Keystone Model Railroad Historical Society
About the Building

Our clubhouse was purchased in March of 1986 and was
originally a power substation for the Pennsylvania Railroad’s Dillsburg
electric trolley line. Originally, the Dillsburg & Mechanicsburg Railway
Company was constructed in 1872 and, when finished, leased to the Cumberland
Valley railroad. Its purpose was to move iron ore from mines about a
mile East of Dillsburg; from 1900 to 1910 a lot of ore cars pulled by steam
engines traveled the line.
In 1905 the line announced it was being electrified. This was to
provide trolley service and used a rather unique structure for its time.
Instead of electric lines directly overhead, the lines were placed 3 feet
outside the rail. This saved them from the blasts of steam engines and
allowed brakemen to walk the tops of cars (as was the practice in those
days) without being harmed. This meant, however, the need for a
special type of trolley.
Wooden poles were set in concrete on the east side of the track.
Flexible brackets carried the 600 volt DC wire and at sidings where it did
not cross the track, a separate wire line was installed. This meant
that the cars had four (4) trolley poles per car with only one in use at any
time; operators had to manually connect the correct pole to run direction
and sidings.
The Dillsburg “Toonerville” as it was called, ran faithfully for over 30
years. Running time from Mechanicsburg to Dillsburg was 25 minutes in
either direction. In the mid 1920’s business fell off and the last run
of an electric was quietly made on January, 15, 1928. The next day,
the Gettysburg & Harrisburg Transportation Company, using buses, took over
the mail service to Dillsburg; the Williams Grove station closed with the
end of railroad service.
We are accepting new members. Contact information can be found
here.