- Seaboard and Roanoke Railroad
The Seaboard and Roanoke Railroad was organized in 1833 (as the Portsmouth and Roanoke Railroad) to extend from the area of the rapids of the
Roanoke River at itsfall line nearWeldon, North Carolina toPortsmouth, Virginia , across the Elizabeth River from Norfolk on the harbor ofHampton Roads .History
In the early 19th century, competition was fierce among Virginia's port cities to be the point where export products such as tobacco could be transferred to ocean-going and coast-wise shipping. Canals, turnpikes and railroads became important conduits in the
antebellum period in Virginia.The original goal of the Portsmouth and Roanoke Railroad was to provide a link for shipments of goods originating on the Roanoke River and its
canal system from points west to reach port facilities in the Norfolk area on the harbor ofHampton Roads . For such traffic, Norfolk and Portsmouth were fiercely competitive with Petersburg, which had access to the navigable portion of the James River at City Point via about 8 miles of theAppomattox River below its fall line, and was also planning rail service from its south and west.The new line was first completed in 1835. Some of the intermediate points in Virginia were Boykins, Franklin, Carrsville, and Suffolk. Lumber was the largest commodity originating along the line, and the facilities of the Camp Company's lumber and paper mill operations in Franklin were located there due to the new railroad.
The Seaboard and Roanoke was the first railroad to reach the Norfolk area, which eventually became a busy point for many railroads. However, it was to be more than 20 years before the
Norfolk and Petersburg Railroad , a predecessor of theNorfolk and Western Railway built byWilliam Mahone , was completed. Through several financial reorganizations, and refinancing by theVirginia Board of Public Works in 1838, it was variously known as the Portsmouth and Roanoke Railroad and the Seaboard and Roanoke Railroad.1837 Head-on collision
On August 11, 1837 the first head-on railroad collision to result in passenger fatalities in the United States occurred near Suffolk when an eastbound lumber train coming down a grade at speed rounded a sharp curve and smacked into the morning passenger train from Portsmouth, Virginia. The first three of thirteen stagecoach-style cars were smashed, killing three daughters of the prominent Ely family and injuring dozens of the 200 on board. They were returning from a steamboat cruise when the accident happened. An engraving depicting the moment of impact was published in Howland's "Steamboat Disasters and Railroad Accidents" in 1840.
American Civil War
One of the Seaboard and Roanoke's builders from the mid-1830s' was
Walter Gwynn , who, during theAmerican Civil War , became a Confederate General assigned to take charge of the defenses of Norfolk, which were held by the southern troops for about a year in 1861-62. Early in that period, fellow railroader William Mahone used his Norfolk and Petersburg Railroad and ruse tactics to feign massive arrivals of additionalConfederate troops at Norfolk. Without a single shot fired, he successfully tricked the small detachment of troops holding theGosport Shipyard (nowNorfolk Navy Yard ) into abandoning it for the safety of Union-heldFort Monroe across the harbor.Mergers: SAL, SCL, CSX
In the 1880s, the Seaboard and Roanoke became part of the
Seaboard Air Line Railway system, which was extended through Petersburg to reach Richmond to the north and covered the southeastern states to reachFlorida .In 1967, the Seaboard Air Line Railroad merged with its arch-rival, the Atlantic Coast Line railroad to form
Seaboard Coast Line Industries (SCL).SCL merged with the
Chessie System in 1980, to formCSX Transportation , which is currently one of seven majorClass 1 railroad s operating in North America in the 21st century.Future
A portion of the line in the cities of Suffolk and western Chesapeake has been included in studies by the
Virginia Department of Rail and Public Transportation of the feasibility of Richmond-South Hampton Roads High Speed Passenger Rail service. A suburban Norfolk-area station has been projected to be located nearBowers Hill in Chesapeake.uffolk Passenger Station
The circa-1885 Seaboard Passenger Station at
Suffolk, Virginia was shared with the coal haulingVirginian Railway when it was built adjacently in the early 20th century. Featuring a brick octagonal cupola for its telegraph operators, the station was restored and now houses a railroad museum, operating model trains based upon of Suffolk around 1907, and a gift shop. [ [http://www.suffolktrainstation.org/ New Page 2 ] ]References
External links
* [http://www.csa-railroads.com/Confederate%20Railroads.htm "Confederate Railroads" web site]
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