Pittsburgh Subdivision

LocaleWestern PennsylvaniaTermini
ServiceTypeFreight rail and passenger railSystemCSXOperator(s)CSXHistoryOpened
  • 1879 (northwest of Pittsburgh)
  • 1883 (southeast of Pittsburgh)
TechnicalLine length60 mi (97 km)Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in)
Route map

Legend
MP
[1]
New Castle Subdivision
Beaver River
40.75
NS Youngstown Line
40.4
Wampum
36.8
CSX Koppel Secondary
32.8
College (PA) defect detector
NS Fort Wayne Line
29.5
Beaver Falls
26.0
NS Cleveland Line
25.2
23.1
CSX Ohio River Secondary
23.0
Blacks Run
USG Industrial Siding
20.4
Aliquippa defect detector
18.4
14.1
Briggston defect detector
11.4
Kendall
Montour Jct.
9.8
8.2
Groveton
I-79.svg I-79
P&OC Neville Industrial Track
5.7
CSX Pittsburg Intermodal Terminal
3.75
3.7
3.6
3.4
2.8
P&WV West End Branch
P&WV Wabash Bridge
PLE0.7
Pittsburgh Holdout
Liberty Bridge (Pittsburgh)
PLY0.2
Pittsburgh defect detector
Industrial siding
1.8
4.4
Lucas
6.5
Union Railroad
7.8
9.1
Turtle Creek
11.0
11.1
13.0
Demmler Yard
14.3
North Riverton Yard
15.1
15.1
16.8
17.27
Sinns
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The Pittsburgh Subdivision is an American railroad line that is owned and operated by CSX Transportation in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.

Notable features

The line runs from McKeesport (PLY 15.1) northwest through Pittsburgh to West Pittsburg (near New Castle)[2] along a former Pittsburgh and Lake Erie Railroad line. Its east end is at Sinns (PLY 16.9), across the Youghiogheny River from McKeesport at Liberty, at the west end of the Keystone Subdivision. It junctions with the Mon Subdivision at McKeesport, and the P&W Subdivision in Rankin; at its west end it becomes the New Castle Terminal Subdivision.[3] [4]

Amtrak's Capitol Limited uses the line southeast of Rankin.

History

The line northwest of Pittsburgh opened in 1879 as part of the Pittsburgh and Lake Erie Railroad. The rest of the line, southeast from Pittsburgh, was opened in 1883 by the Pittsburgh, McKeesport and Youghiogheny Railroad.[5] The latter company was leased by the P&LE.

In 1934, the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad began operating through trains via trackage rights over the P&LE between McKeesport (slightly north of the current beginning of the Pittsburgh Subdivision until the bridge at Sinns opened in 1968[6]) and New Castle, leaving the P&W Subdivision for local trains only.[7] Eventually the P&LE, which had been jointly owned by CSX and Conrail, was merged into CSX.

  • Railways portal

See also

References

  1. ^ https://wiki.radioreference.com/index.php/PI-Pittsburgh_Sub
  2. ^ CSX Timetables: Pittsburgh Subdivision
  3. ^ "PI-Pittsburgh Sub - the RadioReference Wiki".
  4. ^ http://www.multimodalways.org/docs/railroads/companies/CSX/CSX%20ETTs/CSX%20Baltimore%20Div%20ETT%20%234%201-1-2005.pdf CSX Baltimore Division Timetable
  5. ^ Railroads: A Part of the Pittsburgh Plan
  6. ^ Bridges and Tunnels of Allegheny County, Pennsylvania: CSX Bridge at Liberty Boro
  7. ^ "PRR Chronology, 1934" (PDF). (51.7 KiB), August 2004 Edition