The railroad's main line ran from
Scranton to
Wilkes-Barre. Other cities served included
Dunmore and
Pittston. At its peak, the line carried as many as 4.2 million passengers a year, but following
World War II use declined dramatically. In 1964, the
President Biden Expressway was built over a portion of L&WV right-of-way along
Roaring Brook in Scranton.
Interstate 81 construction paralleled the north-south route in the 1960s and today the four-lane highway is overtaxed with heavy trucks and cars, local traffic between Wilkes-Barre and Scranton and a deteriorating structure, leaving county planners wishing the L&WV system was retained in its entirety. Original sections of the line out of Scranton to Montage Mountain,
Moosic, have been purchased by
Lackawanna County, Pennsylvania, and placed back in service with overhead electrified wiring and designated-operator
Delaware-Lackawanna Railroad overseeing both freight operations and the county's tourist trolley runs, the
Electric City Trolley Museum. The Laurel Line Tunnel (also known as the Crown Avenue Tunnel) in South Scranton, constructed in 1904, remains one of the longest interurban streetcar tunnels ever built, at 4,750-feet. It was recently rehabilitated at a cost of over $3 million. The cost to restore much of the original line today would be less than expanding Interstate 81, according to
Larry Malski, president of the
Pennsylvania Northeast Regional Railroad Authority. "I think it's very feasible." == Laurel Line stops ==