BZ&C Engine 12, no date

Final run of the Bellaire, Zanesville, and Cincinnati Railway

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It was Ohio’s longest-lived narrow gauge railroad.

Monroe County’s rugged terrain hindered commerce and communication during the 1800s. In the early 1870s Woodsfield businessmen, led by banker Samuel L. Mooney, promoted a narrow-gauge railroad to connect to the Baltimore and Ohio at Bellaire.

Original caption reads: The Woodsfield ceremony for the OR&W's last run. Mayor Clyde Merskel is speaking from the top of the box car. A George Kampheffner photo. (Gerald Seebach Collection)
Original caption reads: The Woodsfield ceremony for the OR&W’s last run. Mayor Clyde Merskel is speaking from the top of the box car.

Narrow gauge railroads were popular during this boom era because they cost less to build and operate than standard-gauge lines and could traverse sharp curves and steep terrain.

The Bellaire and Southwestern Railway was completed through Armstrong’s Mills and Beallsville to Woodsfield in December 1879, giving Monroe County a welcome modern link to the rest of the country.

Its initial success prompted its extension westward, and it was soon renamed the Bellaire, Zanesville, and Cincinnati Railway, reaching Zanesville via Caldwell in late 1883.

While it served a vital role in the Monroe County life, by 1886 the BZ&C had defaulted on its construction bonds and entered the first of many receiverships. Its 300 trestles and bridges were expensive to maintain; frequent landslides added to operating costs.

Only the coal and oil booms of the 1890s, along with convoluted financing schemes, kept the railroad operating into the 20th century; a benefit for the people of Monroe County if not its stockholders. Reborn as the Ohio River and Western (locally called the “Old, Rusty, and Wobbly”) in 1902, it continued to operate at a loss until the Great Depression. The Village of Woodsfield had staged a ceremony for the first narrow gauge train to arrive in town Tuesday December 2nd, 1879. Similarly, a ceremony was held on Memorial Day May 30, 1931 for the last train. Hundreds turned out. The BZ&C had lasted 52 years.

Eleanore Hancher took this picture of her high school classmates at the Caldwell, OH depot of the BZ&C probably around 1918 when she was 16 and a senior in high school. Hancher lived 10 miles away in Whigville and rode the line she nicknamed 'Bumpy, Zigzag, and Crooked' each Monday to attend high school in Caldwell. She spent the week in a home near the school, where she had room and board, and then on Friday took the narrow gauge back to Whigville (which had no high school of its own).
Eleanore Hancher took this picture of her high school classmates at the Caldwell, OH depot of the BZ&C probably around 1918 when she was 16 and a senior in high school. Hancher lived 10 miles away in Whigville and rode the line she nicknamed ‘Bumpy, Zigzag, and Crooked’ each Monday to attend high school in Caldwell. She spent the week in a home near the school, where she had room and board, and then on Friday took the narrow gauge back to Whigville (which had no high school of its own).

Source: Historical Marker for ‘Bent, Zigzag, and Crooked’

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One comment

  1. Col.mooneys standard guage cutoff railroad in southeast ohio is it still operational?

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