The Cumberland and Pennsylvania Railroad Company was incorporated on March 4, 1850, with a charter from the Maryland General Assembly.[1] The early charter date reflects the prominence of Mt. Savage as an early foundry of ironrail and manufacturer of locomotives in the United States. The first iron rail rolled in the United States was produced at Mt. Savage in 1844.[2]
In 1866 James Millholland opened the locomotive shops which became the center of the railroad. From 1868 to 1917 the shops produced at least 30 locomotives for the C&P, as well as standard and narrow gauge engines for other lines.[4] The C&P also built passenger cars, for its own use and for other railroads.[3]
The WM purchased the C&P from Consolidation Coal in 1944.[5]: 51 The operations of the two companies were formally merged in 1953.[6]: 68 All of the C&P locomotives were replaced with WM engines.[4][5]: 52 In 1954 the WM abandoned redundant C&P track between Mt. Savage Junction and Mt. Savage, and discontinued use of the tunnel under Frostburg, due to the tunnel's low clearances. Some branch lines to local mines were also eliminated.[5]: 198 Coal traffic south of Frostburg was routed along the WM's Georges Creek Branch to the WM junction at Westernport, Maryland (directly across the North Branch Potomac River from Piedmont).
Extant facilities
The depot at Frostburg was originally designed for the C&P by architect Ephraim Francis Baldwin and built in 1891. It contained an office, waiting rooms, freight and baggage sections.[7]
In addition to the station in Frostburg, many of the shop buildings still remain at Mt. Savage.[3] Parts of the route north from Piedmont are still in service as part of CSXT and the Georges Creek Railway.
^ abcCook, Roger; Zimmermann, Karl (1992). The Western Maryland Railway: Fireballs and Black Diamonds (2nd ed.). Laurys Station, PA: Garrigues House. ISBN0-9620844-4-1. OCLC26302871.
^Salamon, Stephen J.; Hopkins, William E. (1991). The Western Maryland Railway in the Diesel Era. Silver Spring, Maryland: Old Line Graphics. ISBN1-879314-07-X.
^Avery, Carlos P. (2003). E. Francis Baldwin, Architect: The B&O, Baltimore, and Beyond. Baltimore, Maryland: Baltimore Architecture Foundation. pp. 45, 128. ISBN0-9729743-0-X.
Mellander, Deane (1981). Rails to the Big Vein, the Short Lines of Allegany County, Maryland. January 1981. Potomac Chapter, National Railway Historical Society, Inc.
Mellander, Deane (1981). Cumberland and Pennsylvania Railroad. Newton, NJ: Carstens Publishers, Inc. ISBN0-911868-42-9.