Seaboard Coast Line Railroad
File:Seaboard Coast Line Herald.png | |
Overview | |
---|---|
Headquarters | Jacksonville, FL and Richmond, VA |
Reporting mark | SCL |
Locale | Alabama, Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Virginia |
Dates of operation | 1967–1983 |
Successor | Seaboard System |
The Seaboard Coast Line Railroad (reporting mark SCL) was created July 1, 1967 as a result of the merger of the Seaboard Air Line Railroad with the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad. Effective January 1, 1983, The Seaboard Coast Line Railroad became Seaboard System Railroad as a result of a merger with the Louisville and Nashville Railroad and Clinchfield Railroad. For some years prior to this, the SCL and L&N had been under the common ownership of a holding company, Seaboard Coast Line Industries (SCI), the company's railroad subsidiaries being collectively known as the Family Lines System which consisted of the L&N, SCL, Clinchfield and West Point Routes. During this time, the railroads adopted the same paint schemes, but continued to operate as separate railroads. At the time of the merger in 1967, the combined system had nearly 10,000 miles of track and 23,000 employees.[1] After the November 1, 1980 merger of SCL with the Chessie System, the resulting CSX Corporation combined the Family Lines System units as the Seaboard System Railroad and later became CSX Transportation when the former Chessie units merged with the SCL in December 1986.
Notable SCL services
Juice Train: a historic model of unit train competition
Juice Train is the popular name for famous unit trains of Tropicana fresh orange juice operated by railroads in the United States. In 1970, beginning on Seaboard Coast Line railroad, a mile-long Tropicana Juice Train train began carrying one million gallons of juice with one weekly round-trip from Bradenton, Florida to Kearny, New Jersey, in the New York City area.
Today operated by SCL successor CSX Transportation, CSX Juice Trains have been the focus of efficiency studies and awards as examples of how modern rail transportation can compete successfully against trucking and other modes to carry perishable products.
Divisions
- Jacksonville
- Tampa
- Waycross
- Florence
- Atlanta
- Rocky Mount
- Savannah
- Raleigh
- CN&L
- GM Railroad
History
The Western and Atlantic Railroad is famous for the Great Locomotive Chase, which took place on the W&A during the US Civil War in April 1862.
This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (May 2008) |
See also
References
External links
- Seaboard Coast Line Railroad
- Seaboard System Railroad
- Predecessors of CSX Transportation
- Defunct Florida railroads
- Defunct Georgia (U.S. state) railroads
- Defunct North Carolina railroads
- Defunct South Carolina railroads
- Defunct Virginia railroads
- Former Class I railroads in the United States
- Companies based in Jacksonville, Florida
- Companies based in Richmond, Virginia
- Railway companies established in 1967
- Railway companies disestablished in 1983
- Defunct Alabama railroads