Wilmington and Northern Branch

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Opened1869 (1869)
Line length63.5 mi (102.2 km)
Wilmington and Northern Branch
Overview
OwnerSee #Summary of ownership
History
Opened1869 (1869)
Technical
Line length63.5 mi (102.2 km)
Route map

mi
63.5
Birdsboro
54.0
Joanna
51.9
Elverson
45.3
Suplee
40.8
Brandamore
36.6
Wagontown
33.2
Coatesville
31.0
Modena
29.2
Mortonville
26.0
Embreeville
23.1
Northbrook
21.0
Wawaset
19.1
Lenape
18.2
Pocopson
15.4
Chadds Ford Junction
13.5
Cossart
Pennsylvania
Delaware
11.4
Granogue
9.5
Guyencourt
8.6
Winterthur
7.3
Montchanin
6.4
Greenville
3.2
Elsmere Junction
0.0
Wilmington (B&O)
Wilmington (PRR)

The Wilmington and Northern Branch is a partially abandoned railway line in the states of Delaware and Pennsylvania. It was constructed between 1869 and 1870 by the Wilmington and Reading Railroad, a predecessor of the Wilmington and Northern Railroad. At its fullest extent it connected Reading, Pennsylvania, with Wilmington, Delaware. The Philadelphia and Reading Railway leased the line in 1900. With the Reading Company's bankruptcy and the creation of Conrail in 1976 the line's ownership fragmented, and the section between Coatesville, Pennsylvania, and Birdsboro, Pennsylvania, has been abandoned.

From Reading, Pennsylvania, to Birdsboro, Pennsylvania, the line followed the left bank of the Schuylkill River, running parallel to the Pennsylvania Railroad's Schuylkill Branch. At Birdsboro, the line turned south, eventually picking up the West Branch Brandywine Creek and following it into Coatesville, Pennsylvania, and an interchange with the Pennsylvania Main Line. From Coatesville, the line continued south to Wilmington, Delaware, where it interchanged with the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad.[1] Passenger trains used the B&O's Water Street station in Wilmington.[2]

History

Notes

References

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