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Florida Central and Western Railroad

The Florida Central and Western Railroad was a rail line built in the late 1800s that ran from Jacksonville west across North Central Florida and the part Florida Panhandle through Lake City and Tallahassee before coming to an end at Chattahoochee. The line was later part of the Seaboard Air Line Railroad network from 1903 to 1967, and was primarily their Tallahassee Subdivision. The full line is still in service today and is now part of the Florida Gulf and Atlantic Railroad.

Florida Central and Western Railroad
Overview
LocaleNorth Central Florida and the Florida Panhandle
Dates of operation1837–1900
Technical
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge

History edit

Construction and early years edit

From Jacksonville west to Lake City, the Florida Central and Western Railroad was first built by the Florida, Atlantic and Gulf Central Railroad (not to be confused with the Florida Gulf and Atlantic Railroad, the current operator of the line).[1] The Florida, Atlantic and Gulf Central Railroad (FA&GC) was chartered on January 24, 1851 by Abel Seymour Baldwin (the namesake of Baldwin, Florida) and construction began at Lake City in 1857.[2]: 21  During the Civil War, the railroad figured in the Battle of Olustee when Union Brigadier General Truman Seymour led troops west toward Lake City along the line, destroying the junction at Baldwin, and then engaging Confederate troops near Olustee Station. The tracks and junction were rebuilt after the war, but the railroad defaulted on its payments to the Florida Internal Improvement Fund.[2]: 37 

 
Depot in Lloyd built by the Pensacola and Georgia Railroad. The depot remained in service until 1966, and it still stands today.

From Lake City to Tallahassee, the Florida Central and Western was built by the Pensacola and Georgia Railroad (P&G).[3] The Pensacola and Georgia Railroad was chartered in January 1853, and was to be built east from Pensacola, Florida, but instead started at Tallahassee and was built east.[4]: 61  It reached Lake City, Florida in 1860 where it connected to the Florida, Atlantic and Gulf Central. The P&G also built a short branch from Drifton north to Monticello. In 1855, the P&G also took over the Tallahassee Railroad, which ran south from Tallahassee to the port at St. Marks, Florida on the Gulf of Mexico. The P&G then built from Tallahassee west to four miles (6 km) short of Quincy, stopping in 1863 in the middle of the American Civil War.

George W. Swepson, a notorious scalawag, purchased both the P&G and the FA&GC in 1868. After renaming the FA&GC the Florida Central Railroad, set his carpetbagger protégé, Milton S. Littlefield, a former Union general known as the "Prince of Carpetbaggers", loose in Tallahassee to buy, cheat, and otherwise defraud Florida legislators in order to obtain a new charter for a railroad that Littlefield promised would be extended west from Quincy to Pensacola.[4]: 97–100 

Backed by $6 million in capitalization, the P&G was reorganized as the Jacksonville, Pensacola and Mobile Railroad in June 1869 with Littlefield as president.[4]: 100  The original charter did not consolidate the Florida Central Railroad into the JP&M; this did not occur until the Florida legislature amended the charter in 1870.[4]: 101  Littlefield and Swepson then launched a major swindle, personally enriching themselves from the sales of company bonds to unwitting investors.[4]: 101–102  Due to the embezzling of such funds, the company was unable to extend the line to Pensacola, reaching only an additional 20 miles to Chattahoochee instead. By 1879, the U.S. Supreme Court had a lien placed on the railroad's assets.[4]: 103 

In 1882, the JP&M and the Florida Central were both acquired by Sir Edward Reed, and were renamed together as the Florida Central and Western Railroad.[4]: 114  Two years later, Reed brought the Florida Central and Western and several other Florida railroads he had purchased under the umbrella of what was named the Florida Railway and Navigation Company, which was renamed the Florida Central and Peninsular Railroad (FC&P) in 1888.[4]: 116–117  In 1900, a year after purchasing the majority of FC&P stock, the newly organized Seaboard Air Line Railway leased the FC&P and, in 1903, acquired it outright.[4]: 146 

Seaboard Air Line ownership edit

Tallahassee Subdivision
 
Overview
StatusStill operating under successor company
OwnerSeaboard Air Line Railroad
Termini
Technical
Line length189.4 mi (304.8 km)
ElectrificationNo
SignallingCentralized traffic control east of Tallahassee
Route map
Tallahassee Subdivision
 
CSX
 
 
 
CSX
 
SP 653.0
Baldwin
 
SP 660.8
Macclenny
 
SP 673.9
Sanderson
 
  I-10
 
SP 680.7
Olustee
 
 
 
Norfolk Southern Railway
Navair District
 
SP 694.3
Lake City
 
  I-75
 
SP 704.2
Wellborn
 
SP 715.3
Live Oak
 
  I-10
 
SP 735.5
Lee
 
SP 745.6
Madison
 
SP 756.4
Greenville
 
 
 
 
SP 764.6
Aucilla
 
SP 770.8
Drifton
 
 
 
Georgia and Florida Railway
 
SP 787.9
Chaires
 
 
 
 
SP 799.3
Tallahassee
 
 
 
SP 803.0
GF&A Connection
 
 
CSX
 
 
 
 
SP 811.4
Midway
 
  I-10
 
SP 823.4
Quincy
 
SP 825.6
Douglas City
 
SP 828.7
Gretna
 
 
AN Railway
 
SP 842.5
00K 811.5
Chattahoochee
 
 
 
 
CSX

The line would become an important route for the Seaboard Air Line. The easternmost 17 miles of the line from Jacksonville to Baldwin became part if the Seaboard's main line. The rest of the line from Baldwin to Chattahoochee became the Seaboard's Tallahassee Subdivision. The branch to Monticello became the Monticello Subdivision, while track from Tallahassee to St. Marks became the Wakulla Subdivision.[5]

The Tallahassee Subdivision was notably used by the Seaboard Air Line for passenger service from Jacksonville to New Orleans, which was operated jointly with the Louisville and Nashville Railroad. This daily passenger service was known as the New Orleans-Florida Express and the New Orleans-Florida Limited before being renamed the Gulf Wind in 1949.

In addition to passenger service, the line also carried two daily Red Ball freight trains and a local freight train six days a week round-trip from Baldwin to Tallahassee in the 1950s. A through freight train also ran from Tallahassee to Chattahoochee daily at the time. The line was busy enough in the 1950s to warrant the installation of Centralized traffic control along the Tallahassee Subdivision from Baldwin to a point just west of Tallahassee.[6]

Later years edit

In 1967, the Seaboard Air Line merged with their long-time rival, the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad (ACL). The Tallahassee Subdivision crossed or connected with ACL branch lines in Jacksonville, Mattox, Live Oak, Drifton, and Chattahoochee.[5] After the merger was complete, the company was named the Seaboard Coast Line Railroad (SCL). In 1980, the Seaboard Coast Line's parent company merged with the Chessie System, creating the CSX Corporation. The CSX Corporation initially operated the Chessie and Seaboard Systems separately until 1986, when they were merged into CSX Transportation.[2]: 12 

The Gulf Wind continued to operate on the Tallahassee Subdivision under the Seaboard Coast Line until 1971, when passenger service was taken over by Amtrak.[7] This left the line without passenger service until 1993, when the Amtrak extended the Sunset Limited to Miami via Jacksonville.[8] The Sunset Limited ran the line until late 2005 due to damage as a result of Hurricane Katrina further west. The Sunset Limited has terminated in New Orleans ever since.

Current operations edit

The Florida Gulf and Atlantic Railroad took over operation of the former Florida Central and Western Railroad on June 1, 2019, after its parent company, RailUSA, acquired the line from CSX Transportation. As part of the deal, the Florida Gulf and Atlantic also took over the former Pensacola and Atlantic Railroad west to Pensacola, and track from Tallahassee north to Attapulgus, Georgia.[9]

Historic stations edit

 
Tallahassee station
Milepost City/Location Station[5][10] Connections and notes
SP 635.4 Jacksonville Jacksonville junction with:
West Jacksonville
SP 641.6 Marietta
SP 652.5 Baldwin Baldwin junction with Florida Railroad (FC&P/SAL)
SP 656.3 Mattox junction with Jacksonville and Southwestern Railroad (ACL)
SP 661.4 Macclenny Macclenny known as Darbyville prior to 1890
SP 663.8 Glen St. Mary Glen St. Mary
Drake
Taliaferros Junction
SP 670.7 Sanderson Sanderson
Woodstock
Mann's Spur
SP 680.6 Olustee Olustee
SP 685.1 Mount Carrie
SP 690.7 Watertown Watertown
SP 693.1 Lake City Lake City junction with:
Ogden
McKinley
SP 704.5 Wellborn Wellborn
SP 709.9 Houston Houston
SP 715.3 Live Oak Live Oak junction with:
SP 721.5 Dickert
Falmouth Falmouth
SP 728.7 Ellaville Ellaville
SP 736.3 Lee Lee
West Farm
SP 743.7 Madison Madison
Champaign
SP 757.4 Greenville Greenville
SP 764.9 Aucilla Aucilla
SP 772.3 Drifton Drifton[11] junction with:
SPB 776.5 Monticello Monticello located on Monticello Branch
Braswell
SP 781.2 Lloyd Lloyd
Capitola
SP 787.8 Chaires Chaires
SP 799.3 Tallahassee Tallahassee junction with:
Ocklocknee
Lawrence
SP 811.4 Midway Midway
SP 823.3 Quincy Quincy
SP 828.7 Gretna Gretna
SP 832.0 Mount Pleasant Mount Pleasant
Jamieson
Chattahoochee Chattahoochee
SP 841.9 River Junction junction with:

References edit

  1. ^ Confederate Railroads - Florida, Atlantic & Gulf Central
  2. ^ a b c Turner, Gregg (2003). A Short History of Florida Railroads. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7385-2421-4.
  3. ^ Confederate Railroads - Pensacola & Georgia
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i Turner, Gregg (2008). A Journey into Florida Railroad History. Gainesville, Florida: University Press of Florida. ISBN 978-0-8130-3233-7.
  5. ^ a b c Seaboard Air Line Railroad North Florida Division Timetable (1949)
  6. ^ Harmon, Danny. "Chasing Artifacts On The Old FLorida SAL". YouTube. Retrieved 9 November 2022.
  7. ^ Seaboard Coast Line Railroad Jacksonville Division Timetable (1969)
  8. ^ Wagster, Emily (April 1, 1993). "All Aboard! Sunset Limited on a Roll". The Clarion-Ledger. pp. A1, A11. Retrieved November 21, 2020 – via Newspapers.com.  
  9. ^ "Florida Gulf & Atlantic Railroad, LLC-Acquisition and Operation Exemption With Interchange Commitment-CSX Transportation, Inc". Federal Register. 2018-12-21. Retrieved 2019-06-05.
  10. ^ "Florida Railroads: Passenger Stations & Stops" (PDF). Jim Fergusson's Railway and Tramway Station Lists (Florida). Retrieved 5 June 2020.
  11. ^ Railroad depot - Drifton, Florida; circa 1900 (FloridaMemory)

florida, central, western, railroad, rail, line, built, late, 1800s, that, from, jacksonville, west, across, north, central, florida, part, florida, panhandle, through, lake, city, tallahassee, before, coming, chattahoochee, line, later, part, seaboard, line, . The Florida Central and Western Railroad was a rail line built in the late 1800s that ran from Jacksonville west across North Central Florida and the part Florida Panhandle through Lake City and Tallahassee before coming to an end at Chattahoochee The line was later part of the Seaboard Air Line Railroad network from 1903 to 1967 and was primarily their Tallahassee Subdivision The full line is still in service today and is now part of the Florida Gulf and Atlantic Railroad Florida Central and Western RailroadOverviewLocaleNorth Central Florida and the Florida PanhandleDates of operation1837 1900TechnicalTrack gauge4 ft 8 1 2 in 1 435 mm standard gauge Contents 1 History 1 1 Construction and early years 1 2 Seaboard Air Line ownership 1 3 Later years 2 Current operations 3 Historic stations 4 ReferencesHistory editConstruction and early years edit See also Florida Central and Peninsular Railroad From Jacksonville west to Lake City the Florida Central and Western Railroad was first built by the Florida Atlantic and Gulf Central Railroad not to be confused with the Florida Gulf and Atlantic Railroad the current operator of the line 1 The Florida Atlantic and Gulf Central Railroad FA amp GC was chartered on January 24 1851 by Abel Seymour Baldwin the namesake of Baldwin Florida and construction began at Lake City in 1857 2 21 During the Civil War the railroad figured in the Battle of Olustee when Union Brigadier General Truman Seymour led troops west toward Lake City along the line destroying the junction at Baldwin and then engaging Confederate troops near Olustee Station The tracks and junction were rebuilt after the war but the railroad defaulted on its payments to the Florida Internal Improvement Fund 2 37 nbsp Depot in Lloyd built by the Pensacola and Georgia Railroad The depot remained in service until 1966 and it still stands today From Lake City to Tallahassee the Florida Central and Western was built by the Pensacola and Georgia Railroad P amp G 3 The Pensacola and Georgia Railroad was chartered in January 1853 and was to be built east from Pensacola Florida but instead started at Tallahassee and was built east 4 61 It reached Lake City Florida in 1860 where it connected to the Florida Atlantic and Gulf Central The P amp G also built a short branch from Drifton north to Monticello In 1855 the P amp G also took over the Tallahassee Railroad which ran south from Tallahassee to the port at St Marks Florida on the Gulf of Mexico The P amp G then built from Tallahassee west to four miles 6 km short of Quincy stopping in 1863 in the middle of the American Civil War George W Swepson a notorious scalawag purchased both the P amp G and the FA amp GC in 1868 After renaming the FA amp GC the Florida Central Railroad set his carpetbagger protege Milton S Littlefield a former Union general known as the Prince of Carpetbaggers loose in Tallahassee to buy cheat and otherwise defraud Florida legislators in order to obtain a new charter for a railroad that Littlefield promised would be extended west from Quincy to Pensacola 4 97 100 Backed by 6 million in capitalization the P amp G was reorganized as the Jacksonville Pensacola and Mobile Railroad in June 1869 with Littlefield as president 4 100 The original charter did not consolidate the Florida Central Railroad into the JP amp M this did not occur until the Florida legislature amended the charter in 1870 4 101 Littlefield and Swepson then launched a major swindle personally enriching themselves from the sales of company bonds to unwitting investors 4 101 102 Due to the embezzling of such funds the company was unable to extend the line to Pensacola reaching only an additional 20 miles to Chattahoochee instead By 1879 the U S Supreme Court had a lien placed on the railroad s assets 4 103 In 1882 the JP amp M and the Florida Central were both acquired by Sir Edward Reed and were renamed together as the Florida Central and Western Railroad 4 114 Two years later Reed brought the Florida Central and Western and several other Florida railroads he had purchased under the umbrella of what was named the Florida Railway and Navigation Company which was renamed the Florida Central and Peninsular Railroad FC amp P in 1888 4 116 117 In 1900 a year after purchasing the majority of FC amp P stock the newly organized Seaboard Air Line Railway leased the FC amp P and in 1903 acquired it outright 4 146 Seaboard Air Line ownership edit Tallahassee Subdivision nbsp OverviewStatusStill operating under successor companyOwnerSeaboard Air Line RailroadTerminiBaldwin FloridaChattahoochee FloridaTechnicalLine length189 4 mi 304 8 km ElectrificationNoSignallingCentralized traffic control east of TallahasseeRoute mapvteTallahassee SubdivisionLegend nbsp CSX S Line Jacksonville Terminal Subdivision nbsp nbsp nbsp CSX Callahan SubdivisionS Line Wildwood Subdivision nbsp SP 653 0 Baldwin nbsp SP 660 8 Macclenny nbsp SP 673 9 Sanderson nbsp nbsp I 10 nbsp SP 680 7 Olustee nbsp nbsp nbsp Norfolk Southern Railway Navair District nbsp SP 694 3 Lake City nbsp nbsp I 75 nbsp SP 704 2 Wellborn nbsp SP 715 3 Live Oak nbsp nbsp I 10 nbsp SP 735 5 Lee nbsp SP 745 6 Madison nbsp SP 756 4 Greenville nbsp nbsp nbsp Aucilla River nbsp SP 764 6 Aucilla nbsp SP 770 8 Drifton nbsp nbsp nbsp Georgia and Florida Railway nbsp SP 787 9 Chaires nbsp nbsp nbsp Lake Lafayette nbsp SP 799 3 Tallahassee nbsp nbsp former St Mark s branch Tallahassee Railroad nbsp SP 803 0 GF amp A Connection nbsp nbsp CSX Bainbridge Subdivision nbsp nbsp nbsp Ochlockonee River nbsp SP 811 4 Midway nbsp nbsp I 10 nbsp SP 823 4 Quincy nbsp SP 825 6 Douglas City nbsp SP 828 7 Gretna nbsp nbsp AN Railway nbsp SP 842 500K 811 5 Chattahoochee nbsp nbsp nbsp Apalachicola River nbsp CSX P amp A SubdivisionThe line would become an important route for the Seaboard Air Line The easternmost 17 miles of the line from Jacksonville to Baldwin became part if the Seaboard s main line The rest of the line from Baldwin to Chattahoochee became the Seaboard s Tallahassee Subdivision The branch to Monticello became the Monticello Subdivision while track from Tallahassee to St Marks became the Wakulla Subdivision 5 The Tallahassee Subdivision was notably used by the Seaboard Air Line for passenger service from Jacksonville to New Orleans which was operated jointly with the Louisville and Nashville Railroad This daily passenger service was known as the New Orleans Florida Express and the New Orleans Florida Limited before being renamed the Gulf Wind in 1949 In addition to passenger service the line also carried two daily Red Ball freight trains and a local freight train six days a week round trip from Baldwin to Tallahassee in the 1950s A through freight train also ran from Tallahassee to Chattahoochee daily at the time The line was busy enough in the 1950s to warrant the installation of Centralized traffic control along the Tallahassee Subdivision from Baldwin to a point just west of Tallahassee 6 Later years edit In 1967 the Seaboard Air Line merged with their long time rival the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad ACL The Tallahassee Subdivision crossed or connected with ACL branch lines in Jacksonville Mattox Live Oak Drifton and Chattahoochee 5 After the merger was complete the company was named the Seaboard Coast Line Railroad SCL In 1980 the Seaboard Coast Line s parent company merged with the Chessie System creating the CSX Corporation The CSX Corporation initially operated the Chessie and Seaboard Systems separately until 1986 when they were merged into CSX Transportation 2 12 The Gulf Wind continued to operate on the Tallahassee Subdivision under the Seaboard Coast Line until 1971 when passenger service was taken over by Amtrak 7 This left the line without passenger service until 1993 when the Amtrak extended the Sunset Limited to Miami via Jacksonville 8 The Sunset Limited ran the line until late 2005 due to damage as a result of Hurricane Katrina further west The Sunset Limited has terminated in New Orleans ever since Current operations editThe Florida Gulf and Atlantic Railroad took over operation of the former Florida Central and Western Railroad on June 1 2019 after its parent company RailUSA acquired the line from CSX Transportation As part of the deal the Florida Gulf and Atlantic also took over the former Pensacola and Atlantic Railroad west to Pensacola and track from Tallahassee north to Attapulgus Georgia 9 Historic stations edit nbsp Tallahassee stationMilepost City Location Station 5 10 Connections and notesSP 635 4 Jacksonville Jacksonville junction with Fernandina and Jacksonville Railroad FC amp P SAL East Florida Railway ACL Jacksonville Tampa and Key West Railway ACL Atlantic Valdosta and Western Railway GSF SOU Florida East Coast Railway Main LineWest JacksonvilleSP 641 6 MariettaSP 652 5 Baldwin Baldwin junction with Florida Railroad FC amp P SAL SP 656 3 Mattox junction with Jacksonville and Southwestern Railroad ACL SP 661 4 Macclenny Macclenny known as Darbyville prior to 1890SP 663 8 Glen St Mary Glen St MaryDrakeTaliaferros JunctionSP 670 7 Sanderson SandersonWoodstockMann s SpurSP 680 6 Olustee OlusteeSP 685 1 Mount CarrieSP 690 7 Watertown WatertownSP 693 1 Lake City Lake City junction with Live Oak Tampa and Charlotte Harbor Railroad Lake City Branch ACL Georgia Southern and Florida Railway SOU OgdenMcKinleySP 704 5 Wellborn WellbornSP 709 9 Houston HoustonSP 715 3 Live Oak Live Oak junction with Live Oak and Rowland s Bluff Railroad ACL Live Oak Tampa and Charlotte Harbor Railroad ACL SP 721 5 DickertFalmouth FalmouthSP 728 7 Ellaville EllavilleSP 736 3 Lee LeeWest FarmSP 743 7 Madison MadisonChampaignSP 757 4 Greenville GreenvilleSP 764 9 Aucilla AucillaSP 772 3 Drifton Drifton 11 junction with Monticello BranchPerry Cutoff ACL SPB 776 5 Monticello Monticello located on Monticello BranchBraswellSP 781 2 Lloyd LloydCapitolaSP 787 8 Chaires ChairesSP 799 3 Tallahassee Tallahassee junction with Tallahassee Railroad SAL Georgia Florida and Alabama Railroad SAL OcklockneeLawrenceSP 811 4 Midway MidwaySP 823 3 Quincy QuincySP 828 7 Gretna GretnaSP 832 0 Mount Pleasant Mount PleasantJamiesonChattahoochee ChattahoocheeSP 841 9 River Junction junction with Pensacola and Atlantic Railroad L amp N Apalachicola Northern RailroadChattahoochee and East Pass Railroad SF amp W ACL References edit Confederate Railroads Florida Atlantic amp Gulf Central a b c Turner Gregg 2003 A Short History of Florida Railroads Arcadia Publishing ISBN 978 0 7385 2421 4 Confederate Railroads Pensacola amp Georgia a b c d e f g h i Turner Gregg 2008 A Journey into Florida Railroad History Gainesville Florida University Press of Florida ISBN 978 0 8130 3233 7 a b c Seaboard Air Line Railroad North Florida Division Timetable 1949 Harmon Danny Chasing Artifacts On The Old FLorida SAL YouTube Retrieved 9 November 2022 Seaboard Coast Line Railroad Jacksonville Division Timetable 1969 Wagster Emily April 1 1993 All Aboard Sunset Limited on a Roll The Clarion Ledger pp A1 A11 Retrieved November 21 2020 via Newspapers com nbsp Florida Gulf amp Atlantic Railroad LLC Acquisition and Operation Exemption With Interchange Commitment CSX Transportation Inc Federal Register 2018 12 21 Retrieved 2019 06 05 Florida Railroads Passenger Stations amp Stops PDF Jim Fergusson s Railway and Tramway Station Lists Florida Retrieved 5 June 2020 Railroad depot Drifton Florida circa 1900 FloridaMemory Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Florida Central and Western Railroad amp oldid 1183125175, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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