A Look Ahead for the Lancaster and Chester Railway
In 2001, the Lancaster and Chester entered into a lease-purchase agreement with Norfolk Southern to operate the former SB line in Lancaster County. This extends from MP 89.5 at the Lancaster side of the Catawba River to MP 58.7 in Kershaw, a total of 30.8 miles. This ended years of negotiation between the two lines. It has also fueled speculation among some area railfans whether this agreement will ever include the track over and beyond the river. (I will discuss this agreement at the bottom of this page.)
Until then the Lancaster and Chester Railway had virtually the same route-mileage since its inception in 1896. It passes over nine wooden trestles ranging in length from 74 feet to 321 feet. The 1,216 foot long Catawba River Trestle is a combination structure made of wooden trestle segments and four steel though trusses. Along the line lies 66 curves, the sharpest of which is 5 degrees 30 minutes. The steepest grade is a mile and half stretch west of Richburg called, appropriately enough, Richburg Hill. At 4.7 percent, it is said to be among the steepest in the Southeast.
The Railway invested heavily in its own line in the late 90s, spending close to nine million dollars over a three to five year period. New rail was, replacing 85 to 95 pound rail with 127-132 pound rail. Most of it is stick rail, through some welded sections were added on crossings and curves to simplify maintenance. In addition, the railroad tripled their locomotive fleet in that time period going from three units in 1996 to a toal of nine by the end of the decade. This does not include an additional three units being leased from Locomotive Leasing Partners (LLPX). Bridges were also strengthened. This allowed the Railway to begin using 286,000 pound cars instead of the 200,000 pound cars previously used. In time, the L&C plans to use 315,000 pound cars.
There are now two interchanges on the line. One is with Norfolk Southern in Chester on thier Charlotte to Columbia main. Traffic to and from the interchange on the NS end is handled daily with their local out of Rock Hill. The power on these locals are generally GP59s or high hood GP38-2s. NS Transcaer GP59 #4611 and Operation Lifesaver #4640 was power for most of October, 2001. An interchange with CSX-predeccesor Seaboard Coast Line (and before that Seaboard Air Line) was built in 1981 in East Chester to replace the SCL interchange in Fort Lawn that was abandoned at the same time. Power on these trains can be anything from GP40s to wide noses -- even LMSX #710 once or twice -- to ex-Con B36-7s.
The lease agreement with Norfolk Southern effectively takes away the Lancaster interchange which had not been used in many years anyway. Most of the L&C's traffic on the Original 29 is on the Chester end of the line and the car-hire charge was reduced if all interchange was handled there.
There was a time when the L&C's parent company was responsible for up to 90 percent of the traffic on the line, up to 13,000 cars annually at the six plants on the line. (The L&C also switched out theEureka PLlant in Chester. To get there, they had to cross Seaboard at grade while using the Southern Columbia to Charlotte main. The last time I saw this happen was in 1989.) However, when Springs bought another company, a truck fleet came with it. The trucking side soon became more dominant and Springs-generated rail traffic dwindled from a couple of thousand cars of textile-related material annually to what it is today, roughly one hundred cars a year at only one plant, the Lancaster Complex, which is located approximately one mile from the L&C Shop in downtown Lancaster. This does not include the Grace Water Treatment Plant which is owned by Springs and uses about 1,400 cars of coal a year. In terms of revenue, this was for many years the largest business served by the L&C.
In the late 70s, the railroad, sensing that Springs-generated traffic would dwindle, created a 470-acre industrial park In Richburg near I-77. Formerly known as Carolina's Distribution Park, since renamed The L&C Railway Distribution Park, this area includes Guardian Industries, Porter-Warner and Thyssen Steel, which was the first industry to move there.
Thyssen, which has recently opened a second plant on the line, takes inbound coils of sheet steel and slits them for various industries, such as stampings for automobiles, lawn mowers and refrigerators. The Lancaster and Chester handles up to 2,400 carloads of sand and chemicals to park tenant Guardian Glass a year. Also, the Railway bought four gondolas for Guardian to ship cullet to the Richburg plant from Florida. (However, these gons, numbered 300 to 303, are in storage on line. Two of them are in Fort Lawn on the spur that once led to the cotton warehouses.)
The Railway owns more than 1,000 acres of land near I-77 in Richburg and hopes to attract other businesses to the area. But not at any cost. A Charlotte, North Carolina company was recently looking to build along the line. However, research into the company's past revealed a number of environmental citations. As a result of this finding, the Lancaster and Chester decided not to sell to this company.
For volume of cars, the largest customer on the line was at one time GAF at a section of track in East Chester near the CSX interchange. As of early 2001, GAF has stopped shipping by rail ompletely. Archer-Daniels-Midland in Kershaw is currently the biggest customer on the line with estimates ranging up to 4,000 cars a year. Circle S at MM17 on the Original 29 handles some 3,500 cars a year. Furthermore, there is a shuffle train between the two feed mills. This was billed as an added bonus to L&C operation of the SB. Formerly, 18-wheelers, up to 60 a week, handled this traffic.
The L&C owns a fleet of boxcars -- 50 foot cars built in 1979 60 foot cars built in 1996 -- that were used primarily by GAF, which manufactures rolled roofing-mat material. The 50 footers once numbered forty in total and were in the 200 to 239 block. Five were lost in derailments in Arkansas while ten were sold to Lexington & Ohio Railroad in 2000. The 60 footers are numbered 600 to 619. For a time, fifteen of these had been leased by CSX. I believe those have since been returned to service by L&C. Since GAF is no longer shipping by rail, many of the L&C owned cars and the SLGG cars are in storage. Some are in East Chester across from GAF while others are north of AmeriSteel on the SB line.
PPG Industries is also located in East Chester. PPG manufactures 70 million pounds of fiber material annually that is used in such diverse products as computers and surfboards. Speciality Polymers, Union Carbide and Owens-Corning are also located near the wye at East Chester.
Once every week to ten days, the L&C gets unit trains from Ohio for the Circle S Feed Mill now at Milepost 17 between Fort Lawn and Richburg. Both Norfolk-Southern and CSX were vying for Circle S. But the L&C convinced the owner of the plant to locate on the L&C by making him see that, according to Steve Gedney, president of the L&C, 'he could have the best of both worlds here,' a reference to being able to choose the best rate between both Class 1 carriers that the L&C connects with. It was this business, along with the 4.7 percent grade at Richburg Hill, that prompted the Railway to purchase four ex-Conrail EMD SW1200s which arrived in 1998. One of these 1200s, 97, spent most of the first three years it was on the line at Circle S unloading the grain cars. As of early November, 2001, it had been replaced by LLPX SW1001 #91. L&C #97 is now in regular mainline service.
In all, the Railway handles about 14,000 cars a year in steel, coal, chemicals, glass, fiberglass, sand, corn, barley, soybeans and lumber. Steve Gedney, however, said that it is hard to project actual car loadings. L&C has operated the SB line, their Kershaw District, for less than a year now, plus the downward trend in the economy as well as GAF has thrown some things in flux. However, this number is certainly an improvement from the 5,800 cars it averaged yearly during the 80s. An additional 4,000 cars could be added if Circle S undergoes a planned expansion. L&C officials foresee moving between 18,000 to 20,000 cars a year in the future, but add that the line could handle upwards of 30,000 a year (on the original route) "without bumping into each other."
But it is the recent lease-purchase deal with Norfolk Southern that offers the most hope from growth on the Lancaster and Chester. "I think the main thing is our presence and having our operating headquarters in this area," Steve Gedney, the president of the railroad told this reporter. "If we want to grow our business, which by doing that helps and assists the local economy whether it be in Lancaster County, Chester County or even York County, we do our own marketing in conjunction with the county economic developers for both counties to try to locate companies and factories that will use rail."
The primary customers on the new line are the Archers-Daniels-Midland plant in Kershaw and AmeriSteel on Riverside Road in Lancaster. Gedney envisions service to existing companies on the line that presently do not use rail. “We are going to see what we can do initially with shippers that have been on the line that have stopped shipping like Thomas and Betts. They’ve got a rail siding going in there. We’re going to talk to them and see if there’s anything we can do to help their business which would put rail cars on the line." Additionally, a spur was put in at Southern Gas north of the interchange in Lancaster. Southern Railway once served this business, but the spur had been taken up years ago.
The line has reshuffled the way they move the trains. In addition, they have put in 100 pound switches. Presently everything that is on the main line right now on the Kershaw District is 85 pound rail. This compares with the 127 to 132 pound rail on the L&C’s original line. New ties have been placed as well on all the curves. Gedney adds, "We’ve also done some bridge work on the 521 bridge. That’s not major work, mainly just heavy maintenance.”
Meanwhile, the L&C and Lancaster County Economic Development Corporation President Ray Gardner are seeking new business to the line. “We’ve already identified some land around Heath Springs and Kershaw,” Gardner said. “We’ll put it together to make something like a two hundred acre park.”
There are also two parcels of land in the northern part of the county. One is nearly twelve hundred acres of land at Foster Park. This area is located on Riverside Road as you head out of Lancaster and toward Highway 5. “It’s zoned I-2,” said Gardner, “heavy industrial. We hope to take advantage of that. On down Riverside Road near the airport, we hope the county is going to get us some land there.”
“They didn’t go out of their way marketing,” Gardner said of how Norfolk Southern handled the line in Lancaster. “I’m not critical of them. But the L&C has got better service. They’re more dependable. They’re local. If you need something, you can drive down there to see them. They’re eager just like we are.”
Also of note, with the increase in traffic, the line has been running three trains a day for most of ADM's busy season. Two trains operate on the Original 29 while an extra operates on the Kershaw District. Officials foresee going back to two trains a day soon, but with the way things have been lately, one never knows. Additionally, two SW end cab switchers have come on line this year, both leased from Locomotive Leasing Partners, or LLPX. This brings the number of end cabs operating on the line to a current total of eleven. In October 2000, L&C tested a high hood NS GP38-2, #5104. Officials and crews were none too pleased with the results and sent the unit packing after two days. However, with the recent increase in traffic, almost 60 miles of track and other options being reviewed, the end cabs may have company on the line in the foreseeable future. Gedney once told this reporter that they may get either GP38-2s or GP40s at some time in the future.
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