The Empire Steel and Iron Company acquired Crane in 1899, and in 1905 created the Crane Railroad to operate the industrial trackage in Catasauqua. Between 1911 and 1912, the Crane Railroad constructed a spur east from Catasauqua a slag dump in Kurtz' Valley; this line included a 735 feet (224 m) tunnel.[2] The Lehigh and New England Railroad (L&NE), whose Bethlehem Branch ran north–south approximately 6 miles (9.7 km) east of Catasauqua, constructed a 5.43-mile (8.74 km) connection from that branch to the eastern end of the Crane Railroad's tracks. This extension was completed on April 1, 1914, and the L&NE acquired the Crane Railroad on September 23, 1914. The line was thereafter known as the Catasauqua Branch.[3]
The post-World War II decline in coal traffic and the shift of cement haulage from trains to trucks led to the L&NE abandoning operations on October 31, 1961.[4] The Central Railroad of New Jersey established the Lehigh and New England Railway to acquire some of the L&NE's lines, including 4.4 miles (7.1 km) of the Catasauqua Branch. The remainder, from Catasauqua to Schoenersville, was abandoned. This remaining section of the line served a new industrial park in Schoenersville.[5]
The Lehigh and New England Railway suffered from cash-flow problems in the 1970s and was one of many Northeastern railroads included in Conrail in 1976.[6] The Catasauqua Branch was one of the lines transferred to Conrail.[7] Conrail called the line the Schoenersville Industrial Track.[8] The remaining line was out of service by 1991 and has since been abandoned.[9]
Kulp, Randolph L., ed. (1972). History of Lehigh and New England Railroad Company. Allentown, Pennsylvania: Lehigh Valley Chapter, National Railway Historical Society, Inc. OCLC2683061.