Eastern Shore Railway Museum

Last updated
Eastern Shore Railway Museum
Depot at Eastern Shore Railway Museum, Parksley, VA, August 2014.jpg
The former Hopeton, Virginia station was moved to Parksley and restored as part of the Eastern Shore Railway museum
Eastern Shore Railway Museum
Established1988 [1]
Location18468 Dunne Avenue
Parksley, Virginia
Coordinates 37°47′02″N75°39′07″W / 37.784°N 75.652°W / 37.784; -75.652
Type Rail [1]

The Eastern Shore Railway Museum is located at 18568 Dunne Avenue, Parksley, Virginia, United States. The museum exhibits historic rail cars and equipment. [1] The museum also contains a restored train station with railroad memorabilia from the lines that operated on the Eastern Shore of Virginia. [2]

The ESRM is open from noon until 4 p.m., Wednesday through Saturday, from March through October, and housed in a restored 1906 Pennsylvania Railroad passenger station. On its siding are two cabooses, [3] [4] a baggage car, [5] a Pullman sleeper, [6] Seaboard 6106, a Budd dining car, [7] a 1913 wooden box car [8] and the Diplomat, an observation car. [9] The museum also includes an 1890s maintenance-of-way tool shed, [10] a crossing guard shanty, [11] and various railroad artifacts. [12] [13] The ESRM no longer maintains a website but it does have a Facebook page. [14]

ESRM museum members were affiliated with the Delmarva Chapter NRHS who had staffed the annual train excursions in held on the first Saturday of October in Hurlock, Maryland. In recent years they were replaced by Wilmington Chapter NRHS members as the Parksley Chapter became depleted by the aging and passing away of its members.

ESRM members also took part in the annual Santa trains operated by the Bay Coast Railroad each year on the first Saturday in December. The train consisted of one Bay Coast locomotive pulling the museum's Fairfax River, a stainless steel Pullman car, and it start at the BCR's southern end at Cape Charles, Virginia at 9 a.m. and head north, stopping at Cheriton (9:50 a.m.), Eastville (10:40 a.m.), Nassawadox (11:45 a.m.), Exmore (12:30 p.m.), Painter (1:35 p.m.), Melfa (2:25 p.m.), Onley (3:30 p.m.), and Parksley (5 p.m.). Problems with the car's wheels prevented the train from running in December 2017 and in May 2018 the Bay Coast ceased operating entirely.

The demise of the Bay Coast has left the ESRM in danger of becoming rail-isolated from the national railroad network. At present the BCR's tracks are still in place; however, they were in a poor state of maintenance prior to the BCR's end of operations and subsequent filing for abandonment, and they would need millions of dollars in repairs to restore them to a satisfactory state. Richard Lewis, president of Associated Grain in Parksley, has asked that the Delmarva Central Railroad reopen the track south from its current terminus in Hallwood, Virginia, 11 miles to the north, to serve his facility. To date the DCR has said no, that the cost to restore the track would be too much and, despite the promise of 250 cars for three years, the DCR would lose money on each car. [15] If rail service to Parksley can be restored, the ESRM will be able to maintain its connection to the national railroad network. If not, it will become rail-isolated.

In January 2020 the Diplomat, [9] one of the museum's older exhibits, was to be trucked to the Colebrookdale Railroad in Boyertown, Pennsylvania and renovated for excursion use. Complications arose regarding the car's shipment and, over a year later, the car remained at the museum. In mid-March 2021 the Colebrookdale Railroad confirmed it still intended to acquire and move the car to Pennsylvania, and the ESRM has stated the current plan was for the car to be shipped on April 13, 2021. [16] A March 30, 2021 announcement on the ESRM's Facebook page, however, stated that the Colebrookdale Railroad had changed its mind and declined to acquire the car.

While the Diplomat has been on display at the museum, it is actually owned by the Delmarva Chapter NRHS and it has been on loan to the museum. Due to the aging and deaths of most of its members, the Chapter has become almost completely dormant and unable to maintain its rail car.

In July, however, the Colebrookdale Railroad changed their mind again, and on July 23, the Diplomat began its journey to Boyertown by truck. [17]

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 Parksley website. "Things to see in Parksely" Archived 2008-05-09 at the Wayback Machine . Retrieved on April 20, 2008.
  2. Virginia Tourism Corporation. "Eastern Shore Railway Museum" Archived 2008-02-12 at the Wayback Machine , Official Tourism Website of the Commonwealth of Virginia, 2008. Retrieved on April 20, 2008.
  3. "NKP 456 basks in the May sun at the Eastern Shore RR Museum".
  4. "Wabash 2783 Caboose at Parksley, VA".
  5. "RR Museum at Parksley, VA".
  6. "RFP "Fairfax County"".
  7. "Seaboard 6106".
  8. "Parksley, VA".
  9. 1 2 "The Diplomat".
  10. "Ye old toll shed".
  11. "Crossing guard shack".
  12. "Inside museum".
  13. "PRR/LIRR Artifacts".
  14. https://www.facebook.com/Eastern-Shore-Railway-Museum-642326862627001/ [ user-generated source ]
  15. Ritch, James (4 September 2019). "Cost of Repairs Debated". Eastern Shore Post.
  16. "Historic rail car to leave Parksley". 23 January 2020.
  17. The Diplomat Arrives! , retrieved 2021-10-24

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Parksley, Virginia</span> Town in Virginia, United States

Parksley is a town in Accomack County, Virginia, United States. The population was 842 at the 2010 census. It is home to the Eastern Shore Railway Museum.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Caboose</span> Crew car on the end of trains

A caboose is a crewed North American railroad car coupled at the end of a freight train. Cabooses provide shelter for crew at the end of a train, who were formerly required in switching and shunting, keeping a lookout for load shifting, damage to equipment and cargo, and overheating axles.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Pennsylvania-Reading Seashore Lines</span> Railroad that operated in southern New Jersey

The Pennsylvania-Reading Seashore Lines was a railroad that operated in South Jersey in the 20th century. It was created in 1933 as a joint consolidation venture between two competing railroads in the region: the Pennsylvania Railroad and the Reading Company.

Buckingham Branch Railroad is a Class III short-line railroad operating over 275 miles (443 km) of historic and strategic trackage in Central Virginia. Sharing overhead traffic with CSX and Amtrak, the company's headquarters are in Dillwyn, Virginia in the former Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad (C&O) station, itself a historic landmark in the community. The railroad was featured in the January 2012 issue of Trains Magazine. It is referenced in the How It’s Made episode “Railway Bridge Ties”, showing it crossing a curved bridge.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Eastern Shore Railroad</span>

The Eastern Shore Railroad, Inc. was a Class III short-line railroad that began operations in October 1981 on the 96-mile (154 km) former Virginia and Maryland Railroad line on the Delmarva Peninsula. The line ran between Pocomoke City, Maryland, and Norfolk, Virginia, interchanging with the Norfolk Southern Railway at both ends.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">New Hope Valley Railway</span> Heritage railroad in Bonsal, North Carolina

The New Hope Valley Railway is a heritage railroad in Bonsal, North Carolina operated by the North Carolina Railway Museum, Inc., an all-volunteer, nonprofit, and tax exempt educational and historical organization.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bay Coast Railroad</span>

The Bay Coast Railroad operated the former Eastern Shore Railroad line between Pocomoke City, Maryland, and Norfolk, Virginia. The railroad interchanged with the Delmarva Central Railroad in Pocomoke City and Norfolk Southern in Norfolk; the interchange in Pocomoke City had been with Norfolk Southern prior to December 2016, when the Delmarva Central Railroad leased 162 miles (261 km) of Norfolk Southern track on the Delmarva peninsula.

The Southern Michigan Railroad Society is a railway museum in Clinton, Michigan, United States. It has preserved 13.5 miles (21.7 km) of track and a variety of railroad equipment including the only GMDH-3 locomotive ever built. Trains are operated on a seasonal schedule.

The Stewartstown Railroad is a heritage railroad in Stewartstown, Pennsylvania. Chartered in 1884 by local interests in the Stewartstown area and opened in 1885, the Stewartstown Railroad survives today in very much original condition and retains its original corporate charter.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Virginia Museum of Transportation</span> Transport museum in Roanoke, Virginia

The Virginia Museum of Transportation (VMT) is a museum in Downtown Roanoke, Virginia, that is devoted to the topic of transportation.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Empire State Railway Museum</span> Railway museum in Phoenicia Railroad Station

Established in 1960, the Empire State Railway Museum is a non-profit railroad museum currently located in the historic Ulster & Delaware Phoenicia Railroad Station, Phoenicia, New York. The station was built in 1899 by the U&D, and is one of the few surviving examples left along the line. The museum owns a small collection of historic railroad equipment. The museum was formerly the publisher of the annual Steam Railroad Directory until the 2006 edition, when the title was taken over by Kalmbach Publishing and now released as the Tourist Trains Guidebook.

The National Railway Historical Society (NRHS) is a non-profit organization established in 1935 in the United States to promote interest in, and appreciation for the historical development of railroads. It is headquartered in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and organized into 16 regions and 170 local chapters located in the United States, Canada, and the United Kingdom. The NRHS sponsors the popular RailCamp summer orientation program in partnership with Amtrak and the National Park Service, offering high school youth hands-on experience in the railroad industry.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Norfolk and Western 1218</span> Preserved N&W class A locomotive

Norfolk and Western 1218 is a preserved four-cylinder simple articulated 2-6-6-4 steam locomotive, built in June 1943 by the Norfolk and Western's (N&W) Roanoke Shops in Roanoke, Virginia as part of the N&W's class "A" fleet of fast freight locomotives. It was retired from regular revenue service in July 1959, and was later restored by Norfolk Southern for excursion service for their steam program, pulling excursions throughout the eastern United States from 1987 to 1991. It is currently on display at the Virginia Museum of Transportation in Roanoke, Virginia.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">East Penn Railroad</span> Railway line in the United States of America

East Penn Railroad is a short-line railroad that operates a number of mostly-unconnected lines in Pennsylvania and Delaware. Except for two industrial park switching operations, all are former Pennsylvania Railroad or Reading Company lines, abandoned or sold by Conrail or its predecessors.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Railroad Museum of Oklahoma</span>

The Railroad Museum of Oklahoma is a railroad museum located in the former Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway freight depot in Enid, Oklahoma. The museum began in 1977 and is a non-profit operated by the Enid chapter of the National Railway Historical Society. The freight depot was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2015.

The Eastern Berks Gateway Railroad is a short-line railroad in Pennsylvania that runs from Boyertown south to Pottstown over the Colebrookdale branch, where it interchanges with the Norfolk Southern Railway. The railroad was operated by U.S. Rail Partners until 2013, when the Colebrookdale Railroad Preservation Trust took over.

The New York, Philadelphia and Norfolk Railroad was a railroad line that ran down the spine of the Delmarva Peninsula from Delmar, Maryland to Cape Charles, Virginia and then by ferry to Norfolk, Virginia. It became part of the Pennsylvania Railroad system.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lee Hall Depot</span> Historic railroad station in Newport News, Virginia

Lee Hall Depot is a historic train station and museum located in the Lee Hall neighborhood of Newport News, Virginia. It was built in about 1881, with a one-story cargo bay, and the two-story main section was added in 1893. Another one-story wing was added by the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway to the north end of the depot in 1918 to handle an influx of military personnel to Fort Eustis. The building is currently in use as a local history museum, focusing on the station's history, and the history of the Chesapeake & Ohio Railroad in Warwick County.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Colebrookdale Railroad</span> Heritage railroad based in Pennsylvania

The Colebrookdale Railroad, also known as the Secret Valley Line or colloquially as The Colebrookdale, is a tourist railroad located in the U.S. state of Pennsylvania. The railroad operates between Boyertown in Berks County and Pottstown in Montgomery County.

The Delmarva Central Railroad is an American short-line railroad owned by Carload Express that operates 188 miles (303 km) of track on the Delmarva Peninsula in the states of Delaware, Maryland, and Virginia. The railroad operates lines from Porter, Delaware to Hallwood, Virginia and from Harrington, Delaware to Frankford, Delaware along with several smaller branches. The DCR interchanges with the Norfolk Southern Railway and the Maryland and Delaware Railroad. The railroad was created in 2016 to take over the Norfolk Southern Railway lines on the Delmarva Peninsula. The DCR expanded by taking over part of the Bay Coast Railroad in 2018 and the Delaware Coast Line Railroad in 2019. In April of 2021, it also owns the line of Taneytown, Maryland, where the Taneytown and Thurmont Railroad currently operates with a wood burning steam engine since November of 2021.