In 1849, the
Erie and North East Railroad started laying track east from Erie to the New York–Pennsylvania border, away, at a gauge of . At the same time, the
Franklin Canal Company was laying track west from Erie to the
Ohio–Pennsylvania border and the
Buffalo and State Line Railroad was laying track from
Buffalo to the Pennsylvania–New York border. Both of these were at a gauge of (Ohio gauge). On November 23, 1852, the first train left Erie for
Ashtabula, Ohio, and on January 19, 1852, the first train from the New York state border arrived in Erie. A passenger traveling between Buffalo and
Cleveland was forced to change trains twice: once in Erie and once at the Pennsylvania–New York border, because of the different gauges. The trains were timed to connect, but delays were not uncommon, resulting in missed connections. Many passengers found, unexpectedly, that they had to spend a night in Erie before continuing the following day. The citizens of Erie benefited from being an "enforced stopping place," as they made good money from the transferring freight from one train to another and from passengers buying food at Erie's restaurants or
street vendors (leading the conflict to sometimes be referred to, with scorn, as the "Peanut War," as Erie's peanut sellers would allegedly be the hardest hit by the lack of passengers). Passengers stayed in Erie hotels. The owners of the Buffalo and State Line Railroad were able to acquire of the Erie and North East's
stock, and on November 16, 1853, they announced that they would
re-lay the track between Erie and the New York border using the narrower Ohio gauge, but four months earlier, to try to prevent the change, Erie's
city council had enacted
ordinances barring the new track from crossing city streets. On November 26, 1853, the council was reconvened when
railroad ties were found being laid in preparation for the
gauge change. The council passed an ordinance allowing the mayor to call out the city's police to take down any of the railroad track that crossed the city's streets, "in order to preserve the present railroad gauge." ==Conflict==