The Lake Shore Electric at its height operated multiple-unit trains of interurban cars to and from Cleveland and Toledo on an hourly schedule. Eastbound trains split at Fremont on the west, while westbound trains split at Ceylon Junction (a passenger station on the former S&I line east of Huron at the connection with the former TF&N branch to Norwalk) on the east. After splitting, some cars would travel via the Huron, Sandusky and Castalia northern route, while others would go via the Norwalk,
Monroeville,
Bellevue, and
Clyde southern route. The cars of eastbound trains rejoined each other at Ceylon Junction, while the cars of westbound trains rejoined at Fremont. The Lake Shore Electric achieved nationwide note after motorman William Lang climbed out of his moving trolley car and snatched a 22-month-old child off the tracks on August 24, 1932, near Lorain, Ohio. The young girl, Leila Jean Smith, grew to adulthood and they remained friends for the rest of Lang's life. in 1936. The LSE went into bankruptcy on October 5, 1932. It continued operation under court-ordered receivership until abandonment. As its passenger business waned with the increasing number of private automobiles on paved roads and the effects of the Depression, it outlasted most connecting interurban lines by concentrating on freight business. LSE had developed a marginally profitable freight service interchanging with the
Cincinnati and Lake Erie Railroad at Toledo to deliver
less-than-carload (LCL) freight from southern Ohio factories to Cleveland. The C&LE traction freights continued through Toledo to Cleveland on LSE trackage, operating on a tight overnight schedule; they could thus provide next day delivery, whereas competing steam railroads would take at least two days longer. LSE also introduced an early
intermodal service called the "Railwagon" that enabled truck trailers to load on a specially designed
flatcar without the need for a loading ramp or crane. Bureaucratic delays by
Ohio motor carrier regulators doomed the service. A poorly planned strike by LSE freight agents and office staff in 1938 caused the LSE receiver to immediately abandon the business. A brief article in a Cleveland newspaper noted that 150 interurban employees lost their jobs immediately. The loss of the Cleveland connection seriously hurt the C&LE leading it to bankruptcy in 1939 and the nearby Indiana Railroad interurban the next year. The LSE ended all interurban rail operations on May 15, 1938. == Surviving remnants ==