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SINNEMAHONING
VALLEY RAILROAD
Started by Frank
Henry Goodyear (1849-1907) it was just one element in the empire
consisting of mammoth sawmills, coal mines, and a railroad linking the
Great Lakes
with the forests and mines of
Pennsylvania
.
Goodyear purchased
1900 acres of virgin hemlock and hardwood in the northcentral part of
Pennsylvania in the Freeman Run area, just south of Keating Summit for
timbering in 1885. Keating
Summit
was earlier called
Forest
House, and was the location of
Goodyear’s temporary offices. A
large lumber mill was operating there at that time and logs were moved
by rail to the mill. This
first railroad was to be the start of the fabulous, but, short lived
railroad called the
Buffalo
and Susquehanna.
Goodyear’s first
railroad, called the Sinnemahoning Valley, ran from
Forest
House east to a switchback and then
south down the north branch of Freeman Run toward
Austin
. It
opened officially as a common carrier on December 14, 1885.
Although most of the railroads of the time and area were
3-footers (narrow gauge) Goodyear used his foresight in building this
railroad of permanent quality to a standard gauge and laid with 70 pound
rail. Later the offices were
located to a two story combination office and station in
Austin
.
It is said that
Goodyear’s capital was almost exhausted when this road was built.
Mrs. Goodyear, from property of her own, made her husband a
present of his first locomotive, Number 1, the F.H. Goodyear.
Through the
1880’s lumbering in the area was strong and the line extended track to
meet it’s needs for shipping as well as supplying tanneries with the
necessary hemlock bark which was a by-product of the mills.
Goodyear moved his logging operations further south as the
surrounding mountains became denuded. By
1892 the railroad reached the East Fork of the
Sinnemahoning
River
and Goodyear owned ten locomotives.
Many “construction” railroads were being built to service the
timber transport in the early 1890’s and in 1893 these were merged
with the SV to form the
Buffalo
and Susquehanna.
During this time
the Goodyear Lumbering was not the only one using rails for the industry
in the area. The Lackawanna
Lumber Company, Emporium Lumber and
Central Pennsylvania
Lumber which all used the main lines of
the
Buffalo
and Susquehanna Railroad tracks with
their equipment. By 1910
there was a serious decline in lumbering and then on
Sept 30, 1911
,
Austin
was all but destroyed by a flood.
88 people died and a good part of
Austin
washed down Freeman Run, putting the
city of secondary importance to the
Buffalo
and Susquehanna RR.
In 1905 the
Buffalo
and Susquehanna Railway was expanding
toward
Buffalo
and the
Great Lakes
. Freight
shipped over the
Pennsylvania
Railroad north from Keating Summit was
now shipped over the new Wellsville to
Buffalo
line.
In 1907 Goodyear formed a new company called Potato Creek
Railroad which hauled freight and passenger service.
The PCRR was owned by the Goodyears until about 1924 and then
operated until 1928 by Keystone Chemical Company and was abandoned.

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