• LV Canastota Branch history

  • Discussion related to the Lehigh Valley Railroad and predecessors for the period 1846-1976. Originally incorporated as the Delaware, Lehigh, Schuylkill and Susquehanna Railroad Company.
Discussion related to the Lehigh Valley Railroad and predecessors for the period 1846-1976. Originally incorporated as the Delaware, Lehigh, Schuylkill and Susquehanna Railroad Company.

Moderator: scottychaos

  by jgrhart
 
I am trying to find out schedules, costs, routes, etc. of the Cazenovia and Canastota Railroad in 1873. Anyone have any information?
Thanks,
jgrhart
  by lvrr325
 
Might be something in either of the two books written on this line. If not there, probably not going to find it unless you get lucky and find an old timetable somewhere.


As far as the rail size goes, why not go to Cortland and look at the remaining segment? I sincerely doubt much of the rail's been changed since it was put down. Even if it has, there could be traces of older rail buried in crossings and so forth.
  by charlie6017
 
NYCUticaSyracuse81 wrote:There might be some info here. Scroll down, click on (Marcham online .pdf) download free book on E, C, & N RR. Open file with adobe reader

http://ecommons.library.cornell.edu/handle/1813/14138
It's an excellent book..........thanks for adding that here! ;-)

Charlie
  by lvrr325
 
That would be one of the two books written about this line.
  by lvrr325
 
That would be wrong. Gangly Country Cousin covers the Southern Central and Auburn & Ithaca branches. It has a few pictures of Freeville, but is not exclusively about the EC&N.
  by charlie6017
 
Are you perhaps thinking of "Lehigh Valley Memories", by David Marcham?
  by TB Diamond
 
Another book on the EC&N is entitled: MR CORNELL'S RAILROAD & HOW IT GREW Camden to Elmira by John Connell, 1982.