Wikipedia:WikiProject Trains/ICC valuations/Cape Charles Railroad

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Interstate Commerce Commission, Volume 114, Valuation Reports

The Cape Charles Railroad[edit]

Location and General Description of Property[edit]

The railroad of The Cape Charles Railroad Company, hereinafter called the carrier, is a single-track standard-gauge steam railroad, extending between Cape Junction and Kiptopeke, Va., a distance of 9.666 miles. The carrier also owns yard tracks and sidings aggregating 1.505 miles, making a total mileage of all tracks of 11.171 miles.

Jointly Used Property[edit]

In addition to its owned mileage the carrier operates, under trackage agreement and without compensation to the owner, over 2.7 miles of track in and around Cape Junction owned by New York, Philadelphia and Norfolk Railroad Company.

Economic Conditions Relating to Traffic[edit]

The principal products of the region traversed by the railroad of the carrier are those of the farm.

Corporate History[edit]

The carrier was incorporated on March 24, 1906, under the general laws of Virginia. Its organization was at the instance of the New York, Philadelphia and Norfolk Railroad Company, which controls the carrier through ownership of a majority of the capital stock. The principal office of the carrier is at Cape Charles, Va. The property of the carrier was acquired by construction. Purchases of right of way by the New York, Philadelphia and Norfolk Railroad Company for the carrier were made as early as January, 1906, but actual construction work on the first section of the line, from Cape Junction to Townsend, was not begun until 1910, that section being completed and opened for operation on December 1 of that year. A subsequent extension from Townsend to Kiptopeke was built by the carrier with its own forces during the period November, 1911, to March 18, 1912, and opened for operation on the latter date.

Road[edit]

The volume of grading averages about 5,000 cubic yards of excavation per mile of road. The carrier owns a telephone line, covering the entire road.