Southern Railway – Carolina Division

The Southern Railway – Carolina Division traced its history back to one of the first railroad chartered in the United States.

The South Carolina Canal and Rail Road Company was chartered in South Carolina in 1827, eventually building a 136-mile (219 km) line from Charleston, South Carolina, to Hamburg, South Carolina. It merged with the Louisville, Cincinnati and Charleston Railroad in 1843 to become the South Carolina Railroad

In 1881, the line was reorganized as the South Carolina Railway. After entering receivership in 1889, it was reorganized once again five years later as the South Carolina and Georgia Railroad.[1]

Southern Railway gained control of the line in 1899. The South Carolina and Georgia Railroad remained separate corporation until May 1902, when it was consolidated with several other lines controlled by Southern.[2]

Southern Railway obtained a 999-year lease of the line in 1902, which is still in effect.[3]

In December 1990, Southern changed its name to Norfolk Southern Railway and became a wholly owned subsidiary of Norfolk Southern Railway Company. In 1996, the Southern Railway Company merged with the Norfolk Southern Railway Company in North and South Carolina, bringing an end to the Southern Railway – Carolina Division.[4]

References

  1. South Carolina Railroads, South Carolina & Georgia Railroad
  2. The Southeastern Reporter, Volume 60, 1908
  3. South Carolina Railroads, South Carolina & Georgia Railroad
  4. [U.S. Fed News, Surface Transport Board Issues Decision on Norfolk Southern Railway Abandonment Exemption in McDowell County, North Carolina, June 13, 2006]


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