Overview of the Erie Railroad
Harold WerthweinDescription
SOME ERIE RAILROAD HISTORY
The Erie moved a lot of milk and fresh produce, as well as the usual freight. One advantage the Erie had over other Eastern railroads was an extra-wide right of way. The Erie was built to six-foot gauge. When the wide gauge was changed to standard in the 1880s, a better-than-normal clearance was the result.
ARMCHAIR MODELER GETS SERIOUS
Harold Werthwein was an armchair modeler who got serious about building — very serious! The Delaware Division could handle over 40 trains during an operating session. Harold captured the feel of the Erie on this large layout due to careful attention to the scenery of southern New York and northeastern Pennsylvania.
This area includes probably the most famous railroad bridge of all, the Starrucca Viaduct.
WHY THE ERIE?
Harold decided to model the Erie for a few reasons. First, it’s the railroad he grew up with; second, it traverses an area with beautiful scenery that lends itself to a nice model; and third, accessibility. Everything in the layout is within a two-hour drive from Harold’s home, so if he had a question or problem while working on it, he could go look at the area in person.
MODEL LAYOUT
The HO-scale Erie Railroad fills Harold’s 85×30-foot basement. The benchwork is open grid. Most of the visible track is hand laid. Our trip begins in the hidden staging yard for Elmira, New York.
This is the Erie Railroad of Harold Werthwein. As a young man, Harold rode the Erie, watched it, and loved it. This affection for one railroad evolved into a lifetime of study and exploration. Now he's modeling the Delaware Division between Port Jervis and Binghamton, New York in HO scale. The Erie moved a lot of milk and fresh produce.
It also carried the usual freight. But one advantage the Erie had over other Eastern railroads was an extra-wide right of way. The Erie was built to six-foot gauge. When the wide gauge was changed to standard in the 1880s, a better than normal clearance was the result. Harold was an armchair-modeler who got serious about building.
And did he get serious! The Delaware Division can handle over 40 trains during an operating session. He's captured the feel of the Erie on this large layout because of careful attention to the scenery of Southern New York and Northeastern Pennsylvania. Of course, this area includes probably the most famous railroad bridge of all, the Starrucca Viaduct. Hi, I'm Allen Keller.
And this is Harold Werthwein, the creator of the Erie Delaware Division. Harold, why did you decide to model the Erie? Well, Allen, there's several reasons. The first, it's the railroad I grew up with as a kid, which was obviously many years ago. Secondly, it traverses an area that's, a beautiful scenery which I thought would lend itself to a nice model.
And thirdly, accessibility, everything I'm modeling is within a two-hour ride of the house. If I have a problem, I can go look at it and it's resolved. The HO scale Erie Railroad fills Harold's 85 x 30 foot basement. The bench work is open grid with spline roadbed. Most of the visible track is hand-laid.
Our trip begins in the hidden staging yard for Elmira, New York.
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