

Hobo's Guide to the Pennsy
Dayton, Xenia & Belpre Railroad Co.
Edited by Tom Vondruska (deceased)
Dayton, Xenia & Belpre Railroad Co.
When the Columbus & Xenia Railroad was conceived,
the intention was to build its tracks through Xenia (Greene Co.)
and the Little Miami RR to Dayton (Montgomery Co.). Instead in 1851
the Dayton, Xenia & Belpre was incorporated to build a rail line
from Dayton through Xenia to Washington Court House (Fayette Co.)
through the then-promising but still undeveloped coal fields of
Southeast Ohio to Belpre, Ohio, in Washington Co. Incidentally,
across the Ohio River from Belpre was Parkersburg, W.Va. where the
Baltimore & Ohio planned its Cincinnati-bound line to cross the
mighty river.
Construction of the new line began in 1853 and in
early 1854, after just six months, the railhead reached Xenia and
the LM&C&X with its connections to the east coast via the CC&C Ry.
and the Lakeshore RR. While a roadbed was surveyed, purchased,
grubbed and graded another 18 miles east, to Washington C.H., all
pretense of extended east of Xenia was dropped as was any reference
to Belpre in the company's name. The Dayton & Xenia was now part of
a transcontinental rail route. While it required frequent changes
of trains, by 1856 it was possible to travel by train more than
1,000 miles from New York to Illinois and the Mississippi River
near St. Louis.
The DX&B was sold at foreclosure in 1865 to the
LM&C&X. Like the other Little Miami holdings, the DX&B became part
of the Pennsy system in 1870 when the Little Miami was leased to
the Pennsylvania Railroad for 99 years. The Little Miami lease was
assigned to the Pennsylvania Co. 1871. For operations the "P" Co.
made the entire 256-mile Little Miami made part of the "The
Panhandle Route ," the Pittsburgh, Cincinnati & St. Louis Ry.
At the western end of the 16-mile DX&P, between
Clement Tower guarding a crossing of the Cincinnati, Lebanon &
Northern (from the south) and the B&O's Dayton cutoff (to the
north) and Dayton Union Terminal Assoc. trackage at Wayne Tower was
a hill steep enough that through freights bound for Columbus or
Richmond were routine routed on the old Columbus, Chicago & Indiana
Central line via Urbana, Bradford, Greenville and New Paris. This
greater than one percent grade was the ruling grade for Amtrak's
National Limited while it used this stretch as part of its
Washington-St. Louis run from 1973-1979.
Conrail abandoned the line from Clement Yard on
Dayton's east side to Xenia in 1986 as it abandoned the
Pennsylvania's mainline between Clement Tower and London in
Madison County. From downtown Dayton to Clement, the line is
operated as a spur serving GM's Delphi Division (Delco) plants in
Kettering, Ohio (Montgomery Co.).
The 13-mile DX&B right of way into Xenia is being
developed as a rails-to-trail project. It will use the B&O cutoff
right of way abandoned by CSX to connect with Dayton's River
Corridor bikeway along the Mad and Great Miami rivers. In Xenia
it will connect with the 72-mile Springfield-Milford Little Miami
Scenic Trail at the Xenia Bicycle Hub. A visitor's center is being
built in 1997 at this park on the site of Xenia's passenger depot.
When complete it will be a replica of Xenia (WG) tower that for
more than 100 yoars guarded the divergance of the D&XP and Little
Miami railroad south of downtown Xenia.
Copyright 1996 - 2008
Last modified: November 24 2007.
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