The TVRR was chartered in April 1891 to build from a junction with the
Pennsylvania Railroad at
Port Royal to points south.
Concord and
Dry Run, in
Franklin County, seem to have been the southern termini originally contemplated. The principal promoter of the new railroad was Thomas S. Moorhead. Moorhead had made a fortune mining
phosphate rock in
Florida in the late 1880s, and had previously been involved in promoting the
Susquehanna and Southwest Railway during the early 1880s. It appears that he intended the TVRR as an outlet for phosphate deposits located at Ross Farm, along the
Tuscarora Creek. Local financial backing was provided by John M. Blair. His father, John H. Blair, had founded
Blairs Mills, high up the Tuscarora Creek. John M. was a storekeeper and a wealthy pillar of the community. The TVRR was surveyed along the east side of the valley, against the edge of
Tuscarora Mountain. Grading began in the summer of 1892 and the railroad was finished from Port Royal to
East Waterford on February 1, 1893. Here a temporary halt to construction occurred, possibly due to the straitened financial conditions during the
Panic of 1893. The use of narrow gauge may have been a measure of economy, as well; on the other hand, the gauge was a popular one with several nearby short lines, such as the
East Broad Top Railroad. The railroad shop was temporarily housed in the basement of a
grist mill in East Waterford, and a turntable was built there. The announcement of the
Path Valley Railroad in late 1893 temporarily balked plans for a southward extension of the TVRR through Concord Narrows into Franklin County. However, by early 1894, the TVRR had begun selling bonds to finance a further southward extension. In April 1895, grading was finished between East Waterford and Blairs Mills, and regular service began in late 1895. The new extension passed by Ross Farm, and in early 1896, Moorhead made the first public announcement of the phosphate deposits there and his formation of the Pennsylvania Phosphate Company to exploit them. Two miles of grading had also been done between Concord and Dry Run. The initial workings at Ross Farm were apparently successful, as Moorhead erected a larger processing plant in 1898. At long, wide, and five stories high, it is believed to be the largest commercial building ever built in
Juniata County, and had a capacity of per day. To supply this plant, Moorhead planned to tap other local lime deposits, and reportedly surveyed a rail line from
Honey Grove to
Reeds Gap. However, fertilizer traffic would prove ephemeral for the TVRR. The remainder of the phosphate deposits proved too poor to process efficiently, the plant's output dropping from of fertilizer in 1899 to in 1900. The company ceased operation in 1904, a great blow to Moorhead and the TVRR, which was now dependent on
lumber and local agricultural traffic. The railroad's directors continued to contemplate extension. An extensive plan was conceived in January 1897. At the north end, the railroad would extend to
Mifflin, cross the
Juniata River to
Mifflintown, and follow the
Selinsgrove and North Branch Railroad's defunct grade to
Selinsgrove. To the south, the line would be extended from Blairs Mills to
Burnt Cabins and
McConnellsburg, and then south to
Hancock, Maryland and the
Baltimore and Ohio Railroad. The extensions would be built to , and the railroad itself converted. Such a plan was far beyond the resources of the TVRR and would have required considerable external investment. As part of the program for doing so, a separate corporation, the
Tuscarora Railroad, was chartered in January 1898 to build the southern extension from Blairs Mills to McConnellsburg. Considerable grading was done during 1898, and was supposed to be complete to
Neelyton by November, with bridges constructed as far south as
Nossville. Grading was finished to Burnt Cabins by the end of the year, possibly using some of the grade from the East Broad Top's branch to reach the
South Pennsylvania Railroad. However, no further work was ever done by the company. In 1919, the whole Tuscarora Railroad
right-of-way was sold to the East Broad Top for the construction of their Stanton Rock Spur, and the Tuscarora Railroad's charter eventually expired. ==Lumber era==