Atlantic and Yadkin Railway

Atlantic and Yadkin Railway

Infobox SG rail
railroad_name=Atlantic and Yadkin Railway
start_year=1899| end_year=1950
locale=North Carolina
hq_city=
The Atlantic and Yadkin Railway was a short line railroad within North Carolina from 1899-1950. It ran from Mount Airy southeast to Sanford, primarily serving the Piedmont region. Some of the rails are still in use as of 2006 as parts of the Yadkin Valley Railway.

History

This Class III railroad's short lifespan covered 1900 to 1950, but some of its rails were laid down in the nineteenth century as part of the Cape Fear and Yadkin Valley Railway (CF&YV) which ran from the Atlantic port of Wilmington, North Carolina, all the way to Mount Airy with a significant branch to Bennettsville, South Carolina. The Atlantic & Yadkin Railway Corporation came into being when representatives of the Wilmington and Weldon Railroad (soon to be reorganized as the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad) outbid the Southern Railway for the debt-ridden and bankrupt CF&YV in an 1899 auction. The Wilmington & Weldon Railroad (W&W) had a clause in its incorporation that required any railroad purchased by the W&W to be placed under the same corporate name. The W&W did not want to own the whole of the CF&YV, only that portion which competed directly with its own lines in southeast North Carolina. So the CF&YV was sold to the Southern Railway, where it was reorganized as a new company under the name Atlantic & Yadkin Railway (A&Y). The newly created A&Y then sold back the southern half of its lines from Sanford to Wilmington to the W&W. The northern half remained a wholly owned subsidiary of the Southern Railway.Fact|date=February 2007

The questionable legality of the transaction regarding the split of the CF&YV meant years of legal wrangling by angry investors and interested state citizens who saw the only "trunk" line from the western mountains to a North Carolina port split between two competitors. In 1924, the North Carolina Supreme Court ruled that the sale and reorganization was legal.Fact|date=February 2007 The Southern Railway wholly owned the A&Y, but kept it as an independent entity throughout the legal battles. The line was considered part of the Southern Railway until 1917, when the A&Y was allowed to run under its own name.

In 1924, the A&Y declared bankruptcy and was taken over by receivers. Receivership required a division of assets and separate operations from the Southern Railway. Eventually, the A&Y was returned to solvency.

The renewed profitability combined with the due date for the A&Y's $1.5 million in bonds in the late 1940s led the Southern Railway management to decide to merge the line into its own Winston-Salem Division. The Southern Railway paid the bonds and initiated a merger request. Despite some reservations by the merchants of Greensboro regarding lack of competition for rail transport in that growing city, the Interstate Commerce Commission approved the merger effective January 1, 1950. At that time, the Atlantic & Yadkin Railway company ceased to exist.Fact|date=February 2007

References


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • List of North Carolina railroads — Contents 1 Common freight carriers 2 Passenger carriers 3 Defunct railroads …   Wikipedia

  • List of defunct United States railroads — Commuter railroads ndash; See alsoSee for historic railway companies that have operated in Canada.A*Abbeville and Waycross Railroad *Abilene, Solomon Valley and Denver Railway *Abilene, Sterling and Southwestern Railway *Akron, Canton and… …   Wikipedia

  • Liste ehemaliger nordamerikanischer Eisenbahngesellschaften — Diese Liste ehemaliger nordamerikanischer Eisenbahnen enthält eine Auflistung nicht mehr existierender Bahngesellschaften, sogenannter „Fallen flags“ in Kanada, den Vereinigten Staaten und Mexiko. Reine Namensänderungen aufgrund rechtlicher… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Julian Price — (1867 ndash;1946) was an insurance executive who made his fortune in the first part of the twentieth century by developing the Jefferson Standard Life Insurance Company, at the time the largest corporation in North Carolina. Childhood to midlife… …   Wikipedia

  • Liste von US-Bahngesellschaften — In dieser Liste nordamerikanischer Eisenbahngesellschaften sind alle nach Angaben der Industrieverbände Association of American Railroads (AAR) und Railway Association of Canada (RAC) zum 31. Dezember 2005 bestehenden Eisenbahngesellschaften in… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Liste nordamerikanischer Eisenbahngesellschaften — In dieser Liste nordamerikanischer Eisenbahngesellschaften sind alle nach Angaben der Industrieverbände Association of American Railroads (AAR) und Railway Association of Canada (RAC) bestehenden öffentlichen Eisenbahngesellschaften in den… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • List of United States railroads — See also: List of Canadian railways There are approximately 150,000 miles (240,000 km) of railroad track in the United States, nearly all standard gauge. The following is a partial list of United States railroads which currently operate there.… …   Wikipedia

  • Liste des chemins de fer d'Amérique du Nord — Les compagnies de chemins de fer d amérique du nord (regroupant Mexique, Canada et États Unis) sont nombreuses, pouvant représenter quelques kilomètres de voies comme des milliers. La présente liste présente les chemins de fer en activité. Les… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Goldston, North Carolina — Infobox Settlement official name = Goldston, North Carolina settlement type = Town nickname = motto = imagesize = image caption = image mapsize = 250x200px map caption = Location of Goldston, North Carolina mapsize1 = map caption1 = subdivision… …   Wikipedia

  • Ararat, North Carolina — Ararat is an unincorporated community in the Long Hill Township of Surry County, North Carolina. Ararat is situated on, and is named for, the Ararat River Harvard citation|Powell|1968|p=12. Ararat is along the former Atlantic Yadkin Railway line… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”