Peter has been involved with the railroad from the beginning, starting out driving hay wagons as a teenager in the early days of CVSR trips to Hale Farm and Village, as well as working concessions, and helping on equipment restoration projects during the summer. Later on, he became involved in the railroad’s bookkeeping, and, after taking a few years away, came back and served on the Board of Directors with his Father. Now, 47 years after driving those hay wagons, he’s in charge of the whole operation.
The CVSR today has changed significantly from when Siegfried founded it in 1972. “It’s a very different railroad”, Peter says. In the early days, there might be 200 passengers a weekend. Today, the railroad typically handles around 200,000 passengers per year, with ridership nearly doubling every year. Events like the yearly “Steam in the Valley” event featuring Nickel Plate Road 2-8-4 No. 765 from the Fort Wayne Railroad Historical Society have certainly contributed to that, as well as newer features, such as dinner trains and first-class cars, like the former California Zephyr cars the railroad acquired in 2018.
Siegfried is a spry 87 today, and he is still proud to speak about the railroad he helped start, and he can regale you with hours of stories about the early years and his time running the operation, speaking in his thick German accent. Siegfried immigrated to Canada from Germany in 1957, and later to the United States in 1959. He tells one story of how he first had the idea of having passenger trains bring people to the Hale Farm and Village via what was then the Cleveland – Akron route of the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad, which also followed the path of the historic Ohio & Erie Canal. He had noticed that there was not much traffic was running on the line, and he decided to take his idea to the local B&O officials. “They practically threw me out of the office!” he says. But he didn’t give up, of course, within a few years, they would have the railroad after all, and would be sharing the scenic beauty of the Cuyahoga Valley National Park with generations of railfans and tourists from around the globe. “The railroad has been one of the most fantastic things in my life,” Siegfried says.
This father/son duo has brought the enjoyment of heritage and tourist railroading to thousands of people in Northeast Ohio and far beyond for nearly 50 years, and they don’t look to be stopping anytime soon. They’re always restoring and purchasing equipment to fit the needs of the operation, and always looking at new ideas. With Peter Buerling now at the throttle of the operation his father founded, the Cuyahoga Valley Scenic Railroad looks to be steaming forward with a bright future.
a great operation with Budd mostly ex- PRR 22 roomette cars that were rebuilt as coaches.and a B&O FA. Great way to spend the day and very reasonable.
It’s the CVSR’s standard livery. It is indeed very similar to the IAIS.
Jf, gotcha. That livery is very reminiscent of the IAIS.
Andrew Winegar, RS18 1822 and C424 4241 are of Canadian Pacific Heritage, same #’s.
It is certainly one of the top class operations in the country! Such wide diversity of passenger options, from the 765 trips to the “bike the trail and ride the rail” return.
A couple of former Iowa Interstate locomotives in that picture?