Allegheny Portage Railroad National Historic Site

Allegheny Portage Railroad National Historic Site This is the official page of Allegheny Portage Railroad National Historic Site. They can also hike or bike on our many miles of trails.
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Allegheny Portage Railroad National Historic Site tells the story of the Pennsylvania Main Line Canal and the Allegheny Portage Railroad. From the 1830s to the 1850s, the "Main Line" was the easiest way to travel and ship goods across the state of Pennsylvania. The Portage Railroad portion of the Main Line opened in 1834 and was the first railroad crossing of the Alleghenies. The Portage consisted

of 10 inclined planes connected by more conventional sections of railroad covering 36 miles between Hollidaysburg and Johnstown. Goods were removed from the canal on one side of the mountain, carried up and over the mountain on the Portage, and then placed back in the canal on the other side. The Main Line was the preferred route until the Pennsylvania Railroad (PRR) opened its line across the state in 1854 upon the completion of the famous Horseshoe Curve. The Portage only survived until 1857 when it was purchased from the state by the PRR along with the rest of the Main Line. The Portage was immediately abandoned and sections of the canal began closing soon after. Today, the National Park Service preserves the remains of the Portage Railroad, including Staple Bend Tunnel, the first railroad tunnel in America. Visitors to the park can tour the Visitor Center, Engine House #6 Exhibit Shelter, and the Lemon House. In the summer a wide variety of special programs are offered. The park is open seven days a week from sunrise to sunset. Park buildings are open weekends in the winter from 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM. Please call 814-886-6150 for more information or visit our website at www.nps.gov/alpo

John Roebling Part 2 of 2Once John Roebling had established his reputation as a manufacturer of wire cable, he turned hi...
06/13/2026

John Roebling Part 2 of 2

Once John Roebling had established his reputation as a manufacturer of wire cable, he turned his attention to the application of wire to the building of suspension bridges. In 1844 the old 1092-foot long wooden aqueduct, which brought the Pennsylvania Canal into downtown Pittsburgh across the Allegheny River, was rated as unsafe by canal engineers. The aqueduct had all sorts of problems. Once, a section of the channel bottom dropped out, draining water out of good portions of the canal system on both sides of the river. Flood damaged various individual spans. In 1845, a fire hastened the decision of the canal commissioners to build a new aqueduct. They contacted John Roebling for advice.

Roebling felt the problem could solved with a "bundled" wire cable suspension structure and laid his plans before the canal engineers. There was considerable opposition but Roebling was finally told to proceed. He rebuilt the seven-span structure with 162-foot slack spans of two 7-inch diameter bundles of 1900 wires each, laid parallel to each other, taking great care to ensure equal tension in each wire. Each cable was protected and tightly bound together by an external wrapping of annealed wire.

The success of Roebling's first structure in Pittsburgh led immediately to another. A suspension replacement to the Smithfield Street Bridge over the Monongahela in 1847, on the piers of the old wooden structure destroyed by the Great Fire of 1845. The bridge had eight suspension spans of 188 feet each, supported by two 4 ½ inch diameter cables. It had cast iron suspension towers 16 feet high and a 35 foot roadway which carried two lines of car tracks, pedestrian promenades on both sides, and the heaviest kind of street traffic, for the next 35 years. -Three Hundred Years with the Pennsylvania Traveler by William H. Shank. (jh)

Image: Smithfield Street Bridge.

John Roebling Part 1 of 2  in 1806Engineer John Roebling was born on June 12, 1806 in Prussia. He emigrated to the Unite...
06/12/2026

John Roebling Part 1 of 2

in 1806

Engineer John Roebling was born on June 12, 1806 in Prussia. He emigrated to the United States at age 25.

John Roebling’s first paid job in the United States was assisting with part-time repair work on the Beaver Division of the State Canal System. His work impressed his supervisors. They made him an assistant engineer on other parts of the canal system for which he had full responsibility, including the Western Division and Beaver Division. Some of Roebling's assignments took him along the Allegheny Portage Railroad. Observing the operation of the step planes, which carried the cars and boats upward or downward at the end of large h**p ropes, Roebling was shocked to witness the breaking of one of the ropes.

He began thinking of how a flexible wire rope could be made, which would not wear out as fast as the h**p and would have far greater strength with considerably less cross-sectional area. Returning to his farm in Saxonburg, he bought a quantity of iron wire and after experimentation, succeeded in twisting a series of individual wires into America's first twisted wire cable.

Roebling's wire cable was first substituted for a 600foot rope for Thomas Young on a boat-slip at Johnstown in the Spring of 1842. It worked well. Roebling received permission to install his cable on the entire length of Plane Number Three on the Portage Railroad that summer on an experimental basis. The quality and safety of his cable led to his commission by the state to install his cables at most of the other inclined planes throughout the "public works" system. -Three Hundred Years with the Pennsylvania Traveler by William H. Shank. (jh)

Image: John Roebling.

Evening on the SummitPlease join us for our first Evening on the Summit presentation of the summer titled Hollidaysburg ...
06/11/2026

Evening on the Summit

Please join us for our first Evening on the Summit presentation of the summer titled Hollidaysburg Canal Personalities. This program begins on Tuesday, June 23 at 7 p.m. in the visitor center auditorium. Who was Whiskey John? Have you ever heard of Limestone Yank? How about John the Agitator? Or Short & Tall Charlie? Learn about some of the more charismatic and dynamic personalities of the Canal-Era time in Hollidaysburg.

The program is presented by Jim Snyder, president of the Blair County Genealogical Society. It is free and no reservations are required. (es)

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Hike with us!Heritage Hike: Staple Bend TunnelSaturday, June 20Reservations are required for this free hike.This hike ta...
06/10/2026

Hike with us!
Heritage Hike: Staple Bend Tunnel
Saturday, June 20
Reservations are required for this free hike.

This hike takes participants to the first railroad tunnel in America, the Staple Bend Tunnel. On this approximately five-mile round trip hike, participants will learn about the history of the tunnel, how it was constructed, the Allegheny Portage Railroad, and much more. Hikers will see several features from the days of the railroad, including stone sleepers and culverts.

Please note: the interior of the Staple Bend Tunnel is closed due to a rockfall. Participants will still be able to view both sides of the tunnel via a path around the side of the tunnel structure. (es)

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  in 1850President Zachary Taylor died on June 9, 1850, the year after his inauguration. After his death, his body trave...
06/09/2026

in 1850

President Zachary Taylor died on June 9, 1850, the year after his inauguration. After his death, his body traveled over the Allegheny Portage Railroad on the way to his final resting place in Louisville, Kentucky. The cemetery is now named the Zachary Taylor National Cemetery.

In the book, The President Travels by Train, author Bob Withers writes:
"Zachary Taylor’s remains were kept in Washington for several months after his July 9, 1850, death. His funeral train finally departed Washington on Oct. 25 via B&O. His elegant Baltimore-built funeral coach was pulled along Pratt and Howard streets to Bolton Station on the Northern Central for the trip to Harrisburg, enroute to Pittsburgh and Kentucky. The journey included a trip across the successive planes of the Portage line; going along for the ride was Old Wh**ey, the white horse Taylor rode in the Mexican War.” (es)

Image: Zachary Taylor.

  in 1906President Theodore Roosevelt signed the Antiquities Act into law on June 8, 1906, establishing the "first gener...
06/08/2026

in 1906

President Theodore Roosevelt signed the Antiquities Act into law on June 8, 1906, establishing the "first general legal protection of cultural and natural resources in the United States." Part of the Act states that permission must be granted to perform archaeology and remove objects from federal land. (es)
To read more about this act please visit:

https://www.nps.gov/subjects/archeology/antiquities-act.htm

Image: Theodore Roosevelt standing with preservationist John Muir.

On Saturday, June 27, travel back in time with a park ranger on a free four-hour van tour of the historic route of the A...
06/06/2026

On Saturday, June 27, travel back in time with a park ranger on a free four-hour van tour of the historic route of the Allegheny Portage Railroad beginning at 1 p.m. The tour is four hours long. Limited space means that reservations are required. Please call 814-886-6150 to sign up for this free van tour.

In many places the route will follow the exact path of the old Portage Railroad and will take visitors to the Staple Bend Tunnel. In addition, the tour will take passengers past the Skew Arch Bridge, the reconstruction of Engine House No. 6, the historic Lemon House and several historic culverts. (es)

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Ranger programs begin today!Costumed demonstrations2026 program dates:June 5 to August 30- Fridays through SundaysSeptem...
06/05/2026

Ranger programs begin today!

Costumed demonstrations
2026 program dates:
June 5 to August 30- Fridays through Sundays
September- Saturdays and Sundays

Costumed rangers conduct a variety of program offerings that vary from day to day. They include stone cutting, rope making and natural dyes. They are generally held between 10 a.m. to 12 p.m. and 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. in the afternoon.

Programs are weather dependent. For additional information and to find out what program is offered on the day of your visit, please inquire at the visitor center or call 814-886-6150. No reservations are required!

Lemon House Tours
2026 program dates:
June 5 to August 30- Fridays through Tuesdays
September- Saturdays and Sundays

Staff dependent, a park ranger is available from 10 a.m. to 12 p.m. and 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. in the afternoon to greet visitors and answer questions about the tavern and its operations during the days of the Allegheny Portage Railroad.

No reservations are required.

The Lemon House is open Fridays through Tuesdays from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. (es)

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  in 1834The Allegheny Portage Railroad and Philadelphia and Columbia Railroad adopted its rules and regulations on June...
06/04/2026

in 1834

The Allegheny Portage Railroad and Philadelphia and Columbia Railroad adopted its rules and regulations on June 4, 1834. “One of these rules and regulations provided that motive power would be furnished by the State as soon as a certain number of locomotive engines could be procured, that such engines would be used as motive power on all parts of the road where they could be advantageously employed. Another provided that locomotive engines with their trains should start from their respective stations periodically and move with uniform speed. Those drawing cars containing the United States mails and passengers were allowed to move at a rate of speed not exceeding 15 miles, and those drawing burden cars not exceeding 10 miles per hour, except when passing bridges or other viaducts, when the speed was reduced as might be directed by the principal engineer,” The Allegheny Old Portage Railroad. (es)

Image: LaFayette model

Evening on the SummitPlease join us for our first Evening on the Summit presentation of the summer titled Hollidaysburg ...
06/03/2026

Evening on the Summit

Please join us for our first Evening on the Summit presentation of the summer titled Hollidaysburg Canal Personalities. This program begins on Tuesday, June 23 at 7 p.m. in the visitor center auditorium. Who was Whiskey John? Have you ever heard of Limestone Yank? How about John the Agitator? Or Short & Tall Charlie? Learn about the more charismatic and dynamic personalities of the Canal-Era time in Hollidaysburg.

The program is presented by Jim Snyder, president of the Blair County Genealogical Society. It is free and no reservations are required. (es)

Secure .gov websites use HTTPSA lock ( ) or https:// means you've safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

Address

110 Federal Park Road
Gallitzin, PA
16641

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 5pm
Tuesday 9am - 5pm
Friday 9am - 5pm
Saturday 9am - 5pm
Sunday 9am - 5pm

Telephone

+18148866150

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