Early history as an independent railroad The
Lake Shore and Tuscarawas Valley Railway Company (LS&TV) was chartered by the state of Ohio on July 2, 1870. It was granted authority to build a line from
Berea, Ohio, to
Mill Township in
Tuscarawas County, Ohio, where it would join the
Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, Chicago and St. Louis Railroad line. A branch to
Elyria, Ohio, was also authorized. In October 1872, the company purchased the long
Elyria and Black River Railway Company (E&BR; chartered in 1871), which allowed for completion of the main line between Berea and
Uhrichsville, Ohio. The Elyria branch was completed in August 1873. In March 1873, the LS&TV filed an amendment to its charter to allow it to extend its tracks south to
Washington Township in Tuscarawas County. But the LS&TV fell into
receivership in July 1874 for failing to pay its mortgage on the E&BR, and the E&BR was sold for $1 million to
Cleveland railroad executive
Selah Chamberlain. On January 30, 1875, Chamberlain sold the E&BR to
Amasa Stone, Robert L. Chamberlain (Selah's son), Ebenezer B. Thomas, Clement Russell, and Edward Kent (an investor from
New York City). These owners formed the
Cleveland, Tuscarawas Valley and Wheeling Railway (CTV&W) to take over the assets of the LS&TV. The CTV&W filed a charter amendment in March 1877 to extend its line from Uhrichsville south through Tuscarawas,
Harrison,
Belmont counties to West Wheeling, Ohio, on the
Ohio River (just south of
Bridgeport). But the railroad once again fell into receivership in February 1883, and Edward R. Perkins purchased it for just under $2.9 million. Perkins immediately sold the railroad back to an investors' group led by Stone, and which included Selah Chamberlain, Worthy S. Streator (a major creditor of the line), Robert L. Chamberlain, and Andrew J. Baggs. They filed a charter on March 1, 1883, to incorporate the
Cleveland, Lorain and Wheeling Railway (CL&W), which would assume the assets of the CTV&W. In June 1886, the CL&W filed an amendment to their charter to extend the line south of West Wheeling to the town of
Bellaire, Ohio. In August 1887, another amendment extended the line a short distance north into Bridgeport.
B&O ownership In 1898, a high-level bridge crossing of the Ohio River was made at Bellaire, connecting the CL&W with the
Baltimore and Ohio Railroad (B&O). In February 1901, the CL&W had about $5 million in preferred stock. Elsewhere, the B&O fell into receivership on February 28, 1896. By the time the B&O emerged from bankruptcy in 1901, the
Pennsylvania Railroad had obtained a controlling (if minority) interest in the road's stock. In December 1901, the B&O purchased $2.7 million of preferred stock in the CL&W, giving it a controlling interest in the company. The B&O made additional purchases of CL&W stock over the next six years, until in March 1908 it purchased all remaining outstanding shares and made the CL&W a subsidiary of the road.
C&O/Chessie System/CSX ownership The CL&W remained part of the B&O until 1963. During the 1950s and 1960s, the Pennsylvania Railroad and the
New York Central Railroad fought for control of the B&O. But beginning in 1960, the
Chesapeake and Ohio Railway (C&O) began purchasing large quantities of B&O preferred stock. By March 1962 it controlled 60 percent of the B&O. But the Pennsylvania and the New York Central agreed to a merger in March 1962, putting an end to this competition. The C&O then sought sole ownership of the B&O, and succeeded in acquiring the New York Central's 20 percent share. The merger was approved by the
Interstate Commerce Commission in March 1963. The C&O formed a holding company, the
Chessie System, in 1973. The B&O continued to operate as a distinct company under the Chessie System. The Chessie System merged with Seaboard Coast Line Industries (owner of the
Seaboard Coast Line Railroad, the
Louisville and Nashville Railroad, the
Clinchfield Railroad, and the
Georgia Railroad and Banking Company) on November 1, 1980, to form
CSX Corporation. CSX Corporation assigned its railroads to a new subsidiary,
CSX Transportation, on July 1, 1986. The B&O's distinct identity ended in October 1986 (one year before the railroad itself was absorbed by the C&O and CSX), at which time the CL&W was downgraded to become a subdivision of CSX Transportation. ==Description of the line==