Pre-DL&W (1832–1853) Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad was first incorporated as '''Leggett's Gap Railroad
on April 7, 1832, though it was dormant for several years following its incorporation. The company was chartered on March 14, 1849, and organized on January 2, 1850. On April 14, 1851, its name was changed to Lackawanna and Western Railroad'''. The line opened on December 20, 1851, and ran north from
Scranton, Pennsylvania, to
Great Bend, Pennsylvania, just south of
Pennsylvania's border with
New York state. From Great Bend, the railroad obtained
trackage rights north and west over the
New York and Erie Rail Road to
Owego, New York, where it leased the
Cayuga and Susquehanna Railroad to
Ithaca on
Cayuga Lake on April 21, 1855. The C&S was the reorganized and partially rebuilt
Ithaca and Owego Railroad, which had opened on April 1, 1834, and was the oldest part of its system. The whole system was built to
broad gauge, the same as the New York and Erie, although the original I&O was built to standard gauge and
converted to wide gauge when rebuilt as the C&S. The "Delaware and Cobb's Gap Railroad" was chartered December 4, 1850, to build a line from Scranton east to the
Delaware River. Before it opened, the Delaware and Cobb's Gap and Lackawanna and Western were consolidated by the
Lackawanna Steel Company into one company, the "Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad", on March 11, 1853. On the
New Jersey side of the Delaware River, the
Warren Railroad was chartered on February 12, 1851, to continue from the bridge over the river southeast to
Hampton, on the
Central Railroad of New Jersey. That section got its name from
Warren County, the county through which it would primarily run.
Expansion and profits (1853–1940) in 1893 The rest of the line, now known as the Southern Division, opened on May 27, 1856, including the Warren Railroad in
New Jersey. A
third rail was added to the
standard gauge Central Railroad of New Jersey east of Hampton to allow the railroad to run east to
Elizabeth via
trackage rights (the CNJ was extended in 1864 to
Jersey City). On December 10, 1868, the company acquired the
Morris and Essex Railroad unit. In 1945, it was fully merged into the DL&W. This line ran east–west across northern New Jersey, crossing the Warren Railroad at
Washington and providing access to
Jersey City without depending on the CNJ. The M&E tunnel under
Bergen Hill opened in 1876, relieving the Morris and Essex Railroad and its owners, the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad, from having to use the
New York, Lake Erie and Western Railway's tunnel to reach Jersey City. Along with the M&E lease came several branch lines in New Jersey, including the
Boonton Line, which opened in 1870 and bypassed
Newark for through freight. The railroad acquired the
Syracuse, Binghamton and New York Railroad in 1869 and leased the
Oswego and Syracuse Railroad on February 13, 1869. This gave it a branch from
Binghamton north and northwest via
Syracuse to
Oswego, a port on
Lake Ontario. The "Greene Railroad" was organized in 1869, opened in 1870, and was immediately leased to the company, providing a short branch off the Oswego line from
Chenango Forks to
Greene. Also in 1870, the company leased the
Utica, Chenango and Susquehanna Valley Railway, continuing this branch north to
Utica, with a branch from
Richfield Junction to
Richfield Springs (fully opened in 1872). The "Valley Railroad" was organized March 3, 1869, to connect the end of the original line at
Great Bend, Pennsylvania, to
Binghamton, New York, avoiding reliance on the Erie. The new line opened on October 1, 1871. By 1873, the company controlled the
Lackawanna and Bloomsburg Railroad, a branch from
Scranton southwest to
Northumberland with
trackage rights over the
Pennsylvania Railroad's
Northern Central Railway to
Sunbury. On March 15, 1876, the whole system was re-gauged to
standard gauge in one day. The New York, Lackawanna and Western Railroad was chartered on August 26, 1880, and opened on September 17, 1882, to continue the railroad from
Binghamton west and northwest to Buffalo. The main line ran to the
International Bridge to
Ontario, and a branch served downtown Buffalo. A
spur from
Wayland served
Hornellsville (Hornell). On December 1, 1903, the company began operating the
Erie and Central New York Railroad, a branch of the Oswego line from Cortland Junction east to
Cincinnatus. That same year, it also began to control the
Bangor and Portland Railway. By 1909, the company controlled the
Bangor and Portland Railway. This line branched from the main line at
Portland, southwest to
Nazareth, with a branch to
Martins Creek. The
Delaware Valley Railway was organized with visions of linking the Lackawanna north to the
Erie Railroad at
Port Jervis, New York beginning with plans in 1893 and construction in 1901. Trains ran north from
East Stroudsburg only as far as
Bushkill, and the twelve-mile line was abandoned in 1937. The primary locomotive and car shops were located in
Scranton. In 1910 they were enlarged and upgraded at a cost of $2 million, including a massive machine and erecting shop measuring 582 by 342 feet. To handle the increasing roster of coal and other freight cars, new car shops were built outside Scranton at Keyser Valley in 1904. A passenger car shop was added in Kingsland, New Jersey, nine miles from New York City, in 1906.
New terminals and realignments The company built a
Beaux-Arts terminal in
Hoboken, New Jersey, in 1907, and another
Beaux-Arts passenger station (now a
Radisson hotel) in Scranton the following year. A new terminal was constructed on the waterfront in Buffalo in 1917. The "Lackawanna Railroad of New Jersey", chartered on February 7, 1908, to build the
Lackawanna Cut-Off (a.k.a. New Jersey Cutoff or Hopatcong-Slateford Cutoff), opened on December 24, 1911. This provided a
low-grade cutoff in northwestern New Jersey. The cutoff included the
Delaware River Viaduct and the
Paulinskill Viaduct, as well as three concrete towers at Port Morris and Greendell in New Jersey and Slateford Junction in Pennsylvania. From 1912 to 1915, the Summit-Hallstead Cutoff (a.k.a. Pennsylvania Cutoff or
Nicholson Cutoff) was built to revamp a winding and hilly system between
Clarks Summit, Pennsylvania, and
Hallstead, Pennsylvania. This rerouting provided another quicker low-grade line between Scranton and Binghamton. The Summit Cutoff included the massive
Tunkhannock Viaduct and
Martins Creek Viaduct. The Lackawanna's cutoffs had no at-grade crossings with roads or highways, allowing high-speed service.
Passenger operations The railroad ran trains from its
Hoboken Terminal, its gateway to
New York City, to its
Scranton, Binghamton,
Syracuse, Oswego, and
Buffalo stations and to
Utica Union Station. Noteworthy among these were: • Nos. 2
Pocono Express / 5
Twilight (
Hoboken to
Buffalo with New York Central connections to
Chicago) • Nos. 3 / 6
Phoebe Snow, also known as the
Lackawanna Limited (Hoboken-Buffalo) • Nos. 7
Westerner / 8
New Yorker (Hoboken to Buffalo, with Nickel Plate
Nickel Plate Limited connection to Chicago) • Nos. 10
New York Mail / 15
Owl (Hoboken to Buffalo) • Nos. 1301 / 1306
Interstate Express (
Philadelphia to Syracuse) • Nos. 1702
Keystone Express / 1705
Pittsburgh Express (Scranton to
Pittsburgh) The railroad also ran commuter operations from the
North Jersey suburbs to Hoboken on the
Boonton,
Gladstone, Montclair and
Morristown Lines. Early publicity for the passenger service featured a young woman,
Phoebe Snow, who always wore white and kept her clothing clean while riding the "Road of Anthracite", powered by the clean-burning coal known as
anthracite.
Decline (1940–1960) The most profitable
commodity shipped by the railroad was
anthracite coal. In 1890 and during 1920–1940, the DL&W shipped upwards of 14% of the state of Pennsylvania's anthracite production. Other profitable freight included dairy products, cattle, lumber, cement, steel and grain. The
Pocono Mountains region was one of the most popular vacation destinations in the country—especially among New Yorkers—and several large hotels sat along the line in
Northeastern Pennsylvania, generating a large passenger traffic for the Lackawanna. All of this helped justify the railroad's expansion of its double-track mainline to three and in a few places four tracks. The Lackawanna Railroad's financial problems were not unique. Rail traffic in the U.S. in general declined after
World War II as trucks and
automobiles took freight and passenger traffic. Forty years later, however, the Lackawanna was a shadow of its former financial self. Seeing no advantage in an end-to-end merger, Nickel Plate officials also rebuffed attempts by the DL&W, which owned a substantial block of Nickel Plate stock, to place one of its directors on the Nickel Plate
board. (The Nickel Plate would later merge with the
Norfolk and Western Railroad.) Shoemaker next turned, in 1956, to aggressive but unsuccessful efforts to obtain joint operating agreements and even potential mergers with the
Lehigh Valley Railroad and the
Delaware and Hudson Railway. Finally, Shoemaker sought and won a merger agreement with the
Erie Railroad, the DL&W's longtime rival (and closest geographical competitor), forming the
Erie Lackawanna Railroad. The merger was formally consummated on October 17, 1960. Shoemaker drew much criticism for it, and would even second-guess himself after he had retired from railroading. He later claimed to have had a "gentlemen's agreement" with the EL board of directors to take over as president of the new railroad. After he was pushed aside in favor of Erie managers, however, he left in disillusionment and became the president of the
Central Railroad of New Jersey in 1962. In 1972, the
Central Railroad of New Jersey abandoned all its operations in Pennsylvania (which by that time were freight-only), causing additional through freights to be run daily between
Elizabeth, NJ on the CNJ and Scranton on the EL. The trains, designated as the eastbound SE-98 and the westbound ES-99, travelled via the Lackawanna Cut-Off and were routed via the
CNJ's
High Bridge Branch. This arrangement ended with the creation of
Conrail on April 1, 1976. During its time, the EL diversified its shipments from the growing
Lehigh Valley and also procured a lucrative contract with
Chrysler to ship auto components from
Mount Pocono, Pennsylvania. The EL also aggressively sought other contracts with suppliers in the area, pioneering what came to be known as
intermodal shipping. None of this could compensate for the decline in coal shipments, however, and, as labor costs and taxes rose, the railroad's financial position became increasingly precarious although it was stronger than some railroads in the eastern U.S. The opening of Interstates
I-80,
I-380, and
I-81 during the early 1970s, which in effect paralleled much of the former Lackawanna mainline east of
Binghamton, New York, caused more traffic to be diverted to trucks. This only helped to accelerate the EL's decline. By 1976, it was apparent that the EL was at the end of its tether, and it petitioned to join
Conrail: a new regional railroad that was created on April 1, 1976, out of the remnants of seven bankrupt freight railroads in the northeastern U.S.
Conrail The EL's rail property was legally conveyed into
Conrail on April 1, 1976. Labor contracts limited immediate changes to the freight schedule, but in early 1979, Conrail suspended through freight service on the Lackawanna side. The railroad removed freight traffic from the Hoboken-Binghamton mainline and consolidated the service within its other operating routes. Railroad officials said the primary reasons were the EL's early-1960s severing of the
Boonton Branch near
Paterson, New Jersey, and the grades over the Pocono Mountains. The
Morristown Line is the only piece of multi-track railroad on the entire 900-mile Lackawanna system that has not been reduced to fewer tracks over the years. It was triple-tracked nearly a century prior, and remains so today. The
Lackawanna Cut-Off was abandoned in 1979 and its rails were removed in 1984. The line between Slateford Junction and Scranton remained in legal limbo for nearly a decade, but was eventually purchased, with a single track left in place. The Lackawanna Cut-Off's right-of-way, on the other hand, was purchased by the state of New Jersey in 2001 from funds approved within a $40 million bond issue in 1989. (A court later set the final price at $21 million, paid to owners Jerry Turco of Kearny, New Jersey and Burton Goldmeier of Hopatcong, New Jersey.) NJ Transit has estimated that it would cost $551 million to restore service to Scranton over the Cut-Off: a price which includes the cost of new trainsets. A 7.3-mile section of the Cut-Off between Port Morris and
Andover, New Jersey, which was under construction, was delayed until 2021 due to environmental issues on the
Andover station site; the Cut-Off between Port Morris and Andover is slated to re-open for rail passenger service no earlier than 2025.
Delaware and Hudson (later Canadian Pacific) In 1979, Conrail sold most of the DL&W in Pennsylvania, with the DL&W main line portion between Scranton and Binghamton (which includes the
Nicholson Cutoff) bought by the
Delaware and Hudson Railway. The D&H was purchased by the
Canadian Pacific Railway in 1991. CPR continued to run this portion of the DL&W main line until 2014, when it sold it to the
Norfolk Southern.
New York, Susquehanna, and Western The Syracuse and Utica branches north of Binghamton were sold by Conrail to the Delaware Otsego Corp., which operates them as the northern division of the
New York, Susquehanna and Western Railway.
Norfolk Southern In 1997, Conrail accepted an offer of purchase from
CSX Transportation and
Norfolk Southern Railway. On June 1, 1999, Norfolk Southern took over many of the Conrail lines in New Jersey, including most of the former DL&W. It also purchased the remnants of the former
Bangor & Portland branch in Pennsylvania. Norfolk Southern continues to operate local freights on the lines. In 2014, it purchased the former DL&W main from Taylor, PA to Binghamton, NY from the Canadian Pacific Railway, which it continues to operate to this day.
NJ Transit in 1996 provided a direct connection between the railroad's mainline and
Amtrak's
Northeast Corridor.
NJ Transit Rail Operations took over passenger operations in 1983. The State of New Jersey had subsidized the routes operated by the Erie Lackawanna, and later
Conrail.
NJ Transit operates over former DL&W trackage on much of the former
Morris & Essex Railroad to Gladstone and Hackettstown. In 2002, the transit agency consolidated the Montclair Branch and Boonton Line to create the
Montclair-Boonton Line. NJ Transit also operates on the remaining portion (south of Paterson) of the original Boonton Line known as the
Main Line. NJ Transit's hub is at Hoboken Terminal. Trains on the
Morristown Line run directly into New York's
Pennsylvania Station via the
Kearny Connection, opened in 1996. This facilitates part of NJ Transit's popular
Midtown Direct service. Formerly, the line ran solely to the DL&W's historic terminal in Hoboken and a transfer to underground rapid transit was required to pass under the Hudson river into Manhattan, or a ferry. This is the only section of former Lackawanna trackage that has more through tracks now than ever before.
Pennsylvania Northeast Regional Railroad Authority Since the 1999 breakup of Conrail, the former DL&W main line from Scranton south-east to Slateford in Monroe County has been owned by the
Pennsylvania Northeast Regional Railroad Authority (PNRRA). The
Delaware-Lackawanna Railroad and
Steamtown National Historic Site operates freight trains and tourist trains on this stretch of track, dubbed the Pocono Mainline (or Pocono Main). Under a haulage agreement with Norfolk Southern, the D-L runs unit Canadian grain trains between Scranton and the Harvest States Grain Mill at Pocono Summit, Pennsylvania and wood deliveries to Bestway Enterprises in
Cresco. Other commercial customers include Keystone Propane in Tobyhanna. Excursion trains, hauled by visiting
Nickel Plate 765 and other locomotives, run from Steamtown to
Moscow and
Tobyhanna (with infrequent extensions to East Stroudsburg or Delaware Water Gap Station, both on the Pocono Mainline). The D-L also runs
Lackawanna County's tourist trolleys from the
Electric City Trolley Museum, under overhead electrified wiring installed on original sections of the
Lackawanna and Wyoming Valley Railroad that was also purchased by Lackawanna County. It also runs trains on a remnant of the DL&W Diamond branch in Scranton. In 2006, the Monroe County and Lackawanna County Railroad Authorities formed the Pennsylvania Northeast Regional Rail Authority to accelerate the resumption of passenger train service between New York City and Scranton.
Other remnants New York Most of the main line west of Binghamton in New York State has been abandoned, in favor of the Erie's Buffalo line via
Hornell. The longest remaining main line sector is
Painted Post-Wayland, with shortline service provided by
B&H Railroad (
Bath &
Hammondsport, a division of the
Livonia,
Avon, and
Lakeville Railroad). Shorter main line remnants are
Groveland-Greigsville (Genesee & Wyoming) and
Lancaster-
Depew (Depew, Lancaster & Western). The
Richfield Springs branch was scrapped in 1998 after being out of service for years; much of the right of way was purchased in 2009 by Utica, Chenango and Susquehanna Valley LLC of Richfield Springs, New York, which as of 2022 operates a narrow-gauge tourist railway Richfield Springs Scenic Railway on a portion of the line and a walking trail on another section. The Cortland-
Cincinnatus Branch, abandoned by Erie Lackawanna in 1960, was partially-rebuilt for an
industrial spur about 1999.
Pennsylvania As of 2018, the
Reading Blue Mountain and Northern operates the former Keyser Valley branch from Scranton to Taylor, as well as the former Bloomsburg branch from
Taylor to Coxton Yard in
Duryea. The
Luzerne and Susquehanna Railway operates the former Bloomsburg branch from Duryea to
Kingston. The
North Shore Railroad (Pennsylvania) operates the former Bloomsburg branch from
Northumberland to Hicks Ferry. ==Gallery==