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Louisville and Nashville Railroad

The Louisville and Nashville Railroad (reporting mark LN), commonly called the L&N, was a Class I railroad that operated freight and passenger services in the southeast United States.

Louisville and Nashville Railroad
L&N system map, circa 1901
Overview
HeadquartersLouisville and Nashville Railroad Office Building, 908 West Broadway, Louisville, Kentucky (1907–1980)
Seaboard Coast Line Railroad Building, 500 Water Street, Jacksonville, Florida (1980–1982)
Reporting markLN
LocaleAlabama
Florida
Georgia
Illinois
Indiana
Kentucky
Louisiana
Mississippi
Missouri
Ohio
Tennessee
Virginia
North Carolina
Dates of operation1850–1982
SuccessorSeaboard Coast Line Railroad
Technical
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Previous gauge5 ft (1,524 mm), converted by 1870.[1][2]
Length10,396 miles (16,731 kilometers)

Chartered by the Commonwealth of Kentucky in 1850, the road grew into one of the great success stories of American business. Operating under one name continuously for 132 years, it survived civil war and economic depression and several waves of social and technological change. Under Milton H. Smith, president of the company for 30 years, the L&N grew from a road with less than three hundred miles (480 km) of track to a 6,000-mile (9,700 km) system serving fourteen states. As one of the premier Southern railroads, the L&N extended its reach far beyond its namesake cities, stretching to St. Louis, Memphis, Atlanta, and New Orleans. The railroad was economically strong throughout its lifetime, operating freight and passenger trains in a manner that earned it the nickname, "The Old Reliable".

Growth of the railroad continued until its purchase and the tumultuous rail consolidations of the 1980s which led to continual successors. By the end of 1970, L&N operated 6,063 miles (9,757 km) of road on 10,051 miles (16,176 km) of track, not including the Carrollton Railroad.

In 1971 the Seaboard Coast Line Railroad, successor to the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad, purchased the remainder of the L&N shares it did not already own, and the company became a subsidiary. By 1982, the Seaboard Coast Line had absorbed the Louisville & Nashville Railroad entirely. Then in 1986, the Seaboard System merged with the C&O and B&O (known as the Chessie System) and the combined company became CSX Transportation (CSX), which now owns and operates all of the former Louisville and Nashville lines.

Early history and Civil War edit

Its first line extended barely south of Louisville, Kentucky, and it took until 1859 to span the 180-odd miles (290 km) to its second namesake city of Nashville. There were about 250 miles (400 km) of track in the system by the outbreak of the Civil War, and its strategic location, spanning the Union/Confederate lines, made it of great interest to both governments.

During the Civil War, different parts of the network were pressed into service by both armies at various times, and considerable damage from wear, battle, and sabotage occurred. (For example, during the Battle of Lebanon in July 1863, the company's depot in Lebanon, Kentucky, was used as a stronghold by outnumbered Union troops). However, the company benefited from being based in the Union state of Kentucky, and the fact that Nashville fell to Union forces within the first year of the war and remained in their hands for its duration. It profited from Northern haulage contracts for troops and supplies, paid in sound Federal greenbacks, as opposed to the rapidly depreciating Confederate dollars. After the war, other railroads in the South were devastated to the point of collapse, and the general economic depression meant that labor and materials to repair its roads could be had fairly cheaply.

Buoyed by these fortunate circumstances, the firm began an expansion that never really stopped. Within 30 years the network reached from Ohio and Missouri to Louisiana and Florida. By 1884, the firm had such importance that it was included in the Dow Jones Transportation Average, the first American stock market index. It was such a large customer of the Rogers Locomotive and Machine Works, the country's second-largest locomotive maker, that in 1879 the firm presented L&N with a free locomotive as a thank-you bonus.

Coal and capital in the Gilded Age edit

 
Union Station in Louisville, Kentucky
 
Gold Bond of the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company, issued 2. June 1890

Since all locomotives of the time were steam-powered, many railroads had favored coal as their engines' fuel source after wood-burning models were found unsatisfactory. The L&N guaranteed not only its own fuel sources but a steady revenue stream by pushing its lines into the difficult but coal-rich terrain of eastern Kentucky, and also well into northern Alabama. There the small town of Birmingham had recently been founded amidst undeveloped deposits of coal, iron ore and limestone, the basic ingredients of steel production. The arrival of L&N transport and investment capital helped create a great industrial city and the South's first postwar urban success story. The railroad's access to good coal enabled it to claim for a few years starting in 1940 the nation's longest unrefuelled run, about 490 miles (790 km) from Louisville to Montgomery, Alabama.

In the Gilded Age of the late 19th century there were no such things as anti-trust or fair-competition laws and very little financial regulation. Business was a keen and mean affair, and the L&N was a formidable competitor. It would exclude upstarts like the Tennessee Central Railway Company from critical infrastructure like urban stations. Where that wasn't possible, as with the Nashville, Chattanooga and St. Louis Railway (which was older than the L&N), it simply used its financial muscle—in 1880 it acquired a controlling interest in its chief competitor. A public outcry convinced the L&N directors that there were limits to their power. They discreetly continued the NC&StL as a separate subsidiary, but now working with, instead of in competition with, the L&N.

Ironically, in 1902 financial speculations by financier J.P. Morgan delivered control of the L&N to its rival Atlantic Coast Line Railroad, but that company did not attempt to control L&N operations, and for many decades there were no consequences of this change.

20th century edit

 
Interior of an L&N dining car, ca. 1921

The World Wars placed heavy demand on the L&N. Its widespread and robust network coped well with the demands of war transport and production, and the resulting profits harked back to the boost it had received from the Civil War. In the postwar period, the line shifted gradually to diesel power, and the new streamlined engines pulled some of the most elegant passenger trains of the last great age of passenger rail, such as the Dixie Flyer, the Humming Bird, and the Pan-American.

 
Louisville Terminus at Union Station with 11-story L&N Building on the left

Though well past its 100th anniversary, the line was still growing. The railroad retired its last steam locomotive, a J-4 class 2-8-2 Mikado #1882, from active service on January 28, 1957.[3] Also in that year, the Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis was finally fully merged. In the 1960s, acquisitions in Illinois allowed a long-sought entry into the premier railroad nexus of Chicago, and some of the battered remains of the old rival, the Tennessee Central, were sold to the L&N as well.

In 1971 the Seaboard Coast Line Railroad, successor to the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad, purchased the remainder of the L&N shares it did not already own, and the company became a subsidiary. Prior to the purchase, the L&N, like other railroads, had curtailed passenger service in response to dwindling ridership. Amtrak, the government-formed passenger railway service, took over the few remaining L&N passenger trains in 1971. In 1979, amid great lamentations in the press, the last passenger service over L&N rails ceased when Amtrak discontinued The Floridian, which had connected Louisville with Nashville and continued to Florida via Birmingham.

By 1982, as the railroad industry consolidated, the Seaboard Coast Line absorbed the Louisville & Nashville Railroad entirely. The merged company was known as "SCL/L&N", "Family Lines", and was depicted as such on the railroad's rolling stock. During the next few years several smaller acquisitions resulted in the creation of the Seaboard System Railroad. Yet more consolidation was ahead, and in 1986, the Seaboard System merged into the C&O/B&O combined system known as the Chessie System. The combined company became CSX Transportation (CSX), which now owns and operates all of the former Louisville and Nashville lines, except for some routes abandoned or sold off.

Legacy edit

Several historical groups and publications devoted to the line exist, and L&N equipment is well represented in the model railroading hobby. The L&N Railroad is mentioned by country music pioneer Jimmie Rodgers in his "Blue Yodel #7". It is also the subject of two other songs: the 2003 Rhonda Vincent bluegrass song "Kentucky Borderline", and "The L&N Don't Stop Here Anymore" by Jean Ritchie and individually performed by Michelle Shocked, Johnny Cash, Billy Bragg & Joe Henry and Kathy Mattea. Dutch blues/rockband The Bintangs had a hit in the Dutch charts in the late 1960s with "Ridin' on the L&N" (a cover from the Dan Burley / Lionel Hampton – composition from 1946). This composition also was covered by John Mayall & the Bluesbreakers.

In 1926 the L&N turned over approximately 137 acres[4] to the Kentucky State Park Commission, making possible the creation of the state's Natural Bridge State Park.

Revenue Freight Ton-Miles (Millions)
L&N NC&StL LH&StL Cumberland & Manchester
1925 12506 1306 410 4
1933 6871 851 (incl in L&N) (into L&N)
1944 17398 2766
1956 15257 2073
1960 16455 (merged)
1970 30580
Totals do not include the Carrollton Railroad.

Passenger operations edit

The Humming Bird and Pan-American, both from Cincinnati to New Orleans and Memphis, were two of the L&N's most popular passenger trains that ran entirely on its own lines. However, the Humming Bird later added a Chicago to New Orleans section in conjunction with the Chicago & Eastern Illinois Railroad utilizing the Georgian north of Nashville. (The Official Guide of the Railroads, February 1952) The railroad also hosted other named trains, including:[citation needed]

 
The Georgian at St. Louis Union Station, 1970

The L&N was one of few railroads to discontinue a passenger train that was en route. On January 9, 1969, as soon as a judge lifted the injunction preventing its discontinuance, the L&N discontinued its southbound Humming Bird at Birmingham, in mid-run from Cincinnati to New Orleans. The 14 passengers continuing south did so by bus.[5]

Preservation edit

There are several preservation organizations of L&N equipment and L&N lines, such as the Kentucky Railway Museum, The Historic Railpark and Train Museum in Bowling Green, Kentucky, and the L&N Historical Society.

 
A preserved L&N train depot in Murphy, North Carolina

The city of Atlanta, Georgia, is home to the General and the Texas, two 4-4-0 locomotives originally built for the Western and Atlantic Railroad, which was later leased to L&N predecessor Nashville, Chattanooga, and St. Louis. The lease of the W&A was passed to, and renewed by, L&N and its successors. The General and the Texas became famous for being participants in The Great Locomotive Chase during the Civil War. The General had been placed on display in the railroad's Union Depot in Chattanooga in 1901. In 1957, the L&N removed the engine and restored it to operating condition. The engine pulled the railroad's wooden center-door Jim Crow combine coach No. 665 as it traveled throughout the eastern U.S. as part of the observance of the Civil War Centennial, including a visit to the 1964 New York World's Fair. Between 1966 and 1971, a legal battle ensued between the railroad and the city of Chattanooga as the former had planned to send the engine to Georgia, while the latter claimed to be the owners of the engine. After the dispute was settled, the engine was formally presented to the state of Georgia in 1971. The engine currently resides at the Southern Museum of Civil War and Locomotive History in Kennesaw, Georgia, while the Texas is currently at the North Carolina Transportation Museum in Spencer, North Carolina undergoing restoration for inclusion into an addition to house it and the cyclorama painting of the battle of Atlanta. The Texas should return to Georgia in late 2016.

The Kentucky Railway Museum consists of many pieces of L&N equipment, as well as a portion of the Lebanon Branch. The museum owns the following L&N equipment: K2A Light Pacific 4-6-2 No. 152, a steam locomotive; heavyweight coaches Nos. 2572 and 2554; an observation car; heavyweight combine No. 1603; combine coach No. 665; sleeper the Pearl River, the Pullman heavyweight 10 section sleeper-lounge Mt. Broderick which was assigned to the L&N but owned and operated by Pullman; several baggage cars; a steam-powered crane; and E-6 diesel locomotive No. 770. All of the last seven pieces of equipment listed need restoration.

The Historic Railpark and Train Museum owns or operates several pieces of L&N equipment, including an E-8 diesel locomotive, a Railway Post Office car, dining car No. 2799, a sleeping car, an observation car, along with a Jim Crow combine in need of major overhaul.

Several other museums own L&N equipment, including the Bluegrass Railroad Museum.

L&N 2132, a South Louisville Shops steam locomotive, is also on static display in Corbin, Kentucky. 2132 was moved from Bainbridge, Georgia to Corbin and underwent a full cosmetic restoration. Along with 2132 and her tender is L&N caboose 1056.[6]

The Wilderness Road Trail is a rail trail built on the ROW from Cumberland Gap National Historical Park to Ewing, Virginia.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Maury Klein (2013). History of the Louisville & Nashville Railroad. University Press of Kentucky. p. 95. ISBN 9780813146751.
  2. ^ "Mortgages, Charters and Other Documents of the Louisville and Nashville ..." Books.google.com. 1871. from the original on January 29, 2024. Retrieved October 27, 2020.
  3. ^ "L&N 0-8-0 No. 2132 to come home to Kentucky". Trains.com. February 26, 2015. from the original on October 15, 2023. Retrieved November 14, 2023.
  4. ^ "Louisville & Nashville Employes' Magazine :: Louisville and Nashville Railroad Company Records". Digital.library.louisville.edu. from the original on February 14, 2017. Retrieved February 14, 2017.
  5. ^ "Union Station". Bhamwiki.com. from the original on February 5, 2023. Retrieved February 3, 2023.
  6. ^ Flanary, Ron. "An "Old Reliable" Comes home to Kentucky". Trains. Vol. 83, no. March 2023. Kalmbach Media. pp. 14–21.

Further reading edit

  • Castner, Charles B.; Flanary, Ron; Dorin, Patrick (1996). Louisville & Nashville Railroad: The Old Reliable (1st ed.). TLC Publishing. ISBN 978-1883089191.
  • Cotterill, R. S. "The Louisville and Nashville Railroad 1861-1865", American Historical Review (1924) 29#4 pp. 700–715 in JSTOR
  • Herr, Kincaid A. (2000) [1964]. The Louisville and Nashville Railroad 1850–1963. University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 0-8131-2184-1.
  • Klein, Maury (2002). History of the Louisville & Nashville Railroad. University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 0-8131-2263-5.
  • Owen, Thomas McAdory (1921). History of Alabama and Dictionary of Alabama Biography, Volume 1. Chicago, IL: The S. J. Clarke Publishing Company.

External links edit

  • The Louisville & Nashville Railroad Historical Society
  • A 1933 article on the Louisville and Nashville Railroad, from the New Zealand Railways magazine.
  • Historic RailPark & Train Museum and L&N Depot
  • 1958 L&N Railroad Map

louisville, nashville, railroad, redirects, here, similarly, named, turnpike, louisville, nashville, turnpike, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, mat. L amp N redirects here For the similarly named turnpike see Louisville and Nashville Turnpike This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Louisville and Nashville Railroad news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Louisville and Nashville Railroad reporting mark LN commonly called the L amp N was a Class I railroad that operated freight and passenger services in the southeast United States Louisville and Nashville RailroadL amp N system map circa 1901OverviewHeadquartersLouisville and Nashville Railroad Office Building 908 West Broadway Louisville Kentucky 1907 1980 Seaboard Coast Line Railroad Building 500 Water Street Jacksonville Florida 1980 1982 Reporting markLNLocaleAlabamaFloridaGeorgiaIllinoisIndianaKentuckyLouisianaMississippiMissouriOhioTennesseeVirginia North CarolinaDates of operation1850 1982SuccessorSeaboard Coast Line RailroadTechnicalTrack gauge4 ft 8 1 2 in 1 435 mm standard gaugePrevious gauge5 ft 1 524 mm converted by 1870 1 2 Length10 396 miles 16 731 kilometers Chartered by the Commonwealth of Kentucky in 1850 the road grew into one of the great success stories of American business Operating under one name continuously for 132 years it survived civil war and economic depression and several waves of social and technological change Under Milton H Smith president of the company for 30 years the L amp N grew from a road with less than three hundred miles 480 km of track to a 6 000 mile 9 700 km system serving fourteen states As one of the premier Southern railroads the L amp N extended its reach far beyond its namesake cities stretching to St Louis Memphis Atlanta and New Orleans The railroad was economically strong throughout its lifetime operating freight and passenger trains in a manner that earned it the nickname The Old Reliable Growth of the railroad continued until its purchase and the tumultuous rail consolidations of the 1980s which led to continual successors By the end of 1970 L amp N operated 6 063 miles 9 757 km of road on 10 051 miles 16 176 km of track not including the Carrollton Railroad In 1971 the Seaboard Coast Line Railroad successor to the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad purchased the remainder of the L amp N shares it did not already own and the company became a subsidiary By 1982 the Seaboard Coast Line had absorbed the Louisville amp Nashville Railroad entirely Then in 1986 the Seaboard System merged with the C amp O and B amp O known as the Chessie System and the combined company became CSX Transportation CSX which now owns and operates all of the former Louisville and Nashville lines Contents 1 Early history and Civil War 2 Coal and capital in the Gilded Age 3 20th century 4 Legacy 5 Passenger operations 6 Preservation 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksEarly history and Civil War editIts first line extended barely south of Louisville Kentucky and it took until 1859 to span the 180 odd miles 290 km to its second namesake city of Nashville There were about 250 miles 400 km of track in the system by the outbreak of the Civil War and its strategic location spanning the Union Confederate lines made it of great interest to both governments During the Civil War different parts of the network were pressed into service by both armies at various times and considerable damage from wear battle and sabotage occurred For example during the Battle of Lebanon in July 1863 the company s depot in Lebanon Kentucky was used as a stronghold by outnumbered Union troops However the company benefited from being based in the Union state of Kentucky and the fact that Nashville fell to Union forces within the first year of the war and remained in their hands for its duration It profited from Northern haulage contracts for troops and supplies paid in sound Federal greenbacks as opposed to the rapidly depreciating Confederate dollars After the war other railroads in the South were devastated to the point of collapse and the general economic depression meant that labor and materials to repair its roads could be had fairly cheaply Buoyed by these fortunate circumstances the firm began an expansion that never really stopped Within 30 years the network reached from Ohio and Missouri to Louisiana and Florida By 1884 the firm had such importance that it was included in the Dow Jones Transportation Average the first American stock market index It was such a large customer of the Rogers Locomotive and Machine Works the country s second largest locomotive maker that in 1879 the firm presented L amp N with a free locomotive as a thank you bonus Coal and capital in the Gilded Age edit nbsp Union Station in Louisville Kentucky nbsp Gold Bond of the Louisville amp Nashville Railroad Company issued 2 June 1890Since all locomotives of the time were steam powered many railroads had favored coal as their engines fuel source after wood burning models were found unsatisfactory The L amp N guaranteed not only its own fuel sources but a steady revenue stream by pushing its lines into the difficult but coal rich terrain of eastern Kentucky and also well into northern Alabama There the small town of Birmingham had recently been founded amidst undeveloped deposits of coal iron ore and limestone the basic ingredients of steel production The arrival of L amp N transport and investment capital helped create a great industrial city and the South s first postwar urban success story The railroad s access to good coal enabled it to claim for a few years starting in 1940 the nation s longest unrefuelled run about 490 miles 790 km from Louisville to Montgomery Alabama In the Gilded Age of the late 19th century there were no such things as anti trust or fair competition laws and very little financial regulation Business was a keen and mean affair and the L amp N was a formidable competitor It would exclude upstarts like the Tennessee Central Railway Company from critical infrastructure like urban stations Where that wasn t possible as with the Nashville Chattanooga and St Louis Railway which was older than the L amp N it simply used its financial muscle in 1880 it acquired a controlling interest in its chief competitor A public outcry convinced the L amp N directors that there were limits to their power They discreetly continued the NC amp StL as a separate subsidiary but now working with instead of in competition with the L amp N Ironically in 1902 financial speculations by financier J P Morgan delivered control of the L amp N to its rival Atlantic Coast Line Railroad but that company did not attempt to control L amp N operations and for many decades there were no consequences of this change 20th century edit nbsp Interior of an L amp N dining car ca 1921The World Wars placed heavy demand on the L amp N Its widespread and robust network coped well with the demands of war transport and production and the resulting profits harked back to the boost it had received from the Civil War In the postwar period the line shifted gradually to diesel power and the new streamlined engines pulled some of the most elegant passenger trains of the last great age of passenger rail such as the Dixie Flyer the Humming Bird and the Pan American nbsp Louisville Terminus at Union Station with 11 story L amp N Building on the leftThough well past its 100th anniversary the line was still growing The railroad retired its last steam locomotive a J 4 class 2 8 2 Mikado 1882 from active service on January 28 1957 3 Also in that year the Nashville Chattanooga amp St Louis was finally fully merged In the 1960s acquisitions in Illinois allowed a long sought entry into the premier railroad nexus of Chicago and some of the battered remains of the old rival the Tennessee Central were sold to the L amp N as well In 1971 the Seaboard Coast Line Railroad successor to the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad purchased the remainder of the L amp N shares it did not already own and the company became a subsidiary Prior to the purchase the L amp N like other railroads had curtailed passenger service in response to dwindling ridership Amtrak the government formed passenger railway service took over the few remaining L amp N passenger trains in 1971 In 1979 amid great lamentations in the press the last passenger service over L amp N rails ceased when Amtrak discontinued The Floridian which had connected Louisville with Nashville and continued to Florida via Birmingham By 1982 as the railroad industry consolidated the Seaboard Coast Line absorbed the Louisville amp Nashville Railroad entirely The merged company was known as SCL L amp N Family Lines and was depicted as such on the railroad s rolling stock During the next few years several smaller acquisitions resulted in the creation of the Seaboard System Railroad Yet more consolidation was ahead and in 1986 the Seaboard System merged into the C amp O B amp O combined system known as the Chessie System The combined company became CSX Transportation CSX which now owns and operates all of the former Louisville and Nashville lines except for some routes abandoned or sold off Legacy editSeveral historical groups and publications devoted to the line exist and L amp N equipment is well represented in the model railroading hobby The L amp N Railroad is mentioned by country music pioneer Jimmie Rodgers in his Blue Yodel 7 It is also the subject of two other songs the 2003 Rhonda Vincent bluegrass song Kentucky Borderline and The L amp N Don t Stop Here Anymore by Jean Ritchie and individually performed by Michelle Shocked Johnny Cash Billy Bragg amp Joe Henry and Kathy Mattea Dutch blues rockband The Bintangs had a hit in the Dutch charts in the late 1960s with Ridin on the L amp N a cover from the Dan Burley Lionel Hampton composition from 1946 This composition also was covered by John Mayall amp the Bluesbreakers In 1926 the L amp N turned over approximately 137 acres 4 to the Kentucky State Park Commission making possible the creation of the state s Natural Bridge State Park Revenue Freight Ton Miles Millions L amp N NC amp StL LH amp StL Cumberland amp Manchester1925 12506 1306 410 41933 6871 851 incl in L amp N into L amp N 1944 17398 27661956 15257 20731960 16455 merged 1970 30580Totals do not include the Carrollton Railroad Passenger operations editThe Humming Bird and Pan American both from Cincinnati to New Orleans and Memphis were two of the L amp N s most popular passenger trains that ran entirely on its own lines However the Humming Bird later added a Chicago to New Orleans section in conjunction with the Chicago amp Eastern Illinois Railroad utilizing the Georgian north of Nashville The Official Guide of the Railroads February 1952 The railroad also hosted other named trains including citation needed Azalean Cincinnati New Orleans had through Pullman Company Sleeping Cars between Cincinnati and New York over the Pennsylvania Railroad ran combined with the Washington Atlanta New Orleans Express New York New Orleans in conjunction with the Pennsylvania Railroad Southern Railway and the West Point Route these trains combined south of Montgomery Pre Amtrak Crescent New York New Orleans in conjunction with the Pennsylvania Railroad Southern Railway and the West Point Route Dixie Flagler Chicago Miami in conjunction with the Chicago amp Eastern Illinois Railroad Nashville Chattanooga and St Louis Railway Atlantic Coast Line Railroad and the Florida East Coast Railway Dixie Flyer and Dixie Limited Chicago and St Louis to Jacksonville in conjunction with the Chicago amp Eastern Illinois Railroad Nashville Chattanooga and St Louis Railway Central of Georgia Railway and the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Dixieland Chicago Miami in conjunction with the Chicago amp Eastern Illinois Railroad Nashville Chattanooga and St Louis Railway Atlantic Coast Line Railroad and the Florida East Coast Railway Dixiana Chicago Miami in conjunction with the Chicago amp Eastern Illinois Railroad Nashville Chattanooga and St Louis Railway Atlantic Coast Line Railroad and the Florida East Coast Railway Flamingo Cincinnati Jacksonville in conjunction with the Central of Georgia Railway Atlantic Coast Line Florida Arrow seasonal train Chicago Louisville Birmingham Miami in conjunction with the Pennsylvania Railroad Atlantic Coast Line Railroad and the Florida East Coast Railway nbsp The Georgian at St Louis Union Station 1970Georgian Originally St Louis Atlanta later changed to Chicago Atlanta in conjunction with the Chicago amp Eastern Illinois Railroad and the Nashville Chattanooga and St Louis Railway Gulf Wind New Orleans Jacksonville in conjunction with the Seaboard Air Line Railroad Piedmont Limited New York New Orleans in conjunction with the Pennsylvania Railroad Southern Railway and the West Point Route Southland Chicago St Petersburg Tampa and Miami in conjunction with the Pennsylvania Railroad Central of Georgia Railway and the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad The Wabash Railroad had a connection in Fort Wayne for trips from Detroit South Wind Chicago Miami in conjunction with the Pennsylvania Railroad Atlantic Coast Line Railroad and the Florida East Coast Railway The L amp N was one of few railroads to discontinue a passenger train that was en route On January 9 1969 as soon as a judge lifted the injunction preventing its discontinuance the L amp N discontinued its southbound Humming Bird at Birmingham in mid run from Cincinnati to New Orleans The 14 passengers continuing south did so by bus 5 Preservation editThere are several preservation organizations of L amp N equipment and L amp N lines such as the Kentucky Railway Museum The Historic Railpark and Train Museum in Bowling Green Kentucky and the L amp N Historical Society nbsp A preserved L amp N train depot in Murphy North CarolinaThe city of Atlanta Georgia is home to the General and the Texas two 4 4 0 locomotives originally built for the Western and Atlantic Railroad which was later leased to L amp N predecessor Nashville Chattanooga and St Louis The lease of the W amp A was passed to and renewed by L amp N and its successors The General and the Texas became famous for being participants in The Great Locomotive Chase during the Civil War The General had been placed on display in the railroad s Union Depot in Chattanooga in 1901 In 1957 the L amp N removed the engine and restored it to operating condition The engine pulled the railroad s wooden center door Jim Crow combine coach No 665 as it traveled throughout the eastern U S as part of the observance of the Civil War Centennial including a visit to the 1964 New York World s Fair Between 1966 and 1971 a legal battle ensued between the railroad and the city of Chattanooga as the former had planned to send the engine to Georgia while the latter claimed to be the owners of the engine After the dispute was settled the engine was formally presented to the state of Georgia in 1971 The engine currently resides at the Southern Museum of Civil War and Locomotive History in Kennesaw Georgia while the Texas is currently at the North Carolina Transportation Museum in Spencer North Carolina undergoing restoration for inclusion into an addition to house it and the cyclorama painting of the battle of Atlanta The Texas should return to Georgia in late 2016 The Kentucky Railway Museum consists of many pieces of L amp N equipment as well as a portion of the Lebanon Branch The museum owns the following L amp N equipment K2A Light Pacific 4 6 2 No 152 a steam locomotive heavyweight coaches Nos 2572 and 2554 an observation car heavyweight combine No 1603 combine coach No 665 sleeper the Pearl River the Pullman heavyweight 10 section sleeper lounge Mt Broderick which was assigned to the L amp N but owned and operated by Pullman several baggage cars a steam powered crane and E 6 diesel locomotive No 770 All of the last seven pieces of equipment listed need restoration The Historic Railpark and Train Museum owns or operates several pieces of L amp N equipment including an E 8 diesel locomotive a Railway Post Office car dining car No 2799 a sleeping car an observation car along with a Jim Crow combine in need of major overhaul Several other museums own L amp N equipment including the Bluegrass Railroad Museum L amp N 2132 a South Louisville Shops steam locomotive is also on static display in Corbin Kentucky 2132 was moved from Bainbridge Georgia to Corbin and underwent a full cosmetic restoration Along with 2132 and her tender is L amp N caboose 1056 6 The Wilderness Road Trail is a rail trail built on the ROW from Cumberland Gap National Historical Park to Ewing Virginia See also edit nbsp Railways portalFamily Lines System List of Louisville and Nashville Railroad precursors Louisville amp Nashville Railroad Co v Mottley U S Supreme Court case involving the railroad Seaboard SystemReferences edit Maury Klein 2013 History of the Louisville amp Nashville Railroad University Press of Kentucky p 95 ISBN 9780813146751 Mortgages Charters and Other Documents of the Louisville and Nashville Books google com 1871 Archived from the original on January 29 2024 Retrieved October 27 2020 L amp N 0 8 0 No 2132 to come home to Kentucky Trains com February 26 2015 Archived from the original on October 15 2023 Retrieved November 14 2023 Louisville amp Nashville Employes Magazine Louisville and Nashville Railroad Company Records Digital library louisville edu Archived from the original on February 14 2017 Retrieved February 14 2017 Union Station Bhamwiki com Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 3 2023 Flanary Ron An Old Reliable Comes home to Kentucky Trains Vol 83 no March 2023 Kalmbach Media pp 14 21 Further reading editCastner Charles B Flanary Ron Dorin Patrick 1996 Louisville amp Nashville Railroad The Old Reliable 1st ed TLC Publishing ISBN 978 1883089191 Cotterill R S The Louisville and Nashville Railroad 1861 1865 American Historical Review 1924 29 4 pp 700 715 in JSTOR Herr Kincaid A 2000 1964 The Louisville and Nashville Railroad 1850 1963 University Press of Kentucky ISBN 0 8131 2184 1 Klein Maury 2002 History of the Louisville amp Nashville Railroad University Press of Kentucky ISBN 0 8131 2263 5 Owen Thomas McAdory 1921 History of Alabama and Dictionary of Alabama Biography Volume 1 Chicago IL The S J Clarke Publishing Company External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Louisville and Nashville Railroad The Louisville amp Nashville Railroad Historical Society L amp N in Georgia L amp N in Alabama L amp N model photos A 1933 article on the Louisville and Nashville Railroad from the New Zealand Railways magazine Historic RailPark amp Train Museum and L amp N Depot 1958 L amp N Railroad Map Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Louisville and Nashville Railroad amp oldid 1204694733, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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