York Railway


The York Railway is a shortline railroad operating of track in and near York, Pennsylvania. The company was created in 1999 through a consolidation of Yorkrail, Inc. and the Maryland and Pennsylvania Railroad, both owned by the Emons Railroad Group, and it immediately sold the property thus acquired to limited liability subsidiaries with the same names. Genesee & Wyoming Inc. gained control of the company, and the other Emons properties, in 2002.
The York Railway operates two parallel main lines, extending southwest from York to CSX Transportation interchanges. Most of the M&P's original line from York to Baltimore has been abandoned, but a short piece in York is still operated. The M&P's current main line is an ex-Pennsylvania Railroad line it acquired from the Penn Central Transportation Company in 1976, beginning at a connection with the Norfolk Southern Railway in York and running to a CSX connection at Hanover. The Yorkrail line, running from a junction with the M&P in York to a CSX connection at Porters Sideling, PA, was opened in 1893 by the Baltimore and Harrisburg Railway, a predecessor of the Western Maryland Railway, and sold by CSX Transportation to Yorkrail in 1989. The York Railway owns three ex-Santa Fe CF7 diesels: #1500, 1502 and 1504 that were usually operated as a pair, and alternated to equalize operating hours. The railroad also operates ex-CSX EMD GP16 diesels #1600, 1602, 1604 and 1606 as well as a pair of LTEX GP15-1s numbered 1414 and 1444. The 1502 and 1504 have been parked for several years in a dead line between Hokes Mill Road and South Sumner Street in York, PA, along with GP9 1754. In early February 2018, the railway removed a traction motor from No. 1504 and put it in No. 1606. The three in the deadline will eventually be scrapped.