks through
Columbus. This project eliminated 10 grade and two railroad crossings.
It increase the capacity of the yard from 1,600 to 3,750 cars. The new
PRR Pennor yard was expanded to 10 tracks.
Pennor yard was
used for coal trains being transferred to the PRR Grogan Yard destined for
the Lake Erie docks at Sandusky. The PRR also leased four tracks at
the southwest corner of the yard for staging coal trains destined for the
PRR Piqua line to Logansport, IN. The interchange with the C&O and T&OC
was just south of Columbus.
During the 1950's
the N&W used the class A, 2-6-6-4 and the class Y3, 2-8-8-2
locomotives for road
engines, the class S1a, 0-8-0 and usually one class M, 4-8-0 for switching
service. Normally a class K, 4-8-2 and occasionally a class J, 4-8-4
were used for the one passenger train, the "Pocahontas". The Columbus
and Cincinnati sections of the Pocahontas were combined at Portsmouth for
the trip to Norfolk, VA.
At the end of the
steam era the N&W had the oldest active steam locomotive in Columbus, the
class M build in 1906-07. They also had the newest locomotives the
class S1a 0-8-0's build in 1951-53.
The N&W was
characterized by its efficiently well-maintained equipment as can be seen in
photographs from the 1950s. Notice in the pictures how clean the
locomotives are and how picked up the facilities are. This attention
to a high level of maintenance lasted until the end of steam in 1958.