- Heart of Dixie Railroad Museum
Infobox Museum
name = Heart of Dixie Railroad Museum
imagesize = 200
caption = Interior historical displays at at the Heart of Dixie Railroad Museum.
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established = mid-1900s
dissolved =
location =Calera, Alabama
type = Railroad museum
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director =
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publictransit = none
website = [http://www.hodrrm.org Heart of Dixie Railroad Museum] The Heart of Dixie Railroad Museum is the official state railroad museum of Alabama. Dedicated to the preservation, restoration, and operation of historically significant railway equipment, the museum is located at 1919 Ninth Street, Calera, Alabama, onI-65 approximately 30 miles south ofBirmingham, Alabama .http://www.hodrrm.org/ Heart of Dixie Railroad Museum]The museum features a wide range of locomotives, cars and other railroad equipment that dates from the 1800s to the 1950s and operates regularly scheduled excursions with museum equipment over the museum’s track.
It also features two depots that are approximately 100 years old.
It also is home to a privately owned dinner train.
Heritage railroad
The museum operates a heritage railroad that offers two excursion trains every Saturday from
March -December . It also operates excursions on special dates such asHalloween andChristmas . The standard gauge train operates with a diesel locomotive on a 5.5 mile section of formerLouisville and Nashville Railroad track. The museum offers visitors the opportunity to ride in the cab of the locomotive and in a caboose in addition to the enclosed and open-air passenger cars.Additionally, the museum operates a two foot gauge live steam engine locomotive and passenger cars on a one-quarter-mile long loop. This train served the nearby
Birmingham Zoo for many years before being placed into operation at the museum.Locomotives
The museum maintains three operating first generation diesel-electric locomotives for powering excursion trains and shop switching. Six additional diesel-electric locomotives are presented as static displays as well as two electric shop locomotives. Builders represented include GM
Electro-Motive Division , Whitcomb, Baldwin,Alco , andFairbanks-Morse .Though none are in service, the museum also has four
steam locomotives on display. While lacking much of its original operating equipment and gauges, the cab of the 1924 Woodward Iron Baldwin 2-8-0 locomotive is open to the public and is equipped with wooden stairs for visitors. Two other steam locomotives have also been cosmetically restored for display, including a unique fireless steamer switching locomotive operated byAlabama Power Company which did not have a firebox, but instead received steam from the plant’s boilers and used that stored steam to operate for about four hours a charge. Builders displayed include Baldwin, Alco, Lima, and Davenport. [Steam Engine No. 40 Interpretative Sign; Heart of Dixie Railroad Museum]Rolling stock
The museum displays over forty pieces of rolling stock, spanning the early to late 20th century including passenger,
railway post office , and freight cars. Numerous passenger cars have been restored and are now used on the museum’s excursions. Birthday parties are hosted in a restored dining car adjacent to the visitors center. Many of the freight and passenger cars are awaiting restoration from damage previously incurred while stored in an unsecured locationpecialty equipment
Among the museum’s collection are two heavy-duty rail mounted cranes used in construction and wreck-clearing duty. Additionally, the museum has several railcars that once belonged to the
United States Air Force Strategic Air Command which were to be used as part of the PeacekeeperIntercontinental Ballistic Missile program which planned the rail-based deployment of such missiles.tations
The museum includes two former community railway stations in its collection. The former
Wilton, Alabama depot, now signed for Calera, houses many railroad artifact displays and serves as the station for excursion trains. The former Woodlawn, Alabama depot houses the Boone Library of railroad books, slides, photographs and other research materials.ignals
A signal garden continues to be developed between the Calera depot and the main museum visitor center which features working crossing signals, a semaphore, and other railroad signals.
Interior displays
The Calera depot houses a collection of railroad artifact displays focusing on the history of railroads in Alabama. Exhibits include railway lanterns, locomotive headlights, rail cross sections, and passenger train china and silver ware. The Boone Library in the Woodlawn deport and adjacent railcar contains print and other media as well as an extensive collection of old maps, track diagrams, timetables, technical manuals, etc. for public research use.
History
*The Heart of Dixie Railroad Museum, Inc. began as the Heart of Dixie Railroad Club. Its first location was at 18th St. S and 1st Ave. N in Downtown Birmingham, across from the Alabama Power Steam Generation Plant. The cars were largely donated to the Club by their respective railroads. However, the cars were vulnerable to vandals. Several cars were burned in different disputes over territory by homeless people. In the Early 1980s, the Club moved to Calera and secured several hundred acres of land between 17th Ave and 20th Ave along 9th St.
*The Calera and Shelby Railroad (the standard-gauge trains) run along a five-and-one-half-mile section of the former L&N Mineral loop, constructed in 1891 to collect the minerals necessary for making iron, then looping back to Birmingham to drop off the minerals at the local ironworks. The line was abandoned when Alabama Power dammed up the Coosa River for a new hydroelectric plant. This would have flooded the bridge over the Coosa River, which was subsequently removed. CSX later pulled up the rails along the line. Eleven miles of right-of-way were purchased by the Heart of Dixie Railroad Club (now Heart of Dixie Railroad Museum, Inc.) when they moved to Calera in the 1980s. Since then, the museum has been replacing the track along the right-of-way. The track currently ends at Springs Junction, Alabama, just East of its crossing of Alabama State Highway 86.
*The Shelby and Southern (the two-foot-gauge train) rolling stock is the former park train of the Birmingham Zoo. Some two-foot-gauge track was purchased, a station and maintenance shed were built, the cars were sandblasted, re-lettered, and re-painted, and the propane fired
4-4-0 steam engine was sent to theTweetsie Railroad for refurbishment. The S&S opened during Day Out With Thomas 2002, a two-weekend period where Thomas the Tank Engine comes to visit the museum.William Penn Dinner Train
The William Penn Dinner Train is privately owned by several members and operates out of the museum. It holds open reservation dinners monthly and is available for charter. Its equipment consists of a recently refurbished ex-
Pennsylvania Railroad Budd-built parlor car converted byAmtrak to a dining car named afterWilliam Penn and a 48-seat coach leased from a museum member
=References
External links
* [http://www.hodrrm.org/ Official Website of the Heart of Dixie Railroad Museum]
* [http://wmpenn.info/ The William Penn Dinner Train]
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