Atlanta, Birmingham and Coast Railroad

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Atlanta, Birmingham & Coast Railroad
ABCRRlogo.jpg
Station Byromville Georgia LOC fsa 8a03451.jpg
The railroad's Byromville, Georgia station in 1938
Overview
Headquarters Atlanta, Georgia, U.S.
Reporting mark AB&C
Locale Alabama
Georgia
Dates of operation18871945
Successor Atlantic Coast Line Railroad
Technical
Track gauge 4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Length640 miles (1,030 kilometres)

The Atlanta, Birmingham and Coast Railroad was organized in 1926 to replace the bankrupt Atlanta, Birmingham and Atlantic Railway. The AB&C was controlled by the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad, which owned a majority of the stock. In 1944 it reported 763 million net ton-miles of revenue freight and 33 million passenger-miles; at the end of that year it operated 639 miles of road and 836 miles of track (the main trackage plus all sidings, spurs, terminal tracks, and shared tracks).

Contents

Passenger services

The AB&C operated daily freight and passenger trains between its northern endpoints, Atlanta and Birmingham, and its southern ones, Brunswick, Waycross, and Thomasville; the two northern branches joined at Manchester to form a single main line. Passenger trains from Atlanta used Terminal Station, while others left from the AB&C's own Eleventh Street station in Birmingham. [1] A branch from the main line at Fitzgerald ran 80 miles southwesterly to Thomasville. The main line continued to the port city of Brunswick, while another branch carried trains to Waycross for connection with the Atlantic Coast Line to the Florida railroad hub of Jacksonville, 75 miles away. [2]

From January 1936, the AB&C was a link in the route of the Chicago-Miami Dixieland. which ran in the winter season only, carrying coaches and Pullmans between Atlanta and Waycross. [3] And beginning in January 1940, the AB&C also carried the Dixie Flagler , a new, streamlined all-coach train that ran every third day, one of a trio of streamliners that provided daily service between Chicago and Miami via multiple railroads over three different routes. The route via the AB&C was the shortest of all three, a total of 1455 miles, covered in 29 1/2 hours. [4]

Acquisition

In 1946 the AB&C was merged into the ACL, becoming the latter company's Western Division.

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References

  1. "Index of Railroad Stations, 1484". Official Guide of the Railways. National Railway Publication Company. 64 (9). February 1932.
  2. "Atlanta, Birmingham and Coast Railroad, Tables 1, 2, 3, 4". Official Guide of the Railways. National Railway Publication Company. 64 (9). February 1932.
  3. Prince, Richard E. (1967). The Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Railway: History and Steam Locomotives. Bloomington: Indiana University Press [reprint, 2001]. p. 156. ISBN   0253339278 . Retrieved 27 April 2023.
  4. Bowen, Eric H. "The Dixie Flagler - June, 1941". Streamliner Schedules. Retrieved 27 April 2023.

Bibliography