The Pennsylvania
Railroad Company |
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Thumbnail History...Chartered in 1846, the Pennsylvania Railroad was nicknamed the Pennsy and styled itself as "The Standard Railroad of the World." With its stranglehold on the mid-Atlantic regional rail system it was at one time the most powerful railroad (and corporation,) in the country, if not the planet. Founded by a group of Philadelphia merchants, the objective of the company was to construct a through railway to Pittsburgh Pennsylvania, and thereby secure for the City of Brotherly Love the inland trade that was at risk of being siphoned off by the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad. In Western Pennsylvania, isolated as it was from the East by the Appalachian Mountain range, Nature had conspired to create a topography that favored a south-easterly flow of commerce. Early on the government of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania recognized the success that New York state had had with its Erie Canal. Pennsylvania had tried to emulate the Mohawk Valley project with its own "Main Line of Public Works." What it developed was a multipart transportation system utilizing canals, rails, and a portage railroad over the Allegheny mountains. Although it did reduce travel time between Philadelphia and Pittsburgh by nearly two-thirds, it was still inefficient, and its tonnage capacities were nowhere substantial enough to meet the demands of the booming steel and coal region. After a bruising legislative battle pitting most of Western Pennsylvania against the Philadelphia interests, on 13 April 1846, a charter for a 'Central Railroad' spanning Pennsylvania from East to West, was signed by the governor. At the same time, however, a competing charter allowing the B&O to enter Pittsburgh was also signed into law. To hasten the work, the articles mandated the PRR to have thirty miles of track either laid or under contract, and to have $3 million worth of their stock subscribed to by the end of July 1847. If those conditions were met, the B&O Act would be held null and void. Not only did the PRR supporters raise the capital which the law required, but they exceeded it, so bright were the line's prospects. In 1852 it opened the first direct all rail connection to Pittsburgh. Continuous through passenger service from Philadelphia to Pittsburgh was introduced on 18 July 1858. That inaugural train also bore the distinction of featuring the first smoking lounge as a regular feature of its consist. Over the next five decades the Pennsylvania Railroad grew at a remarkable pace. Profiting greatly in the Civil War, it absorbed hundreds of smaller lines, laid thousands of miles of track, and eventually reached from the Atlantic Coast to the banks of the Mississippi River. Its strength as a business was unmatched, and for over 120 years its common stock would pay a regular dividend. Shortly after World War Two the fortunes of the entire railroad industry began to wane. Especially hard hit were the already declining Eastern Trunk Lines. Cars, trucks, buses, ships and airplanes - all indirectly subsidized by Federal tax dollars - ate steadily into traffic. Concurrently, industry began to shift to cheaper locales, and the manufacturing base that these lines had been built to serve, slowly drifted away from them. And, there was the dead hand of history to contend with: Because of the excesses and sometimes "robber-baron" tactics of certain early managements and investors, these railroads would find themselves mistrusted, over-regulated, and legally constrained from reacting in a timely manner to changing business conditions. In slightly over two generations, America's railroads had collectively gone from being bleeding-edge industrial innovators, to emasculated mossbacks. High rates of taxation were also problematic for the Eastern roads in particular; many thousands of miles of track were located in urban areas, as were the empty palatial train stations, which the public had largely abandoned by the 1960s. All of these assets were subject to very heavy real estate taxes that competitors, such as truckers for instance, easily avoided. Huge fixed costs, a slothful response to change, "feather-bed" labor agreements, nimble competitors subsidized by the Federal government, and over-regulation were all important elements contributing to the collapse of the Eastern railroads. By the late 1950s the management of the PRR was actively searching for a way out of the eroding earnings morass brought about by the railroad's decline. Attempts at diversification were undertaken by developing some of the vast PRR real estate holdings in New York City, Philadelphia, St. Louis and elsewhere, but these attempts could only achieve so much for the ailing company. Since the First World War, conventional wisdom had been that "consolidation" or the creation by merger of a group of "super-railroads" for the country, was the only cure for the railroad blues. To James M. Symes, the thirteenth president of the PRR, that idea meant that there was only one suitor for his railroad - its arch-rival, the New York Central Railroad. The potential for what today would be called "synergies," implicit in a PRR/NYC merger were as real as they were great: the two lines operated in the same territory, served many of the same customers, had billions in capital locked-up in duplicated infrastructure, and operated almost identically under rules that had been imposed upon them by the ICC, and the unions. In 1957, when Symes first floated the idea, it had solid business sense behind it. Initial studies estimated combined operating savings on the order of $100 million a year. However, the auguries
never proved right for the merger. Negotiations and legal challenges
dragged on for a decade, and that lost time figured greatly in the
eventual failure. Eleven years after it was proposed, in January of
1968, the Supreme Court of the United States gave its blessing to the
merger of the PRR and NYC, thus bringing about the ill-fated Penn
Central. Born on the 1st of February 1968, it filed for bankruptcy on
the 21st of June, 1970. At the time, it was America's sixth largest
company, and its largest business failure to date. Adjusted for
inflation, and just until the Great Recession began, it still ranked in
the top ten all-time greatest U.S. business failures. |
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