in the Bald Eagle Valley, looking southwest toward
Julian.
Bald Eagle Mountain and
Bald Eagle Creek are on the left, the
Nittany and Bald Eagle Railroad and
U.S. Route 220 are in the lower right, and the
Allegheny Front is on the top right.
Roads U.S. Route 220 Alternate, the main route along the valley, ran along the floodplain, but the main route designation has been relocated to the Nittany Valley north of Port Matilda in conjunction with the ongoing extension of
Interstate 99 to
Interstate 80. The road north of there is now known as U.S. 220 Alternate. I-80 runs east-west across the valley between
Snow Shoe and
Bellefonte.
U.S. Route 322, Skytop Mountain Road, also crosses the valley through Port Matilda, and across the ridge in a cut at "Skytop". I-99 runs through the upper valley mostly along the ridge, then wraps around Port Matilda to pick up U.S. 322 in a tandem alignment, before crossing the ridge in the now expanded Skytop cut.
Canal The
Bald Eagle and Spring Creek Navigation Company began building up the Bald Eagle Valley from Lock Haven in 1834. It reached Howard in 1837, but construction stalled, and it only reached Milesburg in 1847 and Bellefonte in 1848. Initially successful, the canal began to face railroad competition during the
Civil War, and was not rebuilt after its destruction by flooding in 1865.
Rail Construction began in 1858 on Centre County's first railroad, the
Bellefonte and Snow Shoe Railroad, which entered the valley through the
Spring Creek water gap at Milesburg. By 1862 the line up the Wallace Run side valley, from Wingate to the timber and coal resources of
Snow Shoe, was completed. It ran along the stream bed to the foot of the
Allegheny Front, then climbed half of the line's vertical rise via a unique series of
switchbacks in a steep box canyon near . The
Pennsylvania Railroad financed the construction of the
Bald Eagle Valley Railroad line through the valley, along the floodplain from Tyrone to Lock Haven. When completed in 1865, it used the Bellefonte & Snow Shoe Railroad track between Wingate and Milesburg. The Pennsylvania Railroad bought the Bellefonte & Snow Shoe Railroad in 1881, making its former line the Snow Shoe and Bellefonte branches. The Snow Shoe branch has been abandoned, but the
Nittany and Bald Eagle Railroad shortline still runs the lines from Tyrone to Lock Haven and Bellefonte.
Air Ridge Soaring Gliderport, the only airport in the valley, is active (except in winter) with
pilot training and
glider rides. The former Peterson Memorial Airport, near Tyrone, closed in 1976, and was converted to an industrial park. North of the valley, near
Black Moshannon State Park, lies
Mid-State Regional Airport, however, it was shut down after the creation of
University Park Airport. ==Geology==