
George Cheatwood captured this image of the Chessie System’s ex-B&O engine facility in Akron, Ohio on October 19, 1980. The caboose on the left is sitting on the west leg of the wye there that is part of Akron Junction.
Akron Junction doesn’t look the same as it once did. Last year CSX removed most of the rails there, thus severing the connection between its New Castle Subdivision and the former Cleveland-Akron-Canton Valley Line. You can read all about it and view photographs of Akron Junction today in the cover article for the January 2017 Akron Railroad Club eBulletin.
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I mentioned at the November Akron Railroad Club meeting that most of the tracks at Akron Junction that once linked the Valley Line of the Baltimore & Ohio with the Chicago-Pittsburgh mainline of the B&O have been removed by CSX sometime within the past year.
The January issue of the ARRC eBulletin will have an article and photographs about the changes at Akron Junction, but here is a view of what it looks like these days.
In the photograph above, the gondola is marooned on the East Wye Track, the rails on each side of the car having been removed. Presumably, this car will some day be scrapped in place.
Also removed has been the other leg of the wye, which was called the Hole Track or PC&T connection. A small portion of the connection is still in at the Eastwood Avenue crossing.
Just beyond the far right end of the gondola is an empty space where the two legs of the wye from the Valley Line headed toward the connection with the Chicago main at BD Tower near Evans Avenue.
The coaling tower still stands, probably because of the expense of removing it.
Akron Junction is an area in the eastern part of Akron that describes where the Baltimore & Ohio; Pennsylvania; Erie; and Akron, Canton & Youngstown railroads all came together.
The name notwithstanding, none of the railroads crossed at grade.
The B&O had two lines that intersected at Akron Junction with its Chicago-Pittsburgh line crossing over the top of the Valley Line between Cleveland and Mineral City, Ohio.
The lines were connected by a connecting track that left the Valley Line beneath the Chicago mainline bridge and snaked around to connect with the Chicago Line at BD.
The area along this connecting track also included a roundhouse, various yard tracks and a wye.
Within the past year or so CSX has removed nearly all of the connecting and yard tracks here.
On a recent Sunday, Akron Railroad Club member Roger Durfee paid a visit to this area and created a now and then image. The top image was made in July 1985.

The site of the Baltimore & Ohio yard office in Akron is now just a bare spot. The rail line above is the CSX New Castle Subdivision between Pittsburgh and Willard, Ohio. The line to the right is the former Valley Line between Cleveland and Mineral City, Ohio. (Photograph by Craig Sanders)
CSX has demolished the former Baltimore & Ohio yard office in Akron that was damaged by fire on Oct. 1, 2013. The demolition was hardly a surprise because the structure was no longer in use. Once the last CSX yardmaster based here retired, the job was abolished.
Once a three-story building, the yard office served two B&O lines in Akron. The tower dated to at least 1919 and it might have been older. At some point, the B&O modernized it with new siding and a roof to give it the appearance that most remember.
The yard office once supervised hree yards in the vicinity of Akron Junction. Hill Yard was located on the Chicago-Pittsburgh mainline. On the Cleveland, Valley & Terminal line were Hazel Yard. located south of the yard office, and Valley Yard.
The top floor housed the chief clerk’s office and had had an exit directly to the B&O’s Chicago-Pittsburgh mainline tracks. The middle floor had the offices of the terminal trainmaster, crew caller and yard clerks. The bottom floor of the structure contained a locker room for crews.
Many railfans have mistakenly described the B&O yard office as “AY,” which are the call letters of a nearby interlocking tower. This tower, which was demolished many years ago, controlled the junction of the B&O with the Pennsylvania Railroad’s Akron Branch.
AY was located just to the east of the grade crossing of Arlington Street. It was operated and maintained by the PRR.
The yard office was located next to a bridge carrying the Chicago Line over the Valley Line. Crews called this location the “hole in the wall” or “the arch.”