Hanover: January 2009 Archives

553 VJ intersection.JPG


Cannonball reader Bob Resig sent in a series of photographs tracing Elijah V. White's route from what later became Valley Junction in southern York County, Pennsylvania, to Hanover Junction. This historic trace was once the Hanover Branch Railroad's right of way, and President Abraham Lincoln rode through here twice before and after his Gettysburg Address.

Bob's photo shows the old roadbed as it bends through the Civil War-era Miller farm. Some of White's Comanches may have followed the tracks northeasterly to a nearby bridge, while others took what is today's Park Road south down to Sinsheim road before turning toward Jefferson.

Let's retrace the historic route of the HBRR, nestled in scenery little changed from when Honest Abe rode these rails. I have intermixed Bob Resig's photos with some aerial photos from Yahoo.com, as these satellite photographs still show much of the original trace of the Hanover Branch Railroad.

All aboard!


HBRR.jpg

Please click anywhere on the map for a much more readable, larger view. The red circles were waystations along the Hanover Branch Railroad; the red line to the right is the section of the railroad that was abandoned to the elements decades ago.


Previous posts:
The Hanover Branch Railroad - Part 1 of a series
The Hanover Branch Railroad - Part 2
The Hanover Branch Railroad - Part 3


The approximate route of the historic Hanover Branch Railroad can be seen in the above map. The base map, courtesy of Google.com, shows the modern railroad tracks leading from Hanover, Pennsylvania, through Smith's Station to Porters Sideling, where they turn to the south. The existing track bed from Hanover is essentially the same as that of the old HBRR, and Elijah V. White and his raiders would have traveled this route. Undoubtedly some of his roughly 230 men would have followed the tracks themselves from Hanover while their ambulance, forge wagon, ammunition wagon, and a small train of empty supply wagons presumably used local roads that roughly parallel the tracks.

In the next few installments in this series (leading up to the skirmish and sacking of Hanover Junction), we will retrace some of the old HBRR line. Reader Bob Resig has sent in some photos taken a few years ago of some of the embankments of the old HBRR, as well as some piers from the old bridges that White burned (which were rebuilt in the months after the June 27, 1863, cavalry raid.


HJ skirmish field 2.JPG

Modern view of Hanover Junction from the approximate line of the Union defensive positions that "protected" the junction in June 1863.

With the rapid development of the railroad industry in the 1840s and 1850s, farmers in rural areas such as southern York County now had a convenient and reasonably priced way to get their produce and goods to markets in larger towns such as Baltimore and Harrisburg, as well as points beyond. Several new railroads were constructed in the county, and work crews were kept quite busy laying out and building the lines. Once the railroad tracks were finished and all the supporting buildings, signage, etc. in place, commercial service began. Small hamlets developed around many of the refueling stops / cargo / passenger stations, and York County maps became dotted with new names such as Hanover Junction, Smith's Station, Porters Sideling, and dozens of other waysides.

Among the new railroads was the Hanover Branch, which ran from Hanover Junction (where it connected with what became the Northern Central) and the bustling town of Hanover. Later, another railroad connected Hanover with Gettysburg to the west.

All three roads became targets of the Confederate raiders in late June 1863, with the vulnerable wooden bridges being particular objects of Rebel attention.


Grazr



About this Archive

This page is a archive of entries in the Hanover category from January 2009.

Hanover: December 2008 is the previous archive.

Hanover: February 2009 is the next archive.

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