Reading Railroad
Reading Railroad was a major railroad company that operated in eastern Pennsylvania and surrounding areas, headquartered in Philadelphia. Founded in 1833 to haul anthracite coal from the mines of Schuylkill County to the port of Philadelphia, the Reading (pronounced "REDD-ing," like the city) grew into a significant railroad system that also carried passengers and general freight. The company is perhaps best known today for its place in the board game Monopoly, where "Reading Railroad" is one of four railroad properties. In its heyday, the Reading operated important commuter services in the Philadelphia area and competed fiercely with the Pennsylvania Railroad for traffic. The company built Reading Terminal in Center City Philadelphia, a magnificent headhouse that still stands as part of the Pennsylvania Convention Center, with its historic train shed home to the Reading Terminal Market. The Reading Railroad went through multiple bankruptcies and was eventually absorbed into Conrail in 1976, but its legacy persists in Philadelphia's transportation infrastructure and architectural heritage.[1]
Coal and Origins
[edit | edit source]The Reading Railroad was created to solve a transportation problem: how to move anthracite coal from Pennsylvania's Schuylkill County mines to markets in Philadelphia and beyond. Anthracite—hard coal that burns hotter and cleaner than bituminous coal—was essential to the growing industrial economy, but the mountainous terrain between the coal regions and the coast made transportation difficult. Earlier canal systems proved slow and seasonally limited. The Philadelphia and Reading Railroad, chartered in 1833, offered a year-round route that could move coal quickly and cheaply, and it quickly became the dominant carrier from the anthracite fields.[2]
The railroad's original main line ran 94 miles from Philadelphia to Reading, then extended into the coal regions. The route followed the Schuylkill River valley, taking advantage of the water-level grade through the mountains. The railroad's chief engineer, Moncure Robinson, designed a route that minimized curves and grades, creating an efficient coal highway that could handle heavy traffic. The railroad opened in sections during the late 1830s, with through service from Philadelphia to Pottsville beginning in 1842. From the beginning, coal dominated the Reading's traffic and profits, with the railroad hauling millions of tons annually from the mines to tidewater at Philadelphia.[1]
Expansion and Diversification
[edit | edit source]Under the leadership of Franklin B. Gowen, president from 1870 to 1883, the Reading expanded aggressively, acquiring coal mines, connecting railroads, and new lines that extended the system into new markets. Gowen sought to control the entire anthracite industry, from mines to transportation to distribution. His ambitions led to bitter conflicts with labor, including his controversial prosecution of the Molly Maguires, a secret society among Irish coal miners accused of violence and sabotage. Gowen's expansion also strained the company's finances, leading to bankruptcies in 1880 and 1884 that forced reorganization and more conservative management.[2]
The Reading developed passenger services that complemented its coal business. Commuter trains served growing suburbs in Montgomery and Berks Counties, connecting communities along the Schuylkill Valley with Center City Philadelphia. Long-distance trains provided service to New York via connections and to the Jersey Shore via the Reading's own lines and those of subsidiary companies. The passenger services never matched coal in importance to the Reading's bottom line, but they gave the company visibility and connected it to the daily lives of Philadelphia-area residents in ways that freight service alone could not.[1]
Reading Terminal
[edit | edit source]The Reading's most visible legacy in Philadelphia is Reading Terminal, the company's passenger station in Center City. The terminal, opened in 1893, featured an innovative design that placed the headhouse (containing waiting rooms, offices, and retail space) at street level while trains operated on an elevated train shed behind. The train shed, spanning 267 feet without interior supports, was an engineering marvel of its era and remains one of the largest single-span arched structures in the world. The headhouse, designed in the Italianate Renaissance Revival style, became a Center City landmark.[3]
Below the elevated train platforms, a public market had operated since 1892. Reading Terminal Market, opened a year before the station above it, provided space for farmers and food vendors to sell directly to the public. The market became a beloved Philadelphia institution, offering everything from Pennsylvania Dutch specialties to fresh produce to ethnic foods reflecting the city's diverse population. When passenger service to Reading Terminal ended in 1984 (with trains diverted to a tunnel connection to 30th Street Station), the market continued and even thrived. Today, Reading Terminal Market is one of Philadelphia's most popular attractions, drawing tourists and locals alike to its diverse food vendors.[4]
Decline and Consolidation
[edit | edit source]The Reading Railroad's fortunes declined with the coal industry that had created it. Oil and natural gas displaced coal as preferred fuels; the anthracite mines of eastern Pennsylvania were depleted or became uneconomical to work; and the railroads that had grown rich on coal traffic found their business evaporating. The Reading went through bankruptcy again in 1971, this time without recovery. In 1976, the Reading's freight operations were absorbed into Conrail, the government-sponsored corporation that consolidated multiple bankrupt northeastern railroads. SEPTA assumed the Reading's commuter services, which continue today as part of the regional rail network.[1]
The Reading headhouse and train shed were incorporated into the Pennsylvania Convention Center, which opened in 1993. The historic structures were preserved and integrated into the convention facility, giving the Convention Center an architectural distinction that purely new construction could not have provided. Reading Terminal Market continues to operate below, benefiting from the foot traffic generated by conventions while maintaining its identity as a public market. The Reading Railroad as a company is gone, but its physical legacy—the stations, the rights-of-way, the market—continues to serve Philadelphia.[3]
See Also
[edit | edit source]- Reading Terminal Market
- Pennsylvania Railroad
- Industrial Revolution in Philadelphia
- 30th Street Station