Crews from Winters Rigging and the East Erie Commercial Railroad descended on the former GE Transportation test track in Harborcreek, Pa., to remove the catenary that has been above it for many years. The removal was in response to years of neglect and damage, most recently from copper thieves.
The catenary has been a part of the test track long before it was a test track, wires have been over these tracks since it was part of the Buffalo and Lake Erie Traction Company main line in 1906.
When GE began to develop electric locomotives the catenary on the 4-mile line was crucial to theirs and other locomotive development. This included the Pennsylvania Railroad’s famous GG1 locomotives.
In the 1960s the system was rebuilt to handle the newer foreign and domestic electric locomotives as well as multiple-unit car development that GE also was involved in during the 1960s and 1970s. The electrification of the catenary lasted into the 1990s when preference for diesel locomotives and lagging electric locomotives sales prompted GE to mothball the catenary in place.
Damage from a downed tree in 2016 severed the wires in one spot on the line but it was cleaned up in that location and left in place until this past weekend. The area where it was severed was hit by copper thieves causing damage that brought a section of the wires down, fouling the tracks. This resulted in a closure of the test track for 3 days. It was also found that some of the wooden poles were rotten through, creating a potential safety hazard to crews operating on the line.
Some of the hardware will be retained for now and sources close to the East Erie Commercial Railroad and Wabtec say they had not closed the door on building electric locomotives at the Erie plant. Work to remove the catenary is expected to be completed by Wednesday.
For that matter, too bad it probably would cost too much to rebuild the line up to the train museum in North East.
Too bad this can’t be part of a trolley museum.
Kind of funny(?) this happens at the same time as BM&LP ceasing operations…
Just a sign of the times. But damn, GG1’s, Little Joes, Y1’s, EP3’s, E33’s and any more. Americans built some of the best electric locomotives ever.
Not to mention the copper thieves.
As I see it, Wabtec is not interested in building electric locomotives or MU cars in Erie.
Easily replaceable if ever again needed.