Casselman Tributary to Youghiogheny River | |
---|---|
Location | |
Country | United States |
State | Pennsylvania Maryland |
County | Somerset (PA) Garrett (MD) |
Borough | Casselman Rockwood Meyersdale Confluence Salisbury Ursina Garrett |
Town | Grantsville |
Physical characteristics | |
Source | confluence of North and South Branch Casselman River divide |
• location | about 0.25 miles south-southeast of Casselman, Maryland[2] |
• coordinates | 39°42′30″N 079°07′02″W / 39.70833°N 79.11722°W[1] |
• elevation | 2,160 ft (660 m)[2] |
Mouth | Youghiogheny River |
• location | Confluence, Pennsylvania[3] |
• coordinates | 39°48′54″N 079°21′53″W / 39.81500°N 79.36472°W[1] |
• elevation | 1,312 ft (400 m)[3] |
Length | 55.28 mi (88.96 km)[4] |
Basin size | 593.06 square miles (1,536.0 km2)[5] |
Discharge | |
• location | Youghiogheny River |
• average | 1,208.58 cu ft/s (34.223 m3/s) at mouth with Youghiogheny River[5] |
Basin features | |
Progression | southwest[4] |
River system | Monongahela River |
Tributaries | |
• left | Spiker Run, Shade Run, Slaubaugh Run, Crab Run, Flag Run, Tub Mill Run, Elklick Creek, Bigby Creek, Miller Run, Shaler Run, Stony Batter Run, Rhoades Creek, Town Line Run, Lost Run, McClintock Run, Cucumber Run, Whites Creek |
• right | Schoolhouse Run, Meadow Run, Piney Creek, Miller Run, Flaugherty Creek, Blue Lick Creek, Swamp Creek, Buffalo Creek, Piney Run, Weimer Run, Coxes Creek, South Glade Creek, Middle Creek, Laurel Hill Creek |
Bridges | Maple Grove Road, I-68/Us 219, US 40, River Road (x2), Ord Street, Coal Run Road, Shaw Mines Road, US 219, Broadway Street, US 219, Great Allegheny Passage, Petenbrink Road, Berlin Street, Rockdale Road, Markleton School Road, Listonburg Road, Robert Brown Road |
The Casselman River is a 56.5-mile-long (90.9 km)[6] tributary of the Youghiogheny River in western Maryland and Pennsylvania in the United States.[7] The Casselman River drains an area of 576 square miles.[8]
The river has been used for transportation across the Allegheny Mountains, between the cities of Baltimore and Washington, D.C., in the east and Pittsburgh in the west. Two railroads followed the Casselman River from Meyersdale, Pennsylvania, to Confluence. First is the B&O Railroad, running between Baltimore and Pittsburgh, which was completed in 1871, and is currently owned by CSX. Second is the Western Maryland Railway, which ran from Cumberland, Maryland, to Connellsville, Pennsylvania. Although the Western Maryland was abandoned in the 1980s, the right-of-way has been converted into the Great Allegheny Passage, a rail trail bicycle and hiking path.[9]