Cincinnati and Lake Erie Railroad
Encyclopedia
The Cincinnati and Lake Erie Railroad (C&LE) was a short-lived electric interurban
Interurban
An interurban, also called a radial railway in parts of Canada, is a type of electric passenger railroad; in short a hybrid between tram and train. Interurbans enjoyed widespread popularity in the first three decades of the twentieth century in North America. Until the early 1920s, most roads were...

 railway that operated in 1930-1939 Depression-era Ohio
Ohio
Ohio is a Midwestern state in the United States. The 34th largest state by area in the U.S.,it is the 7th‑most populous with over 11.5 million residents, containing several major American cities and seven metropolitan areas with populations of 500,000 or more.The state's capital is Columbus...

 between Cincinnati
Cincinnati, Ohio
Cincinnati is a city in the U.S. state of Ohio. Cincinnati is the county seat of Hamilton County. Settled in 1788, the city is located to north of the Ohio River at the Ohio-Kentucky border, near Indiana. The population within city limits is 296,943 according to the 2010 census, making it Ohio's...

, Springfield
Springfield, Ohio
Springfield is a city in the U.S. state of Ohio and the county seat of Clark County. The municipality is located in southwestern Ohio and is situated on the Mad River, Buck Creek and Beaver Creek, approximately west of Columbus and northeast of Dayton. Springfield is home to Wittenberg...

, Columbus
Columbus, Ohio
Columbus is the capital of and the largest city in the U.S. state of Ohio. The broader metropolitan area encompasses several counties and is the third largest in Ohio behind those of Cleveland and Cincinnati. Columbus is the third largest city in the American Midwest, and the fifteenth largest city...

, and Toledo
Toledo, Ohio
Toledo is the fourth most populous city in the U.S. state of Ohio and is the county seat of Lucas County. Toledo is in northwest Ohio, on the western end of Lake Erie, and borders the State of Michigan...

. It had connections with three neighboring interurbans that provided freight and passenger connections to allow it to reach Cleveland (Lake Shore Electric), to Detroit (Eastern Michigan Railways), and to cities in Indiana (Indiana Railroad). For many years, the Cincinnati & Lake Erie's 217-mile Toledo-Cincinnati run was the longest direct trolley operation in the United States. The C&LE constantly struggled financially and suffered numerous fatal wrecks.[1] When the connecting Lake Shore Electric abandoned operations in 1939, the resulting loss of essential interline freight business forced the C&LE to abandon operations the next year.[1][7][8]

History

The C&LE was legally formed as a corporate entity in January 1930, from the merger of three interurban lines: the Cincinnati, Hamilton, and Dayton Railway (CH&D); the Indiana, Columbus and Eastern; and the Lima-Toledo Railroad. Each of these was a small regional interurban teetering on bankruptcy
Bankruptcy
Bankruptcy is a legal status of an insolvent person or an organisation, that is, one that cannot repay the debts owed to creditors. In most jurisdictions bankruptcy is imposed by a court order, often initiated by the debtor....

 even in the middle of the prosperous 1920s prior to the onset of the Great Depression
Great Depression
The Great Depression was a severe worldwide economic depression in the decade preceding World War II. The timing of the Great Depression varied across nations, but in most countries it started in about 1929 and lasted until the late 1930s or early 1940s...

. Under the direction of former CH&D president and eventual C&LE president Dr. Thomas Conway, these combined interurban lines were transformed into an efficient regional carrier of passengers and freight.[1],[2, p 68, 398]

Although the three separate interurbans were struggling at the time of the Conway merger, their physical plant was in good condition and their combined routes had the potential for profitable passenger and freight operation based upon attracting more riders and shippers. This was the Conway business plan, and considerable bonded money was expended to implement it. Business was growing, but the dramatic economic challenges of the Depression ultimately caused this plan to fail. The company was unable to meet operating expenses and debt service and finally was forced to abandon operations in 1938 after eight years of operation.[1][2] Prior to the evolution of the C&LE, an entity called the Ohio Electric Railway
Ohio Electric Railway
The Ohio Electric Railway Company was an interurban formed in 1907 with the consolidation of 14 smaller interurban railways. It was one of Ohio's largest interurban systems...

 had attempted to combine small and local interurbans into a large central Ohio interurban network. The OE went bankrupt in 1921, and the former regional lines, such as Lima-Toledo Traction, returned to their original corporate entities or abandoned operation. (Hilton, p 231)

Improving Passenger Service

To embark on dramatically improving passenger service and schedules, shortly after the C&LE corporate formation, President Conway supervised the design of and acquisition of a unique fleet of twenty lightweight, high speed, power efficient, aluminum bodied bright red passenger cars (known eventually as "Red Devils"
Red Devil (interurban)
The Red Devil was a high-speed interurban trolley . It was developed by the Cincinnati Car Company for the Cincinnati and Lake Erie Railroad , which bought 20 of them in 1929 for service between cities and towns in Ohio. At and long, they were among the first lightweight trolleys, with side...

[1]) from the Cincinnati Car Company
Cincinnati Car Company
Cincinnati Car Company or Cincinnati Car Corporation was a subsidiary of Ohio Traction Company. It designed and constructed interurban cars, streetcars and buses. It was founded in 1902 in Cincinnati, Ohio. In 1928 it bought the Versare Car Company.The company was among the first to make...

. These interurban cars embodied the latest in Art-deco styling and were equipped with numerous amenities including leather bucket seats with high headrests. Half were built as lounges
Lounge car
A lounge car is a type of passenger car on a train, where riders can purchase food and drinks. The car may feature large windows and comfortable seating to create a relaxing diversion from standard coach or dining options...

 to provide parlor car first class
First class travel
First class is the most luxurious class of accommodation on a train, passenger ship, airplane, or other conveyance. It is usually much more expensive than business class and economy class, and offers the best amenities.-Aviation:...

 comfort. In order to promote the cars, the C&LE staged a race between Red Devil #126 and an airplane
Fixed-wing aircraft
A fixed-wing aircraft is an aircraft capable of flight using wings that generate lift due to the vehicle's forward airspeed. Fixed-wing aircraft are distinct from rotary-wing aircraft in which wings rotate about a fixed mast and ornithopters in which lift is generated by flapping wings.A powered...

. The car achieved a speed of 97 miles per hour and "won" the highly publicized race.[8,p189 photo] Unfortunately, and typical of most interurbans, considerable open country operation was on side-of-road track and considerable urban operation was on track embedded in town streets with tight radius turns, so the Red Devils had to contend with automobile
Automobile
An automobile, autocar, motor car or car is a wheeled motor vehicle used for transporting passengers, which also carries its own engine or motor...

 traffic and would rarely achieve these speeds in day-to-day operation, but in open country, particularly existing on the Springfield-Toledo division, they operated up to ninety miles per hour if behind schedule. The Red Devils were 43'9" long, 11'4" high and weighed 22 metric tonsversus a typical 1920s large steel interurban 55' long and 14' high and 50 tons. Night time freight speed could also be high, reportedly up to sixty miles per hour. Unfortunately, the line was not signalled, and the high speeds combined with no signal protection on a single-track line led to serious head on collisions. Through Red Devil parlor car service was provided from Cincinnati to Detroit in conjunction with a Toledo to Detroit interurban, the Eastern Michigan Railway, but that did not last long as the EM stopped running in 1932.[1]

Route

A small portion of the C&LE's high speed route between Middletown and Dayton was parallel to the old towpath
Towpath
A towpath is a road or trail on the bank of a river, canal, or other inland waterway. The purpose of a towpath is to allow a land vehicle, beasts of burden, or a team of human pullers to tow a boat, often a barge...

 of the Miami and Erie Canal
Miami and Erie Canal
The Miami and Erie Canal was a canal that connected the Ohio River in Cincinnati, Ohio with Lake Erie in Toledo, Ohio. Construction on the canal began in 1825 and was completed in 1845. It consisted of 19 aqueducts, three guard locks, and 103 canal locks. Each lock measured by and they...

. The C&LE served the aforementioned locations as well as Cincinnati, Hamilton
Hamilton, Ohio
Hamilton is a city in Butler County, southwestern Ohio, United States. The population was 62,447 at the 2010 census. It is the county seat of Butler County. The city is part of the Cincinnati metropolitan area....

, Springfield
Springfield, Ohio
Springfield is a city in the U.S. state of Ohio and the county seat of Clark County. The municipality is located in southwestern Ohio and is situated on the Mad River, Buck Creek and Beaver Creek, approximately west of Columbus and northeast of Dayton. Springfield is home to Wittenberg...

, Lima
Lima, Ohio
Lima is a city in and the county seat of Allen County, Ohio, United States. The municipality is located in northwestern Ohio along Interstate 75 approximately north of Dayton and south-southwest of Toledo....

, Columbus and numerous smaller towns in Ohio. The 1930 Conway management team made hard decisions regarding lines to drop and lines to retain and improve. Considerable money was spent upgrading track.[2] Springfield became the C&LE's operating "hub" and was where the Dayton, Toledo, and Columbus routes converged. The Toledo division route was Cincinnati-Mt.Healthy-Hamilton-Dayton-Middletown-SPRINGFIELD-Urbana-W.Liberty-Bellefontaine-Huntsville-Waynesboro-Lima-Ottawa-Deshler-Maumee-Toledo. The Lima north portion tightly paralled the track of the Baltimore and Ohio's Cincinnati-Toledo line.[See external link: Railroad Commission 1918 Interurban Map.] The Columbus division route was straight east Springfield-Summerford-W.Jefferson-Columbus. Much of this route paralled US route 40. The line east of Columbus reaching Zanesville was never included in the C&LE.

Freight with Next Morning Delivery

President Conway knew that the real key to financial survival by the new C&LE was to dramatically improve freight business and revenues.[1] Freight facilities were rebuilt and relocated, and better rolling stock was acquired. Freight trains also faced the same limitations as the line's passenger cars with operation on downtown streets, often a source of complaints by town councils. See photo [2,p386],[8] for an example of an interurban's tight turn at town corners. Freight and express business steadily improved as measured by documented tonnage increases each year. The line's freight agents and sales force worked hard to sell the C&LE to shippers and were able to take business away from the steam railroads by guaranteeing overnight delivery by 8am the next morning, something that the competing steam railroads could not do. This is impressive considering that the distance from Cincinnati to Toledo was around 224 miles and from Toledo to Cleveland another 124. The travel time plus terminal transfer time Cincinnati to Cleveland was accomplished from 5pm the prior evening to 8am the next morning. Deliveries were so fast and predictable that a General Motors refrigerator plant in Moraine City (near Dayton) shifted to the C&LE as its primary shipper and provided the C&LE with in-plant loading tracks.[1] Both freight and passenger revenues jumped and the C&LE appeared to have a good future, but as the Depression deepened, revenues and profits began to fall.[2,pp140–150; 380–395: Interurban Freight.] [Also: Keenan, External Link 1.]

Essential Interurban Connections

At Toledo, the C&LE interchanged with the Lake Shore Electric to run "next morning 8am" freight to/from Cleveland. Also at Toledo the C&LE interchanged with the Eastern Michigan Railways interurban to move freight the forty seven miles to/from Detroit. These interchange connections were essential to the C&LE, but both of these companies were financially weak. Eastern Michigan Railway abandoned operations in 1932; the LSE in 1938.[1][2] The loss of the Eastern Michigan in 1932 was a blow. The loss of Lakeshore Electric in 1938 was fatal.

Similar to the Conway plan of combining weak interurban lines to make a strong one, in Indiana five marginal lines had been combined in 1929 to form the Indiana Railroad. The IR did much the same as the C&LE had done earlier: it bought new lightweight passenger cars based upon the Red Devil design, and it worked to increase freight business. Interchange was important to IR as it was to the C&LE. The primary link between the C&LE and the IR was the Dayton and Western interurban which ran Dayton-Crown Point-New Lebanon-W.Alexandria-Eaton-to Richmond, Indiana. The C&LE interchanged with the D&W at Dayton. The IR interchanged with the D&W at Richmond. The Dayton and Western also was very weak financially. To assure that it remained in business, at different times both the C&LE and Indiana Railroad leased and operated it. Eventually, neither had the funds to continue leasing, and the unsubsidized Dayton and Western abandoned operations in 1937. The Lima,OH-Ft.Wayne,IN C&LE-IR connection had been lost earlier when the IR had to abandon that line.[1] All Ohio interurbans lost their reason for being due to competition from truckers and the growing personal use of automobiles.

Fatal Wrecks

No part of the single track C&LE was protected by block signals, and both passenger and freight service and speed had dramatically increased. Frequent operation of equipment in two directions on a single track with sidings was by dispatcher provided paper orders carried on board by the crew. The very fast Red Devil passenger cars had a one man operator who sometimes became distracted by all that he had to do which included on board ticketing and change making. This resulted in wrecks where both C&LE employees and riders died in disastrous head on collisions. Such wrecks usually were due to an operator, often of a Red Devil, proceeding past a siding where he had orders to pause and await the passage of an opposing train. The settlement money expended, not to ignore the terrible loss of life, in claims and lawsuits and repairing, replacing, or scrapping wrecked rolling stock eventually exceeded what an installed block signal system would have cost in 1930 when the C&LE was formed from the three original interurbans. Obviously block signals should have existed.[1]

Municipalities Were Unhappy

As freight business grew, the larger municipalities that the C&LE went through became unhappy with the nuisance of trains running down major streets. Not only were interurban passenger cars mingling with automobiles and pedestrians, including stopping and starting at traffic signals, but freight trains of multiple cars pulled by heavy freight motors were also on those streets, sometimes at midday. Auto traffic was impeded, and the streets suffered physical damage as the ties underlying the rails aged and rotted. The town that complained the most was Springfield. The city and the interurban were in court frequently over issues of street repaving and demands for track relocation. Springfield finally demanded that the C&LE leave city streets entirely. The financially strapped C&LE had no money to comply. In addition, everyone was aware that the C&LE had local people employed at a time of dramatic regional and national unemployment.[1]

Decline and Abandonment

Competition with a growing population of automobiles riding on state paved highways and Depression caused growing unemployment led to a decline in C&LE passenger business. Freight business remained adequate, but the Lake Shore Electric connection at Toledo was an essential link to shippers in Cleveland. In 1938, LSE's freight agents and handlers struck for higher pay. The LSE had no funds to survive a strike and it immediately shut down and began to dismantle. For the C&LE this meant a dramatic collapse in its freight business. It hung on briefly by trying to work with trucking lines to replace the LSE, but it could no longer operate the guaranteed next morning at 8am schedule. The C&LE abandoned a few months later in 1939.[1,2,6,7] Although there is little in the present literature regarding the LSE agent's strike, obviously their union did not expect it to lead to LSE's total abandonment with permanent unemployment for both the agents and everyone else employed by the LSE, a very dire situation in the middle of the Depression with 25% national unemployment. This strike brought down the LSE in 1938, the C&LE in 1939, and eventually the Indiana Railroad in 1941.[6][7, pp178–189]

Disposition of the Red Devils

The very successful lightweight 1929 Cincinnati Car Company "Red Devil" cars were sold. Six went to the Cedar Rapids and Iowa City Railway (CRANDIC) and thirteen to the Lehigh Valley Transit (LVT) interurban lines. They successfully operated as CRANDIC trippers between the capitol at Iowa City to Cedar Rapids and as Liberty Bell Limiteds between Allentown and Philadelphia into the 1950s. They had an operational life of twenty five years.[3][4][5] (See Bibliography and Wikipedia Links related to these two interurban railroads.) The design mated aluminum sheeting onto a steel frame. This resulted in "dissimilar metals electrolysis" erosion that had to be dealt with during their life. In some cases the aluminum sheets were replaced with steel.[1]

See also

  • Indiana Railroad
    Indiana Railroad
    This article is for the electric interurban railroad of 1930-1941. For the currently operating freight railroad Indiana Rail Road see Indiana Rail Road....

  • Lake Shore Electric Railway
  • Cedar Rapids and Iowa City Railway
    Cedar Rapids and Iowa City Railway
    The Cedar Rapids and Iowa City Railway , also known as the Crandic is a Class III railroad operating in the US state of Iowa.-History:...

  • Lehigh Valley Transit
    Lehigh Valley Transit
    The Lehigh Valley Transit Company was a Pennsylvania interurban rail transport company that operated a network of city and interurban trolley lines. In poor financial condition, LVT abruptly abandoned operation of its Philadelphia Division in September 1951...

  • Northern Ohio Railway Museum
    Northern Ohio Railway Museum
    Northern Ohio Railway Museum is a railroad museum located in Chippewa Lake, Ohio. The Museum is a non-profit, educational organization. It was established in 1965, granted 501 status by the Internal Revenue Service in 1966 and incorporated under the laws of the State of Ohio in 1976...


Sources

  • 1. Keenan. Design and construction of the Red Devils for improved passenger service. Reworking freight service. Next day delivery guarantee. Importance of Dayton and Western, LSE strike by freight agents and workers leading to LSE abandonment with drastic loss of freight business to C&LE leading to its eventual abandonment. High speed freight and passenger operation combined with no block signals leading to fatal wrecks. Dissimilar metals problems with the Red Devils.
  • 2. Middleton (1). C&LE history, pp140–150. Photographs of p68,398. Interurban freight business, pp380–395. Importance of Dayton and Western connection, p150. C&LE abandonment, p147.
  • 3. CERA Bulletin #114. Purchase and operation of Red Devils by CRANDIC, Cedar Rapids and Iowa City Ry.
  • 4. Volkmer. Purchase and operation of Red Devils by LVT, Lehigh Valley Transit.
  • 5. McKelvey. Operation of Red Devils as Liberty Bell Limiteds by LVT. Scrapping and museum acquisition.
  • 6. Bradley. Effect of C&LE abandonment on the Indiana Railroad.
  • 7. Hilton. Economic decline of all interurbans including C&LE and adjacent Indiana Railroad.
  • 8. Rowsome. Chapter The Ride Downhill p189: Red Devil-airplane race, decline of all interurbans due to the Depression, map of exstensive network of midwest interurban lines in 1912.

External links

The source of this article is wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.  The text of this article is licensed under the GFDL.
 
x
OK