Archives: Southern Railway Historical Association Collection
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Southern Railway Historical Association Collection
MS2003.009
Provenance:
The Southern Railway Historical Association loaned these records
in 2003.
Single photocopies may be made for research purposes for a small
fee. Permission to publish materials from this collection must be
obtained from the Director of Library/Archives and the Southern
Railway Historical Association, Inc.
Sallie E. Loy processed these papers in 2003.
Organizational History of the Southern Railway Historical Association,
Inc.
The Southern Railway Historical Association, Inc. is a non-profit
educational organization chartered in North Carolina for the preservation
and dissemination of information related to Southern Railway, its
predecessors, successors and affiliates.
The Association publishes a bimonthly magazine, TIES Magazine,
holds annual meetings in locations of historical significance to
Southern Railway, and makes available special offerings of books,
videos, slides and other items to its members and to the public.
The Associations goals include the establishment of a research
archives and a photo archives.
Courtesy of the Southern Railway Historical Association, Inc. website
http://www.srha.net.
Organizational History of the Southern Railway System
Southern Railway is the product of nearly 150 predecessor lines
that were combined, reorganized and recombined since the 1830s.
The nine-mile South Carolina Canal & Rail Road Co., Southern's
earliest predecessor line, was chartered in December 1827 and ran
the nation's first scheduled passenger service to be pulled regularly
by a steam locomotive -- the wood-burning "Best Friend of Charleston" -- out of Charleston, S.C., on Christmas Day 1830. When its 136-mile
line to Hamburg, S.C. was completed in October 1833, it was the
longest continuous line of railroad in the world.
As railroad fever struck other Southern states, networks gradually
spread across the South and even across the Allegheny Mountains.
Charleston and Memphis, Tenn., were linked by 1857, although rail
expansion halted with the start of the Civil War.
Known as the "first railroad war," the Civil War left
the South's railroads and economy devastated. Most of the railroads,
however, were repaired, reorganized and operated again. In the area
along the Ohio and Mississippi rivers, construction of new railroads
continued throughout Reconstruction.
Southern Railway was created in 1894, largely from the financially-stressed
Richmond & Danville system and the East Tennessee, Virginia
& Georgia Railroad. The company owned two-thirds of the 4,400
miles of line it operated, and the rest was held through leases,
operating agreements and stock ownership.
Southern also subsequently controlled the Queen & Crescent
Route (Alabama Great Southern; New Orleans & Northeastern; Cincinnati,
New Orleans & Texas Pacific; and for a time the Alabama &
Vicksburg), and the Georgia Southern & Florida, which were operated
separately.
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Samuel Spencer, First President of Southern Railway System |
Samuel Spencer
Southern's first president, Samuel Spencer, drew more lines into
Southern's core system. During his 12-year term, the railway built
new shops at Knoxville, Tenn., and Atlanta, and purchased more equipment.
He moved the company's service away from an agricultural dependence
on tobacco and cotton and centered its efforts on diversifying traffic
and industrial development.
By the time the New Orleans & Northeastern (Meridian-New Orleans)
was acquired in 1916 under Southern's president Fairfax Harrison,
the railroad had attained the 8,000-mile, 13-state system that marked
its territorial limits for almost half a century.
The Central of Georgia became part of the system in 1963, and the
former Norfolk Southern Railway Co. (Norfolk-Charlotte) was acquired
in 1974.
Southern and its predecessors were responsible for many firsts in
the industry. Its predecessor, the South Carolina Canal & Rail
Road Co., was the first to carry passengers, U.S. troops and mail
on regularly-scheduled steam-powered trains, and it was the first
to operate at night. In 1953, Southern Railway became the first
major railroad in the United States to convert totally to diesel-powered
locomotives, ending its rich history in the golden age of steam.
From dieselization and shop and yard modernization, to computers
and the development of special cars and the unit coal train, Southern
often was on the cutting edge of change, earning the company its
catch phrase, "The Railway System that Gives a Green Light
to Innovations."
Courtesy of the Southern Railway Historical Association, Inc. website
http://www.srha.net.