Finally, in 1884 the Eastern Shore not only had a railroad
but also one of the largest corporations in the nation operating in
its
midst. The Pennsylvania Railroad had entered into a traffic agreement
with the Peninsula Railroad, now renamed the New York, Philadelphia
and
Norfolk Railroad Company. With this powerful connection the Eastern Shore's
transformation seemed foreordained to many residents. It was to become
the produce "garden" of the cities, the place of rest and relaxation
for urbanites, the orchard land of the east coast. William L. Scott,
the
Erie, Pennsylvania, coal magnate who was a leading investor in the N.Y.,
P. & N., expected that the railroad would bring a "great revolution"
in the variety of agricultural products that would enter the Philadelphia
and New York markets. He noted the gentle climate of the shore, which
he compared with Marseilles, France, and the superb quality of the soil,
which, he said, exceeded that of Long Island.
32
The natural features of the region were not the only sources for the bright
future that William Scott envisioned. At a cost of nearly $300,000, the
N.Y., P. & N. was dredging a new harbor out of a large fresh-water
lagoon between King’s and Old Plantation creeks in lower Northampton
County, and Scott planned to develop a new town around it called Cape
Charles City. The appellation “City” for any place on the
Eastern Shore was romantic, a vision of the future that the railroad might
make possible. To dramatize the opportunities, Scott suggested, "Take
a compass and draw a circle over the lower Chesapeake, within a radius
of seventy-five miles of Cape Charles, and you will find that 18,000,000
bushels of oysters are gathered every year, while there are only about
four millions taken from all other waters of the country."
33
Cape Charles City and its harbor were planned as a hub for traffic flowing
via steamboat and barge to and from Norfolk where numerous railroad lines
extended South and West. Less than a year after its founding, a reporter
described the place as “an embryo city . . . with a breakwater,
long piers, and sundry warehouses and other buildings.” In 1887
the Pennsylvania, the N.Y., P. & N., and the Wilmington and Weldon
Railroad agreed on a traffic arrangement, the “Atlantic Coast Despatch,”
which greatly facilitated the shipment northward of Southern early fruits
and vegetables. A few years later the N. Y., P. & N.’s allies
in Congress placed Cape Charles harbor in the River and Harbor Act. In
1890 the Corps of Engineers dredged the harbor basin, its entrance, and
a channel through Cherrystone Inlet and built stone jetties protecting
the harbor outlet. By 1912 the Corps estimated that Cape Charles harbor
handled 2,500,000 tons of freight a year.
34
Over the next several decades the N.Y., P. & N. continued to expand
and improve its infrastructure. Beginning in 1906, the railroad double-tracked
its line using heavier rails and in 1912 completed an extension Southward
from Cape Charles City to Kiptopeake. It installed a block signal system
in 1908, substituted telephone for telegraph dispatching in 1912, and
replaced manual signals with electric in 1923. It built new shops and
offices at Cape Charles City in 1910 and all the while added and upgraded
sidings. Boxcar capacity increased from 40,000 lbs. in the 1880s to 100,000
in 1901. Boxcars were equipped with ventilators for the shipment of seafood
and vegetables and after 1913 were of all-steel construction.
35
Where the earliest travelers on the new rail line had seen “little
except pine forests, corn fields, fallow fields and here and there a farm
house surrounded by a few fruit trees,” those that followed soon
after discovered “new settlements appearing, and buildings going
up wherever a station has been built.” From the new depots (eventually
numbering twenty-eight) rail cars carried away seafood from the Broadwater,
mine props from the swampy forests of the upper Accomack bayside, and
produce – onions, cabbages, strawberries, and sweet and white potatoes
– from the peninsula’s farms. “The stimulus of profitable
trade piles up the stations with their produce,” an Englishman observed,
“for they are engaged in feeding populations numbering several millions,
from 200 to 500 miles northward. The rapid trains for the quick delivery
of produce go as far as Boston, and in some cases to Canada. In 12 hours
the fresh and tempting fruits and vegetables are delivered in New York,
in 20 hours in Boston, and in 30 hours in Montreal.” A few of the
depots remained villages busy only at the harvest, but others grew rapidly
into towns.
36
The towns developed as nodes on a greater network, as residents rearranged
the landscape around the railroad. Local people, not the railroad corporation,
developed most of the railroad towns. All were laid out in a more or less
regular pattern with their business districts adjacent to and often facing
the rail yard and their residential neighborhoods, developed by different
people at different times, laid out in square or rectangular blocks. Cape
Charles City and Parksley, planned by Northern investors, were more formally
arranged. They were laid out in a grid with lots reserved not only for
businesses and residences but also for a variety of community purposes.
One of Parksley’s founders boasted that “foresight was shown
in the reservation of a five acre site to be maintained as a park on the
west side of the railroad and a one acre lot on the east side to be used
as a playground. An additional five acres were reserved for school buildings
and two choice lots were granted to each church which applied for same.”
37
A network of new roads soon connected the countryside to the railroad
towns. Neither stream nor swamp discouraged the farmers, watermen, and
lumbermen who yearned for more direct access to the rails. In 1898, for
example, the haul between the seaside necks and the station at Painter
was shortened by the bridging of the Machipongo River. Meanwhile, Slutkill
Neck on the bayside was more directly linked to the depot at Onley by
the building of multiple spans across the upper reaches of Onancock Creek.
Before the coming of the railroad, the Eastern Shore’s road pattern
had resembled a grid with the north to south roads (known as the seaside,
middle, and bayside roads) crossing those running east to west from sea
to bay. Now it more closely resembled a sequential series of webs emanating
from each of the railroad towns. So intricate had the pattern become
that an architectural historian writing in the 1970s mistakenly attributed
its origin to medieval England.
38
Published: 31 July 2007
© 2007 William G. Thomas III, Brooks Miles Barnes, Tom Szuba and
Southern Spaces