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return to: Railroads Page

Submitted by Richard F. Palmer

The Erie Third Rail - In 1876, the standard gauge Lehigh Valley advanced the Erie Railroad some $2 million to lay a third rail from Waverly to Buffalo so that freight no longer had to be broken at the former point and transferred to wide gauge cars. This view, discovered by the late Joseph Boyd of Elmira, shows Erie engine 199 on the mainline next to the gravel pit at Cameron Mills, which may have been a source for stone ballast. There is evidence that Lehigh Valley locomotives pulled through freights to Buffalo this way before it opened its own main line west of Waverly in 1893.

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Erie Railroad Scraps the Broad Gauge

by Richard F. Palmer

      It is generally known among railroad historians that the Erie  
Railroad was originally constructed to six-foot gauge, and it has  
been chronicled many times in various histories. Less known is the  
long-term project to convert it to standard gauge.
     Starting in the late 1860s, a third rail, as finances would  
permit,  was gradually laid the length of the system to accommodate  
standard-gauge rolling stock and to permit interchange with other  
railroads.  It is recorded that the Lehigh Valley Railroad advanced  
the money to the Erie to lay a third rail west from Waverly, N.Y. so  
it could operate standard-gauge coal trains to Buffalo. This  
arrangement was continued until the 1890s when the Lehigh Valley  
built its own main line from Sayre to Buffalo.
     This eliminated the complicated operation in which railroad  
officials had to sometimes resort to peculiar methods of coping with  
the different gauges.  For example,  Erie locomotives were equipped  
with offset couplers to handle both wide and standard-gauge cars.  
Dual-gauge yards could be nightmares when snow covered the tracks  
only experienced trackmen could contend with.
     Virtually the only source of information for this interesting  
chapter in railroad history is the local newspapers of the day. They  
reveal fascinating details of  how this  massive slimming of the  
rails was accomplished.  Although the actual changeover may in many  
cases have been done in a matter of hours, months of preparation went  
into this. The newspapers hailed the changeover as a miracle of  
technology.
     Following are several newspaper articles explaining how this was  
accomplished. It wasn’t until 1882 and the investment of some $22  
million that the Erie management finally corrected this extremely  
costly mistake of not going to standard gauge in the first place.  It  
all but drove the Erie into bankruptcy because it also necessitated  
the standard-gauging of thousands of pieces of rolling stock,  
including locomotives, coaches and freight equipment.
American Railroad Journal, April 10, 1852
Gauge of Railroad from Buffalo to Cleveland.
     From Cleveland, Ohio, to Erie, Pennsylvania, the Ohio gauge of  
four feet ten inches is used. Upon the Erie and Northeast railroad,  
extending from Erie to the New York State line, a distance f some 18  
miles, the wide, or six feet gauge has been adopted. From the state  
line to Buffalo, the four feet ten inch gauge prevails.
     To whom this arrangement is owing we are not informed, but the  
genius of all evil himself could not have framed a a more  
inconvenient, or one better adapted to obstruct business and travel.  
With the exception of the Buffalo and State-line road, the only  
gauges known in this State are the 4 feet 8 1/2 inches, and the 6 feet.
     Common sense would seem to dictate that one of these should have  
been taken by the Lake Shore road. As it is, there must now be  
transshipments at Buffalo, Dunkirk, the Pennsylvania state line, and  
at Erie; making tour where there should have been but two at most.
     Either the wide or the narrow gauge should have been carried to  
Erie. That would have been a convenient place of transshipment, and  
would probably have been selected as such, had there been no break of  
gauge even thee. There must be a limit to the distance to be run by  
freight and passenger cars. It is found to be more economical and  
convenient to transship freight from one train to another, than to  
run the train over  given distance, on account of the difficulty of  
preserving order in the arrangement and distribution of the cars.
     We presume that under no circumstances whatever, would cars  
loaded at Cleveland be run through to this city. A break of gauge at  
some point upon the line between the above cities is not  
objectionable, provided it occurs at the most convenient point. But  
where there are three or four interruptions to the transit of  
merchandise and travel, within short distances, and at the most  
inconvenient places, they will be found to work a serious injury to  
traffic of all kinds.
     We predict that evil will be in a short time become  unbearable,  
as to work out its own cure. What the Erie people were about, when an  
arrangement was completed, that completely prevented them from moving  
in any direction, is more than we can opine. At the lake their road  
comes to a dead halt, and all through business has to be tumbled  out  
of their own cars upon those of other companies. All these blunders  
must be remedied, and the sooner the better.
Montrose (Pa.) Democrat, Feb. 16, 1876
     The laying of a third rail by the Erie Railway between Waverly  
and Buffalo, will be in effect the first step taken by that road to  
reduce the gauge. The tendency in all railroads is now toward narrow  
gauge, which is found to be quite as safe and convenient as broad  
gauge and much cheaper. In a few months the Albany and Susquehanna  
Railroad will be entirely narrow gauge; the Delaware, Lackawanna and  
Western Railroad are making arrangements for a similar change from  
Scranton to Syracuse; and it is safe to predict that ere many years a  
broad gauge car will be unknown in this locality.
Montrose Democrat, April 26, 1876
      The third rail on the Erie railway from Jersey City to Waverly  
will be laid by the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western and Delaware and  
Hudson companies, they receiving from the Erie company 24 percent of  
the earnings for two years. The Lehigh Valley Railroad company will  
lay the third rail from Waverly to Buffalo and will have a perpetual  
lease of road so that they can run their trains over the Erie at any  
time. They have formerly been obliged to pay a large sum for the  
privilege. Over 1,200 carloads of iron will be required to lay the  
third rail from Jersey City to Buffalo.
New York Tribune, Nov. 8, 1877
     Receiver Jewett of the Erie Railway, has been authorized to lay  
a third rail from Binghamton to Susquehanna, to  connect with the  
Jefferson Railroad (which is leased by the Erie), and on which a  
third rail has already been laid.  The Jefferson road taps the  
Delaware and Hudson Railroad system at Carbondale, and this route   
will give the Erie another outlet to Philadelphia. The object of  
obtaining this authority at present was to to furnish a guarantee to  
the directors of the Boston, Hoosac Tunnel and Western Railroad, that  
the necessary arrangements for a Boston connection would be made,  
without which they refused to begin the  construction of their road.
     Accompanying the request for the order, was a letter from T.W.  
Powell to Mr. Jewett. Mr. Powell and Sir Edward Watkin are the  
"independent trustees, not representing any special interest." Mr.  
Powell, who has now returned to England, states that he was  
authorized by the other seven trustees of the reconstruction program  
to act on their behalf during his visit to America. "I have,  
therefore, to inform you," he says, "that the trustees approve the  
laying of the third rail for narrow gauge on that section and the  
issue of the receiver's notes for the purchase of the necessary steel  
and iron. And you may assure the vendors thereof of such an approval,  
and of our intention thereof of such an approval, and of our  
intention as trustees, having control of the expenditures of the  
assessment money after the intended foreclosure sale, that (without  
assuming or being held liable for any personal responsibility) it is  
our intention to protect and pay any portion of the receiver's notes  
for the purchase money of said steel and iron, which may not be paid  
by the receiver before he hands over the road to the purchasers,  
under the reconstruction program."
     Mr. Powell's authority to act was contained in a resolution of  
the Reconstruction Trustees, which provides that: "Mr. Powell be  
urgently request to proceed to America to decided with Mr. Jewett the  
appointment of Purchasing Trustees, and to make such arrangements as  
may be necessary in his best judgment, to further the completion of  
foreclosure, the repurchase of the undertaking, and the  
reorganization of the company."
Cincinnati Commercial, Jan. 4, 1879
Erie's Narrow Gauge
           _______
The Laying of the Third Rail.
           ______
Advantages of the New Gauge.
            _____
    New York Tribune. - In April last of the Erie Railway  
reorganized,  and under the new management the familiar name was  
changed to New York, Lake Erie and Western Railroad. But the new  
management made other changes besides that of name. The most  
important of these has been change of the gauge of the road, which  
has been accomplished by the laying of a third rail. This work was  
begun in 1876, when the alteration was made on the Buffalo, and a  
part of the Susquehanna Division, so that narrow-guage cars of the  
Lehigh Valley Line were run from Philadelphia through  to Buffalo on  
the Erie Road from  Waverly.
     Last summer the laying of the third rail was continued to  
Binghamton, connection being there made with Albany by the  
Susquehanna Railroad. The work was completed last when the additional  
rail was finally laid to Jersey City, and yesterday the first train  
passed over to Port Jervis, the end of the Eastern Division.  
Hereafter it will be in constant use.
     Octave Chanute, Assistant Superintendent of the railroad,  
yesterday gave the following account of the adoption of the old  
gauge, and its change:
     "When Stephenson built the first railroad the gauge adopted was  
five feet between the centers of the rails. The rails were then U- 
shaped, they had a trough in  the center about three inches in width,  
for the wheel to run in. But this form was soon abandoned, because  
the dirt collected in it, and the edge, or T-shaped rail was adopted.  
In order to adapt this to the rolling stock then in use, it was found  
necessary to measure the gauge on the inside of the rails, and this  
four-feet eight and one half inches, which thus became the standard  
gauge.
     The managers of the Great Western  Railway of England believed  
that more power could be gained by having a broad base to the boiler,  
and that greater security would be insured by a broader gauge. So  
they adopted seven feet. When the Erie was built three ideas  
prevailed, and the six-foot or broad gauge was chosen. But these  
principles have since been proved to be fallacious; no advantage has  
been gained by the extra width, and the cost of rolling-stock has  
been much increased."
     "What will be the advantage to the road of the new rail?"
      "The great saving will be in running freight through without  
breaking bulk. Time and money will be saved by not having to change  
the loads of cars when they come on our line. We have saved the  
unloading of through cars by changing trucks at Buffalo,  but this  
cost forty cents for each car and took considerable time. The way it  
has been done is this: Two cars, one on broad-gauge trucks and the  
other on narrow, were run in side by side. By hoisting machines the  
cars were raised and the trucks changed; one car went on west by the  
narrow gauge track and the other ran to this city on the broad-gauge.  
By the new regulations, cars of both  gauges may be run on the same  
train. We have been doing that on portions of the road already  
provided with three rails. No difficulty is found, as we use a patent  
coupler, which causes a direct draft between the two widths. Much  
care is necessary at the switches, however, and extra caution is  
enjoined upon all employees. To simplify matters as much as possible,  
we try to keep all cars of the same width together."
      "Has the company purchased any new rolling-stock for the narrow- 
gauge?"
      "We have ordered thirty new engines, which are being made in  
Patterson, and 3,000 new freight cars. The present rolling-stock will  
not be altered but will be replaced as fast as worn out by those of  
narrower gauge. It would cost only about half a million to change all  
the cars, but more than three times that mount would be necessary to  
alter new locomotives, as new boilers would be required. No change  
has been made in connections with other lines. It is quite probable  
that some arrangements may be made  with other lines, such as the  
Midland, which meets us at Middletown, but so far the only change has  
been with the Montclair and Greenwood Lake Road. Of this road's stock  
we bought a large share at its recent sale, and the third rail will  
permit the running of their trains to our depot in Jersey City. 
The trains of that road have been running to the depot of the  
Pennsylvania Central, but tomorrow the change will be made, and  
hereafter all passenger and freight trains of the road will run to  
and from our depot only. A general notice to that effect has just  
been printed. All business on that line will be noted at our offices." 
John N. Abbott, General  Passenger Agent, was asked if the completion  
of the new gauge would make any change in he running of passenger  
trains. "Our broad-gauge passenger and sleeping coaches," he said,  
"give us an advantage over other lines in the comfort of passenger.  
We have quite a reputation in this respect between here and Buffalo,  
and we expect to keep it. Through trains of broad-gauge cars will be  
continued over our own line and our broad-gauge connection, the  
Atlantic and Great Western Railroad, o Rochester, Niagara Falls,  
Buffalo, Cleveland and Cincinnati.
      "To points which we  don't reach by broad-gauge we shall run  
narrow-gauge cars, as to Chicago, St. Louis and Detroit. The fast St.  
Louis express, leaving here at 6 P.M., will be made up of narrow- 
gauge cars, to run through. We had fifty new narrow cars built for us  
in the Centennial year, and placed on broad trucks, these we can  
change to use on the narrow gauge, if we wish. Of course, we shall  
build no new broad-gauge coaches, although they  are pleasanter to  
ride in from their roominess, and run more steadily, from heir  
broader base."
Most of the rolling stock conversion took place at company shops such  
as Susquehanna, Pa. and Hornell, N.Y., while some was done at smaller  
facilities for convenience.
Cattaraugus Republican, Salamanca, N.Y., Thursday, June 24, 1880:
The Erie Narrowed Standard Gauge--A Day Without A Railroad Train-- 
Waiting Passengers--Quick Work--An Ovation--Again On Time.
     Never was the enterprise and push characteristic of our age more  
fully exemplified than in narrowing the gauge of the Erie last  
Tuesday. For the last few weeks extra gangs of men had been busily at  
work preparing the track and switches for the change, and getting  
everything in readiness for the moment when the order should be given  
to move one rail fifteen and a half inches nearer the other.
     Moving the rail, however, did not constitute the greatest amount  
of work to be done. The handling of the vast amount of rolling stock  
was one of the largest jobs in connection with the work. Monday  
morning the yards all along the division were full of broad gauge  
cars, and these had to be sent to Hornellsvile on that day. During  
the day 300 cars were shipped out of Salamanca, and at night the yard  
on the Erie side looked desolate and deserted. The old switch  
engines, 304, 36 and 73, which had so long pulled in and out on the  
labyrinth of switches, were likewise sent away. As these old switch  
engines left the yard the Atlantic (and Great Western) engines and  
engines in the shops gave them a parting salute. The departing  
locomotives gave a long good-bye blast, which had in it some little  
tinge of sadness, and the whistles which had become familiar to all  
were heard for the last time on the Reservation. At 6 o'clock Monday  
evening there were but three broad gauge cars in the Erie yard -- the  
tool car and two gondolas, which were to be narrow-gauged here.
     The passenger trains ran regular Monday forenoon, but in the  
afternoon there was a general abandonment after train 9 had passed  
over the road. The last broad gauge train over the road was a wildcat  
from Dunkirk to Hornellsville, run by conductor Kimball, and passed  
Salamanca at 9:30 P.M.
     Monday night was a remarkable one in the history of the Erie  
road. After Kimball's "wildcat" reached Hornellsville, the shriek of  
no engine broke the stillness between Dunkirk and Hornellsville. The  
moon shone down upon a stretch of 198 miles of track upon which stood  
not a single car. Excepting a few cars in the shops at Salamanca,  
there was not a car on the Western division from 12 M until 9 o'clock  
on Tuesday morning.
     The work of moving the rail began at 4:30 Tuesday morning, and  
at 8 A.M. intelligence was flashed over the wires to Superintendent  
Beggs that the work was completed on the main line. About 800 men  
were employed in the great enterprise, which was carried through  
without accident in just three hours and a half from the time the  
first spike was pulled. The Little Valley section was first to report  
its work finished. In just two hours from the time of beginning  
Foreman Carroll sent in his report that his section was ready for the  
narrow gauge trains. Track Foreman Wyman telegraphed to  
Superintendent Beggs that the Salamanca section was ready at 7:30. A  
number of sections were completed at almost the same moment.
     Shortly after the news that the line was reduced to standard  
gauge, an inspection train, with Wm. Wilcox as conductor and  
containing Division Superintendent Beggs and other railroad officials  
was started out of Dunkirk. The train was pulled by an engine from  
the Dunkirk & Allegany Valley Railroad, "The Conewango, No. 3"--with  
engineer Tibbits at the throttle. The engine and cars were decorated  
with flags and the train was greeted with continuous ovation as it  
passed over the road. As it reached Salamanca, at 11:45, there was  
such a screeching of engines as is seldom heard. The "wildcat"  
inspection train proceeded to Olean where it was met by a similar  
train from Hornellsville. The Dunkirk train returned to Salamanca and  
was closely followed by the Homellsville inspection train, under the  
direction of Conductor Langworthy. The train was pulled by engine 574  
and reached here at 2:30 P.M. and was greeted with an enthusiastic  
reception. M.W. Coburn, one of the most reliable engineers on the  
road, has the distinction of driving the first Erie engine over the  
narrow gauge track. Engine 574 is nearly new, having been used on the  
Buffalo Division for a few weeks. It is a 60 ton Mogul, built at the  
Grant Locomotive Works at Paterson.
     The inspection trains having passed over the road, the track was  
pronounced in good condition, and train three was dispatched from  
Homellsville as "wildcat." The train, run by Conductor Martin, came  
into Salarnanca at 2:50 P.M., being about three hours behind its  
regular time. David Cary, one of the oldest men on the line, pulled  
the train with engine No. 57. Thus with comparatively little  
inconvenience to the traveling public the Erie was reduced to  
standard gauge, and again the trains are speeding over the road  
nearly on time.
Notes
The gauge of the New York, Pennsylvania & Ohio Railroad between  
Leavittsburg, Pa., and Dayton, Ohio, was changed Tuesday from broad  
to standard. Two thousand five hundred men were placed along the line  
from Dayton to Leavittsburg, 325 miles. The work began at 3 a.m. and  
ended at 9 a.m. the shortest piece of work of this kind on record.
     The trains on the Eastern Division of the NYP&O, with few  
exceptions, ran on about their usual time Monday and Tuesday.
     Twenty new consolidated 60-ton moguls from the Grant Locomotive  
Works are to pull the freight on the westem division of the Erie.  
Their power seems almost limitless, and the boys say they will draw  
everything that can be hitched to them. One of them took about eighty  
log fed cars out of Salamanca yesterday morning.
     On Monday a special order was issued by Superintendent Beggs,  
enjoining engineers and conductors to use the utmost care in running  
trains. The order was faithfully obeyed and the great amount of  
rolling stock moved to the east terminus of the division without  
delay or accident. The same care was enjoined and complied with in  
moving the train after the road had been reduced to standard gauge.  
About 70 cars have been narrow gauged at the Erie shops since the  
15th of May. They are stamped "N.G. Salamanca, May (or June) 1880."  
"N.G." doesn't always stand for "no good."
     The new bob-tail switch engine No. 515, to be used in the yard  
here, reached Salamanca Tuesday. Two more of the same pattern are  
expected to do the same work by the old switch engines. Train 12 on  
the N.Y. P.& 0. came into Salamanca Tuesday with narrow gauge  
coaches.  1,600 cars from the N.Y.P.& 0. road were sent east over the  
Erie between Monday and Monday night. Since the "embargo has been  
raised," freight traffic has been lively.
Rochester (N.Y) Union and Advertiser, Saturday, July 30, 1881
"The Battle of the Gauges" Last of the Broad Gauge--The New York,  
Lake Erie & Western Railroad Conforms to the Standard
     The broad gauge of the New York, Lake Erie & Western Railroad is  
no more. In the bright light of this beautiful summer morning with  
each moving rail a change was wrought and in a few short hours the  
diligent hands of experienced workmen had transformed the Erie road  
from a broad gauge route to one of standard gauge. It was a matter of  
expediency, nothing more. A few years ago this fact was fully  
appreciated by the directors and managers of the road, and a third  
rail -- allowing means of passage for both broad and standard cars --  
was placed on the main line. To-day an important step has been taken  
by the company. The road between this city and Coming has been  
narrowed from a width of six feet between the rails, to one of 4 feet  
8-1/2 inches, the standard gauge.
How It Was Done
     As the Erie was the last railroad to submit to the "battle of  
the gauges," some little interest may be excited as to the manner in  
which the change was made. For several months past extensive  
preparations leading to a rapid narrowing of the road have been going  
on. All along the line between Coming and Rochester, a distance of 94  
miles, the measurements for the new gauge have been made. In fact the  
line had already once been laid before work was commenced this  
morning. The east rail was the one to be moved, and just 15-1/2  
inches from the inside of this rail spikes had been set, throughout  
the entire distance, at intervals of time throughout the past two  
months.
     Mr. Canfield of Buffalo, Road-master, and Thomas Conners,  
Supervisor of Tracks, had thoughtfully and carefully made preliminary  
arrangements and G. E. Butterfield, stationmaster in this city, had  
changed the switches in and about the yard, thus completing the  
preparations for successful and speedy changing of the gauge. Last  
night the rolling stock of the road was all transferred to Corning.
     The Last train running on the broad gauge, drawn by engine  
number 11, B. Rogers, engineer, and A.S. Alexander, conductor,  
arrived in this city at thirty minutes past eleven and almost  
immediately returned to Coming. Between two and four o'clock this  
morning about 500 experienced workmen, employees of the Rochester,  
Buffalo, Susquehanna and Western Divisions, were distributed in gangs  
of six or eight each at equal intervals along the line of the road  
between this city and Coming. Strict orders were given to begin the  
work promptly at four o'clock and at that hour, all being in  
readiness, almost simultaneously each separate force of workmen began  
their allotted task. It was an interesting sight to one walking along  
the line of the railroad to see these men busy as beavers tearing up  
and rapidly replacing the rails. In each division the work was so  
arranged that it was carried on in the most systematic manner possible.
Perfect System
     First came the men who skillfully and quickly withdrew the  
spikes, then followed swiftly those who moved the rail from its old  
position to the one destined for it alongside of the spikes already  
set, snd last of all in quick succession came those who drive the  
spikes about the rail in its new place. The work progressed far more  
rapidly than one would readily believe, the rate of taking up and  
relaying the rails being about one mile in four hours as performed by  
each gang.
     By eight o'clock the whole distance of ninety-four miles had  
been transformed from a broad gauge to the standard measurement and  
the last victory of the standard width, 4 feet 8-1/2 inches, in the  
battle of the gauges in this country has been won. The first arrival  
this morning over the newly laid track was the "wild cat" train from  
Avon, drawn by engine 60, Frank Marsh engineer, and A.S. Alexander  
conductor. This train left Avon at 8:15 and reached this city at  
11:45, being detained about an hour and a half at the Henrietta  
section; the only place along the route where the men laying the  
track had not done all that was expected of them. At a quarter before  
twelve o'clock the train from Corning, drawn by engine 35, in charge  
of Augustus Johnson engineer, and G.H. Brown conductor, reached its  
destination, thus proving the complete transformation of the road.
     Although this train was an hour and forty minutes late running  
time had been made, the delay being occasioned by waiting at various  
stations for orders, the passengers on this train report a gala day  
all along the line. At each station crowds were assembled to welcome  
the train and great enthusiasm prevailed. Hats were thrown in the  
air, handkerchiefs were waved and cheers burst from the lips of many.  
The change is completed and general satisfaction prevails and great  
credit is due to both managers and men for the highly creditable  
manner in which this work has been accomplished.
Fish Plates and Spikes
--J.E. Butterfield and his men did some hard work yesterday. John  
Wieman is the Boss man to "fix" switches.--The Hog (switch engine)  
left on Thursday morning at 5 o'clock never to return. The porcine  
locomotive, almost a historical machine, has done its duty.
 --John English began at this end of the branch, with twenty men. 
--Thirty men from Avon to Attica breakfasted at Mrs. Kelly's hotel at  
half-past two o'clock this morning.
--V. Rogers, the well-known engineer, enjoyed the distinction of  
driving the last locomotive over the broad gauge. He "made the old  
gal scream" before leaving the city.
--Frank Marsh is the first engineer over the narrow gauge on the  
Rochester branch.
--Tom Ford wants a little more practice before he can draw a spike  
properly. --It as amusing to see Dan Turner handle a crow bar yesterday. 
--It was a big surprise to some of the boys on this end of the  
division to see themselves in the agony of perspiration. --Joseph  
Bradt was out with his rail gang this morning and did splendid service. 
--Tom Connors, the supervisor of the tracks, tough obliged to forego  
the pleasure of helping in the narrowing, on account of  
indisposibility, followed the work of the men in his mind and was  
almost well when he heard the scream of the last engine out on the  
broad.

 

 

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