Trackage Rights At its formation,
trackage rights on Norfolk Southern were extended to the new organization to serve several
limestone quarries in the
Bellevue, Ohio area. Trackage rights were also obtained over
CSX Transportation from
Connellsville, Pennsylvania to
Hagerstown, Maryland. These rights are a remnant of the 1950s
Alphabet Route of which the original W&LE was a part. W&LE also maintains trackage rights from
Wellington to Berea on CSX, then from Berea to the Cleveland Flats on Norfolk Southern. In the sale, the W&LE acquired the Huron Branch (an original W&LE route), a line between Norwalk and the Huron docks, but the line was never activated north of the Norwalk city limits, and was later removed in its entirety. Until 2019, W&LE served the Huron Docks using trackage rights on NS's former Nickel Plate Road mainline (now the NS Cleveland District) from Bellevue using a connecting line to the docks built by the NKP in 1952. The trackage rights expired in 2019, and W&LE ceased operations to Huron. W&LE also has trackage rights to
Lima, Ohio, that originally used CSX lines from
Carey to
Upper Sandusky to Lima, but after the lease of the CSX line (the former
Pennsylvania Railroad Fort Wayne Line) by
RailAmerica's
Chicago, Fort Wayne and Eastern Railroad, W&LE now uses trackage rights from its lines at
New London to
Crestline, Ohio on CSX, then west on the CF&E to Lima. These trackage rights were also a result of the Conrail split.
W&LE Routes Branch lines reach as far south as
Benwood, West Virginia (just south of Wheeling) and as far east as
Connellsville, Pennsylvania. The W&LE joins the
Southwest Pennsylvania Railroad at
Owensdale, Pennsylvania. The W&LE currently owns of track and retains
trackage rights on another , totaling to 840 miles (1350km).
Brewster Subdivision The Brewster Subdivision runs 40 miles through the fields of Medina, Wayne and Stark Counties in northeastern Ohio. It sees the largest amount of traffic of any Wheeling and Lake Erie Subdivision. The west end of the line is in Spencer, Ohio at the diamond where the Akron, Brewster, Carey and Hartland Subdivisions all meet. Spencer is regarded as the crossroads of the Wheeling & Lake Erie. In the 1970s, under Norfolk & Western ownership, there were passing sidings every 10 miles. Those sidings had remotely-controlled switches and signals. The sidings and signals systems were removed shortly after W&LE took ownership of the route. Since this change, operations have been controlled with track warrants issued from the dispatcher in Brewster at the company headquarters building. In 2010, The Wheeling & Lake Erie Railway had finished installation of a 6,900-foot siding at Creston to provide a badly needed place for trains to pass on the Brewster Subdivision between Brewster and Spencer. After the switches were installed, the adjacent right-of-way was cleared, and then ties, rails and ballast were installed. After the track machines left, the siding was placed in operation. It was used by trains traveling at restrictive speed to settle the new track. The track is 136-pound welded rail. The switch at the west end of the siding is at MP B108.76, just east of Brooklyn Street. The east switch is at MP B110.2 north of Sterling Road. The new siding will allow meets between eastbound and westbound trains on the Brewster subdivision (Spencer–Brewster). Trains had been passing at Orrville Junction, using the former W&LE mainline, now the Orrville secondary, a dead-end track. Use of that line requires heading in on lesser-weight rail and then backing out to the mainline after the meet. The new siding at Creston will eliminate that tedious move. The siding has radio controlled (DTMF) switches (and accompanying indicator signals). The switch positions are set by the DTMF tone generator from an approaching train. The indicator signals are "red" by default. This does not mean “stop” in the usual railroad parlance, it only means that the signal has not been activated by an approaching train. The signal aspect will go “green” for normal (straight through alignment) and “amber” for reverse (switch lined for the siding). Continuing East past Creston, the Brewster sub passes through rural farmland into the villages of Smithville, Orrville, Dalton, and Kidron. Upon reaching Brewster, the Brewster Yardmaster controls the main track. Trains may enter or exit the west end of Brewster yard at a location called "Shorbs." Trains access the east end of Brewster yard at a location called "Baymere," also a DTMF controlled switch. Just east of Brewster, the Brewster Subdivision crosses RJ Corman at a diamond called "Justus". About a mile east of Justus, there is a switch called "Harmon," a DTMF controlled switch, which is the junction with the W&LE Cleveland Subdivision. Just east of Harmon, the Brewster Subdivision ends at Junction 138, where the Rook Subdivision begins.
W&LE Operations over Parallel Routes Some other small portions of the original W&LE and AC&Y have been abandoned and/or replaced with trackage rights on parallel lines by W&LE. One of these instances occurs on the Carey Subdivision between Greenwich and New London, Ohio. W&LE uses trackage rights over CSX to move between the eastern and western portions of the Carey Subdivision. The partial-abandonment of the Carey Sub was done to remove two at-grade crossings between the CSX and W&LE Lines. A similar case is on the Rook Subdivision between Bowerston and Jewett, Ohio, where W&LE operates over the Ohio Central Railroad. This arrangement allowed the W&LE to remove approximately of their route, which paralleled the now-used Ohio Central Route.
Non-W&LE trackage operated by other railroads There are several portions of the original W&LE operated by companies other than the current W&LE. West of
Bellevue, Ohio, the now-NS Toledo District was not sold back to W&LE. Immediately after W&LE operations began, Norfolk Southern removed the at-grade crossing in Bellevue, which connected the current W&LE Hartland District to the current NS Toledo District. W&LE now has trackage rights to Toledo on this line, obtained after the
Conrail split in 1999. W&LE uses these rights to interchange with
Canadian National Railway. Another section is the former Cleveland Division south of Harmon (east of Brewster), which was sold to the
Ohio Central Railroad by NS in 1988. == Locomotive roster ==