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Chesapeake & Ohio Historical Society releases Chesapeake & Ohio’s Craig Valley Branch

by Virginian Review Staff
in Local News
January 16, 2025
Reading Time: 7 mins read
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The cover of Chesapeake & Ohio’s Craig Valley Branch (Photo courtesy C & O Historical Society) 

The cover of Chesapeake & Ohio’s Craig Valley Branch (Photo courtesy C & O Historical Society) 

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Clifton Forge, Va. (VR) – The Chesapeake & Ohio Historical Society has released a publication that

highlights a Virginia rail line from the late 1800s that operated until 1961. The 112-page book,
titled Chesapeake & Ohio’s Craig Valley Branch, is a history of this relatively unknown operation
in a state with tremendous railroad heritage. The Craig Valley Branch was unique because the
line primarily hauled iron ore from mines adjacent to its territory, but also supported agricultural
shipments and passenger traffic, connecting goods and people to wider markets who might
have otherwise been economically isolated.
A collaboration between authors Al Kresse, Chuck McIntyre, and Dave Ostrander, this new
Craig Valley publication is intended to be the second in a series of three volumes on the C&O
Railway’s James River Subdivision, the first of which was the Lexington Virginia Branch
published in 2016 and the third to be a future title on the area’s section of the main rail line itself.
Expanding upon a sixteen-page article entitled “The Chesapeake and Ohio Railway‘s Craig
Valley Branch” published in the August 1991 issue of the Chesapeake & Ohio Historical
Magazine, the member magazine of the C&O Historical Society, the book is intended to provide
a detailed history of the construction, operation, decline and abandonment of the line, as well as
of iron mining operations in the Craig Valley which it was built to serve.
While the authors brought different strengths to the published work, for all three historians,
Chesapeake & Ohio’s Craig Valley Branch was a labor of love that appealed to each for unique
reasons.
Describing how he became interested in this rail line, co-author Al Kresse commented on his
work to preserve iron ore industrial history along with the Craig Valley’s rail history, “I got
interested in this project after being introduced by a local C&O Historical Society volunteer to
James Blizzard Mead, who was raised in Low Moor, Virginia, and had worked as a newspaper
reporter for the Richmond Times-Dispatch/News Leader and was retired living in Roanoke. Jim
was the nephew of James Blizzard, the comptroller for the Low Moor Iron Company who
oversaw the liquidation of the company’s equipment and properties between 1927 and 1930.
While researching the local blast furnaces and iron mines along the C&O Railway near Clifton
Forge for the Alleghany Iron project in 2010-2012, Jim, the local iron industry historian, drove
me around to most of the sites of the former Low Moor properties in the Low Moor and Rich
Patch, Potts Creek, and Craig Creek Valleys. I knew then that the C&O’s Craig Valley Branch’s
operations deserved more than a sixteen-page article on the subject.”

According to the C&O Historical Society, construction of the Craig Valley Branch of the
Chesapeake & Ohio Railway was initiated by the Craig Company in 1889. The line was
acquired and completed by the Chesapeake & Ohio Railway in June 1890 and August 1891,
respectively. Generally following Craig Creek, the branch line extended 26.45 miles from Eagle
Rock, Virginia at Milepost 213 along the C&O’s James

River Subdivision to a terminus at New Castle, Virginia. In addition to its primary purpose of
hauling iron ore from mines in Craig Valley, for the first 35 years the line was active hauling
pulpwood, agricultural goods, livestock, and modest passenger traffic. Once mining operations
ceased in the mid-1920s, however, another 35 years and three applications to the Interstate
Commerce Commission were required for abandonment of the line. Seventy years after it was
constructed, the branch line was formally abandoned in 1961, and subsequent to rail removal,
the right-of-way and bridges were donated to the Commonwealth of Virginia for highway
purposes in 1962.
Co-author Chuck McIntyre detailed his personal introduction to the rail history of the Craig
Valley region, “My association with the Craig Valley Subdivision began with a train excursion on
the James River line in 1968 when I was only ten, and the trip itinerary pointed out the bridge
crossing the James River, which I looked for and saw. Ten years later, I was working and
volunteering at the Alleghany Central Steam Railroad on the C&O Railway’s former Hot Springs
Subdivision, run by Jack Showalter. Jack had worked on the steam locomotives 377 and 378
and Bill Bursey, his regular engineer, had fired those locomotives on the Craig Valley Branch. I
heard a number of great stories about this line and I wanted to know more about it. One of the
other volunteers lived on Craigs Creek near Bridge 13, and I went on a number of trips
surveying the whole line at their invitation in the early 1980s. I became fascinated by how much
of it was left and visible with the numerous bridges and it was very scenic. Jack had actually
had it in mind for a scenic railroad when the abandonment came up, however the line went to
the Commonwealth of Virginia, and he had to wait about 15 years until the Hot Springs line
became available. Any time any information or article about ‘the Craig’ surfaced, I was all about
it and I am glad to be a part of the telling of its history. Even the 377 can be seen today [in
Baltimore].”
Putting the Craig Valley’s history into perspective, co-author Dave Ostrander reflected, “Each
branch line in the Chesapeake & Ohio Railway system had a distinctive character due to the
purpose for which they were built and terrain through which they passed. The Craig Valley
branch is unique as one of only two Chesapeake & Ohio branch lines developed primarily to
haul iron ore, rather than coal, and is notable for its reuse of seven truss and girder bridges
originally constructed for main line service. Once almost ubiquitous in their use on both railways
and highways, the truss and girder bridges that have survived to this day on the Craig Valley
Branch represent a veritable museum of late nineteenth and early twentieth century bridge
technology.”

The 112-page softbound book is printed to the same quality standards as the C&O Historical
Society’s other books and features hundreds of historic illustrations related to the Craig Valley
region.
C&O Historical Society President Mark Totten concluded, “For 56 years now, our non-profit
organization has been rescuing topics such as this from the oblivion of history. Our authors
have compiled an amazing work covering the people, communities, industries, transportation
history, and even recollections from Virginia’s Craig Valley. This title is the embodiment of our
mission–to preserve and share Chesapeake & Ohio Railway history–and the final product is a
superb and worthy tribute to the people who lived and worked in this region for so many
decades.”

The publication Chesapeake & Ohio’s Craig Valley Branch may be ordered online from
ChessieShop.com or from the C&O Historical Society’s Business Office & Archive, which is
open Monday through Friday from 9 AM – 5 PM and may be contacted by telephone at 540-862-
2210 or by email at cohs@cohs.org. The book is also available in the C&O Railway Heritage
Center’s gift shop, open from Tuesday through Sunday, 10 AM – 4 PM, at 705 Main Street,
Clifton Forge, VA.
The C&OHS archive database is available online at archives.cohs.org. Updates and additional
information can be found on Facebook under @cohs.org or on Instagram @ChessiesRoad.

This page is available to subscribers. Click here to sign in or get access.

Virginian Review Staff

Tags: SocietyVA

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Published on January 16, 2025 and Last Updated on January 16, 2025 by Christopher Mentz