Anthracite Coal Field Maps
with Early Railroad Routes

S F Payer
2/25/03

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Mid - Anthracite Topography --- Hazleton to Ashland
Girardville--Streets Girardville-USGS McAdoo-Audenreid-USGS McAdoo-Hazleton McAdoo-Hazleton-USGS
Girardville--Streets Girardville-USGS Topographical McAdoo-Audenreid
USGS Topographical
McAdoo-Hazleton
Outline Topo
McAdoo-Hazleton
USGS Topographical
McAdoo-Shenandoah McAdoo--Streets McAdoo-Tresckow-Audenreid-Patchtowns North Schuylkill County Shenandoah-Ashland-USGS
McAdoo -Shenandoah Outline McAdoo--Streets Patchtowns---McAdoo-
Audenreid-Beaver Brook-
Hazleton
North Schuylkill
County
Shenandoah-Ashland
USGS Topographical
Shenandoah-Girardvlle Shenandoah--Streets Shenandoah-USGS    
Shenandoah-Girardville USGS Topo Shenandoah--Streets Shenandoah-USGS
Topographical
   
Mid - Anthracite Topography --- McAdoo, Hazleton Local & East
Schuylkill and Surrounding Counties McAdoo-Hazleton Outline Topo McAdoo-Hazleton Mcadoo-Hazleton w Patchtowns (magn) McAdoo Aerial
Profile Path - Conyngham to Tamaqua Profile - Conyngham to Tamaqua 3D Spring Mountain
Terrain
Spring Mtn 3D
Terrain Wide View
'Paragon'
Land Grab
The Coal Basins and Drainage Tunnels
     
  AnthraciteCoalBasins
Note: 675KB
  The DrainageTunnels  
The Old Towns and Patches


Tri-County, Northeast
Mid-Anthracite

 

McAdoo-Hazleton Locale

INDEX


Southwest
Anthracite


Indian Times Map

The Counties of the Region
 
Schuylkill County, circa 1880   Mid and South Anthracite Townships
1870 through 1900
1868 & 1884 Railroads
Legend-rr005210-1884 Legend-rr005800-1868 rr005210-Mid Anthracite-Hazleton rr005800-1868-Mid Anthracite Coal Fields rr5210-Easton to Tremont
Legend-rr005210
1884
Legend-rr005800
1868
rr005210-Mid Anthracite
McAdoo Local 1884
rr005800-1868-Mid
Anthracite 1868
rr5210-Easton to
Tremont 1884
rr5210-Mid Anthracite Coal Fields rr5210-NYC to Easton rr5210-Tremont to Lewistown
rr5210-Mid Anthracite
1884
rr5210-NYC to Easton
1884
rr5210-Tremont to
Williamstown 1884
Coal Vein Levels

Pennsylvania
Coal Region

Counties

Map Notes:

The topographical maps are from the USGS series, most dated 1969 and updated in the 1980s, obtained from the Penn State University archive; The simpler outline topos, streets and 3D views were derived from DeLorme Topo USA software. The railroad maps come from the Library of Congress' 'American Memories' Series of prints and photographs. Further sources for the county and township maps are indicated on the pages where they appear.

For a better picture of some of the (south of Hazleton) mine patches see the regional map ca. 1875. This 539 KByte map was manufactured by using several old maps of small areas as overlays to a modern US Geological Survey quadrangle. Using computer aided drafting methods, the small maps were scaled to appropriate reference points and overlaid in red and blue on the USGS map. The contour lines were removed for improved clarity --- except for the strippings, (strip mines), and coalbanks around Audenreid to indicate the present state of old Yorktown. Most of the correspondences are quite accurate. We may be off by a few feet in the McAdoo locale, a half block or so at Hazleton. This is because most effort was applied to precisely locate the long-gone Yorktown. It was most interesting to track the faint traces of roads and places on the modern map with the long ago cartography of the 1875 surveys.

Similar techniques were applied to a series of circa 1880-1890 coalfield geology maps to manufacture the picture/map of the Eastern Mid-Anthracite Coal Fields and a partial of the South- and West-Mid Anthracite Fields.


 

The Early Railroads of the Coalfields

View online and trace an early railroad journey from Port Clinton to Catawissa in Harper's Monthly, June, 1862 from the Cornell University 'Making of America' web site.

This and similar stories are (improbably, since the objective location is at least 110 miles distant), collected in the The Catskill Archive, which see below ...

The Catawissa RR transit begins at Port Clinton, through Tamaqua, on through the Tuscarora-Quakake Valley, and up the switchback on the Spring Mountain. Here it reaches its highest point at Summit (now Lofty). From there it passes through the Lofty Tunnel and descends slowly on the north side of Spring/Mahanoy/Locust Mountain to the valley of the Catawissa Creek. At that time this trip was something of an adventure, the full Catawissa RR having been completed only a few years earlier. Coal was only beginning to be mined then at this remote edge of Schuylkill County near the patch towns of Honeybrook and Silverbrook of the West Audenreid Basin. By 1884 the Catawissa RR had become part of the Philadelphia & Reading Railroad Co.

Connections with early Klein and East Union Townships

Lofty Tunnel and the LVRR 'Arch'

The Lofty Tunnel Today

The 'Arch' Today


Great stories of regional early American railroading:

The Catskill Archive Railroad Extra Stories Index

Catskill Archive's: A Trip To The Gravity Railroad at Mauch Chunk (now Jim Thorpe)

Catskill Archive: A Wider Ranging Trip through the Coalfields

Catskill Archive: Switchback Excursion - To Mauch Chunk and the "High Bridge"

See some excellent modern photographs of the terrain near Jim Thorpe and the old resort at Glen Onoko here. Click on the icon cameras on the picture index map.


Lehigh Valley Railroad (1) -- Ignore the badly done home page, the rest is worth looking at.

Lehigh Valley Railroad (2) -- A comprehensive picture gallery.

Lehigh valley Railroad (3) -- Links to early railroading and more. "No beavers in Beaver Meadows"

LVRR Timetable

See a thorough and illustrated treatment of Anthracite Country railroading at "Black Diamonds to Tidewater", a web site for the Jersey Central Railroad.


 

 

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