The New Holland Secondary is a rail line that runs from Lancaster, Pennsylvania, to New Holland, Pennsylvania, and is owned and operated by Norfolk Southern Railway. It is 12 miles long, single tracked,[1] and originally ran from Lancaster to Downingtown, Pennsylvania, but all track between New Holland and Downingtown has since been abandoned.[2] The line branches off of track 4 of the Amtrak owned Philadelphia to Harrisburg Main Line (originally part of the Main Line of the Pennsylvania Railroad) at Cork Interlocking, milepost 67.0 in Lancaster.
The rail line was originally built by the East Brandywine and Waynesburg Railroad, but has changed hands quite a few times since its construction in 1854.[2] It came into the possession of the Pennsylvania Railroad in 1903, Penn Central in 1968, Conrail in 1976, and in 1999 it was acquired by Norfolk Southern Railway, where it remains today.[3] The line serves as a branch line for freight delivery, and services a number of businesses along its path, including RR Donnelley and Sons Printing, HM Stauffer, the Leola Dart Container plant, and L&S Sweeteners. The line is operated five days a week, mostly at night and early morning to avoid high traffic in New Holland.[4]
Infrastructure
editThe New Holland Secondary has no bridges,[3] but does have 25 level crossings over named roads. (26 if the crossing over Norman Road, in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, which is not crossed by the main line, is included). The line also crosses over several privately owned or unnamed lanes. The crossings over named roads are as follows:
Greenfield Road |
Jefferson Drive |
Willow Road |
Hartman Station Road |
(Norman Road) |
Industrial Circuit |
Horseshoe Road |
Creek Hill Road |
Newport Road (PA 772) |
Farmland Road |
Graybill Road |
Hess Road |
Zimmerman Road |
Trinity Drive |
S Groffdale Road |
Peters Road |
S Shirk Road |
George C Delp Road |
S Hoover Avenue |
Brubaker Avenue |
Diller Avenue |
S Custer Avenue |
S Railroad Avenue |
Brimmer Avenue |
S Kinzer Avenue |
Ranck Road |
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "Profile of Penn Central's New Holland Secondary Track at Lancaster, Pa". digitalcollections.library.cmu.edu. Carnegie Mellon University University Libraries Digital Collections. Retrieved 11 December 2016.
- ^ a b "Lancaster to Downington". Abandonedrails.com. Retrieved 11 December 2016.
- ^ a b Pennsylvania Department of Transportation. "2003 Pennsylvania State Rail Plan" (PDF). PennDOT.gov. Retrieved 11 December 2016.
- ^ "new_holland_secondary_doc.pdf" (PDF). Model Railroad Hobbyist. Model Railroad Hobbyist Magazine. 2014-09-09. Retrieved 2023-02-05.