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This forum is for discussion of "Fallen Flag" roads not otherwise provided with a specific forum. Fallen Flags are roads that no longer operate, went bankrupt, or were acquired or merged out of existence.

Moderator: Nicolai3985

 #856359  by frank754
 
Having recently moved to Wilkes-Barre, PA, (in L&WV territory), I have been hunting down info on third rail interurbans in the US, and have made up a list. This covers all that I know about so far, and the dates of discontinuance on each.
If anyone knows about more (some I have missed) or date corrections, please post back. This list does not include city operations, like NYCMTA, CTA, MBTA, LIRR, Metro North, etc., but does include, for example the P&W Norristown line.
All dates are "passenger service discontinued" dates, and not necessarily electrified discontinuance dates if they still may have had electrified freight service a few more years. I will add more details (mileage, voltage, etc.) to some of the lesser "popular" ones.

CA&E - Third rail Chicago suburban service - all service discontinued Chicago - Aurora/Elgin 7/3/57
Through service to CTA loop until 9/19/53

CNS&M mostly overhead but 3rd rail into Chicago via CTA -
last run 1/21/63

Scioto Valley Traction Co. - 600 volts 3rd rail -
Columbus, OH - Chillicothe 47 mi Columbus - Lancaster 30.8 mi
Last passenger service 9/30/30

Northwestern Pacific - 3rd rail commuter service Sausalito-San Rafael, CA with a branch to Mill Valley - main line 10.5 miles
Ended 2/28/41 (Mill Valley branch ended 9/30/40)

Oneida Railway (NY State Railways) Syracuse - Oneida - 3rd rail
Ended 12/31/30

P&W (Red Arrow) 69th St - Norristown (13.7 mi) - still in operation
Strafford Branch (Villanova - Strafford) disc. 3/23/56
Lehigh Valley Transit through service Allentown-69th St disc. 9/26/49, while overhead LVT to Norristown lasted until 9/6/51

Sacramento Northern - 3rd rail (portion of line) Sacramento - Chico, CA passenger service ended 10/31/40, lower part of SN to San Fran was overhead, but used 3rd rail over bay bridge in San Fran, which ended 1941. Also SP "Big Red Cars" service used 3rd rail on bridge until 1941. Key System (overhead except for bridge) until 4/20/58

PRSL (Pennsylvania Reading Seashore Lines) - 650 volt combo 3rd rail/overhead from Camden, NJ to Atlantic City (overhead in cities), also branch from Camden-Millville, NJ electrified.
Atlantic City line (electric operations) disc. 9/26/31, Millville line cut back to Glassboro 6/20/49, and last electric operations (Glassboro-Camden) on 9/8/49

WB&H (Wilkes-Barre & Hazleton) 3rd rail line disc 7/17/33

L&WV (Lackawanna & Wyoming Valley) Scranton-Wilkes-Barre 12/31/52

Michigan Railways - Kalamazoo-Grand Rapids (50 miles), also Allegan-Battle Creek, Jackson-Muskegon, Grand Rapids-Muskegon
Some lines were experimentally 2400 volts dc for a while, but this was too high for practical use (arcs, power failures, etc.) and were all cut back to 1200v shortly (in about a year) - all lines disc. 11/30/28
Were these the only third rail lines in Michigan?

Puget Sound Railway (WA) Seattle-Tacoma ended 12/30/28

New Haven Nantasket Beach Line - Cohasset-Nantasket Jn-Weymouth-Braintree (MA) 6.5 miles - center third rail (like Lionel) until 1902

Also New Haven Hartford-New Britain-Bristol (18.6 mi) plus branch to Berlin, CT (3 1/4 mi) - center third rail (v-shaped)
Reports say most 3rd rail removed in June 1905, but New Britain also mandated via injunction that all third rail service end by 8/1/1906 due to public safety

Albany Southern RR (NY) Albany - Hudson NY - third rail 37 miles + 2 miles overhead in Hudson, NY - ended 12/21/29

Central California Traction - third rail Stockton-Sacramento, 1200 volts, passenger service ended 2/4/33 with electric freight until 12/24/47, and the line in still in operation with diesel freight.

Are there any I have missed?
 #856392  by 3rdrail
 
Key System (Key Route) Bridge Units travelling over the Oakland Bay Bridge between San Francisco's East Bay Terminal (now TransbayTerminal) and West Oakland utilized 600v third rail pickup while on the bridge. Off the bridge, the articulated cars used pantograph pick-up. They lasted until 1958, with some of the Bridge Units going to Buenos Aires, Argentina.
I noticed that the Key was tucked in under Sacramento Northern on your list above on my second pass. The Key was an independent private company not linked to SN or SP.

The New Haven Railroad was going to run commuter service on it's Main Line utilizing the outer two tracks which would have been divided from the two middle "high speed" tracks by fence. Their Nantasket Beach service was going to be the prototype for this expanded service. This early electrification was probably the reason for the underground loop at Boston's South Station, and never came to pass.
 #857206  by JimBoylan
 
Add:
Baltimore & Hamden (Md.) used center 3rd rail for a short time in the mid '80s, but it was soon replaced by real horses.
I think this was before Hamden became part of the City of Baltimore.

I don't think that Southern Pacific - Interurban Electric Rwy. used 3rd rail shoes. I think they used the 1,200 Volt catenary across the Bay Bridge.
 #857400  by 3rdrail
 
JimBoylan wrote:Add:

I don't think that Southern Pacific - Interurban Electric Rwy. used 3rd rail shoes. I think they used the 1,200 Volt catenary across the Bay Bridge.
They didn't. Cab and train controlled, over 72' long, weighing over 30 tons, the "Big Red" cars were impressive with large pantographs, which SP/IER ran with- no poles or shoes. You're also right about the juice, Jim. GE developed the high-voltage 1,200 v-DC overhead system in 1907 and four years later, SP was the first road to use it.
 #857824  by polybalt
 
Don't forget the Altantic City & Shore, which used third rail where operating on trackage rights over the PSRL.
 #857966  by frank754
 
Yes, a few other folks mentioned the Atlantic City & Shore (or Shore Fast Line).
I haven't done much research on it, I believe it quit sometime in 1948. May have shared some track with the PRSL. Endpoints possibly Atlantic City-Pleasantville. Let me know if there's a good site about this line. What was the mileage and last date?
As far as the Bay Bridge goes, although the Key System trains ran until 1958, the other two lines to use the bridge discontinued service in 1941, just a few years after the bridge was built. The SN used the 600v third rail to cross the bridge to slow them down, as they used 1200v catenary elsewhere. The IER cars never used the third rail, but had 1200v catenary over the bridge for just that short time span, if I'm correct. Even so, they were very heavy and much slower than the other two lines.
In Michigan, in addition to the lines I mentioned, was the Grand Rapids, Grand Haven & Muskegon Railway. It ran on third rail (except in the cities) from Grand Rapids to Muskegon, with a branch to Grand Haven. This was a sister line to the L&WV, also financed by Westinghouse. Not sure of the mileage, but it quit on 4/18/28.
There was also the Baltimore & Hampden (MD), which used 3rd rail, but I can find very little documentation about that line.
 #859053  by Aa3rt
 
JimBoylan wrote:Add:
Baltimore & Hamden (Md.) used center 3rd rail for a short time in the mid '80s, but it was soon replaced by real horses.
I think this was before Hamden became part of the City of Baltimore.
I recall seeing some photographs of this operation during a visit to the Baltimore Streetcar Museum a few years ago. I tried, in vain, to find some on-line photos at the Baltimore Streetcar Museum website.

http://www.baltimorestreetcar.org

As Mr. Boylan has already pointed out, the third-rail operation reverted back to horsepower, supposedly when the electrical equipment wore out. This is the only on-line reference I was able to uncover: (Referenced in the third paragraph)

http://www.btco.net/bthist.htm
 #859651  by Ridgefielder
 
What about Staten Island Rapid Transit? Even though it's under the MTA NY City Transit umbrella now, and operates using modified R44 subway cars, it's technically part of the national rail network and was owned for years (and electrified) by the Baltimore & Ohio.
 #859752  by frank754
 
Yes, the SIRT is a valid one, I guess, although it's now sort of blanketed in with the NYCMTA, I guess at one time when independent it could have been considered part of the list.
 #1325237  by Aa3rt
 
Giving this long dormant topic a "bump", I was recently rereading "The Electric Interurban Railways In America" by Hilton and Due and found the following brief entry on a New York State line named the "Keeseville, Ausable Chasm and Lake Champlain Railroad":

"In 1890 this little road (6 miles) was opened to connect Keeseville, center of a resort area, with the main line of the Delaware & Hudson Railroad at Port Kent. It was electrified in 1905 with a third rail-probably the smallest third-rail line in America. The electrification was removed in 1911, but the railroad survived until 1924."
 #1342341  by Gerry6309
 
frank754 wrote:Yes, the SIRT is a valid one, I guess, although it's now sort of blanketed in with the NYCMTA, I guess at one time when independent it could have been considered part of the list.
SIRT was actually a branch of the B&O RR. It was connected by a drawbridge which still exists, though there is no connection to the present SIRTOA rails.

If you count the P&W you have to also count Lindenwold also, personally I consider both Suburban Rapid Transit. Lehigh Valley Transit, a true interurban, used P&W's third rail to reach 69th St. Terminal.