On March 4, 1851, Robert McCurdy, Josiah Benner, and Henry Myers secured a charter for the Gettysburg Railroad Company.[1] The groundbreaking was on February 22, 1856;[1] the first mortgage was issued in 1857,[2] and the railroad opened between Hanover Junction[3] and New Oxford on January 6, 1858[4] (the first passenger train had entered Adams County on September 14, 1857).[1] After construction commenced from New Oxford on June 24, 1858,[4] a locomotive first entered the Gettysburg borough on November 29.[1] Service from Goulden's Station had begun by September 27,[5] the line was "completed" at Gettysburg on December 1, 1858, with operations over the Gettysburg Railroad Company tracks managed from that date by the Hanover Branch RR until June 12, 1859.[2] The last spike was driven at Gettysburg on December 16, 1858 (12:30 a.m.); and that day at Hanover, company representatives met an official "party of Baltimoreans" with the Blues Band from Calvert railway station. The group arrived at Gettysburg at 3 p.m. where a reception was held at "a large and recently furnished building near the depot".[6] The Gettysburg Railroad Station contracted in the fall[7] opened in May 1859 after the railroad had been the site of a New Oxford riot at the end of December 1858.[8]
^ abcdBennett, Gerald (2006) [1999]. The Gettysburg Railroad Station: A Brief History. Gettysburg Railroad Station Restoration Project. pp. 4–6.
^ abPoor, Henry V (1860). "Gettysburg Railroad". History of the Railroads and Canals of the United States. New York: John H. Schultz and Co. p. 443. Retrieved May 10, 2011 – via Google Books.
^ abBaer, Christopher T. "PRR Chronology, 1858"(PDF). A General Chronology of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company Predecessors and Successors and Its Historical Context. Pennsylvania Railroad Technical and Historical Society. Retrieved June 21, 2009.
^"Railroad Report: To The Stockholders Of The Gettysburg Railroad Company". The Adams Sentinel. January 17, 1859. Retrieved May 10, 2011 – via Google News Archives. The Grading and Bridging of the road was completed by Messrs Irwin & Taylor … During the fall a contract was concluded with Messrs. Warner of Gettysburg for the erection of an Engine-house, a Freight-House and a Passenger station at Gettysburg. … ground from Messrs. 'Doersom & Codori [for the houses] and from Geo. W. McClellan, for the passenger station on the Corner of Carlisle and Railroad street