Skip to content

Charleston Cincinnati & Chicago Railroad Modern Logo

Rails Across the Appalchians

Appalachian Railroads, Yesterday and Today

3Cs Railroad Loops

Home » Charleston Cincinnati and Chicago Railroad – 3Cs » 3Cs Railroad Loops
  • Home Page
  • Appalachian Railroads
    • Legacy: B&O | C&O | Clinchfield | L&N | NC&StL | N&W | Pennsylvania | Southern | Virginian
    • Partners: ACL | SAL | SCL
    • Early Lines: AT&O | Blue Ridge | Cincinnati Southern | LC&C | N&C | OR&C
    • Short Lines: Gainesville Mid | Kentucky & Tennessee | Tallulah Falls
    • Consolidation: Chessie | Family | Penn Central & Conrail | Seaboard
    • Today: CSX | Norfolk Southern
  • Charleston Cincinnati & Chicago Railroad: History | Locos | Maps | John T. Wilder | Railfan Guide
  • ET&WNC: History | Maps | Locomotives | Timetables | Leaders | Tweetsie
  • Appalachian Railroad Cities: Asheville | Baltimore | Chattanooga | Cincinnati | Erwin | Johnson City | Knoxville | Lynchburg | Richmond | Roanoke | Spartanburg | and more
  • Appalachian Mountain Gaps
  • Railfan Guides | Abandoned Lines & Railroads | Rails to Trails
  • Sources & Resources: Scholars & Authors | Books | Museums | Organizations | Links
  • Model Railroads: 3Cs | ET&WNC
  • Appalachian-Railroads.org: Site Map | Editor
  • Related sites: Clinchfield.org | Southern-Railroads.org

Page Contents

  • 3Cs Loops: Crossing the Blue Ridge Mountains
    • Clinchfield Loops
    • 3Cs/Clinchfield Loops Comparison
    • 3Cs/Clinchfield Loops Interactive Map
    • For More Information – Sources and Resources
    • Contact Us
        • Your message has been sent
    • 3Cs Websites

3Cs Loops: Crossing the Blue Ridge Mountains

Just like its successor the Clinchfield Railroad, the Charleston Cincinnati & Chicago Railroad’s (3Cs) would require a rail line down the front range of the Blue Ridge Mountains between Spruce Pine and Marion NC. In the late 1880’s, the 3Cs had chosen their route using Gillespie Gap to cross the mountain ridge. Their plan was then to utilize the Armstrong Creek drainage basin as a way to loop down the mountain, dropping more than 1,500 feet in elevation. Due to its complexity and high cost of construction, this was one of two primary mountainous segments of the 3Cs that never made it to the construction stage.

Clinchfield Loops

Twenty years later in 1909, the Clinchfield Railroad completed building their version of the Loops, which to this day remains one of the engineering marvels of railroad construction. The Clinchfield took a more easterly route using McKinney Gap and the drainage basins of Pepper Creek, Honeycutt Creek and the North Fork of the Catawba River.

3Cs/Clinchfield Loops Comparison

3Cs Railroad Loops - Clinchfield Railroad Loops

(Map: 3Cs: Purple, Clinchfield: Yellow)

While we have found no plans as to the exact design of the 3Cs Loops, the original surveys of the Clinchfield Railroad did consider Gillespie Gap and Armstrong Creek as one of their options and plotted its alignment. But, a superior option was chosen for the Clinchfield Loops via McKinney Gap with a 1.2% grade, many tunnels and broader curves. The Clinchfield’s Gillespie Gap/Armstrong Creek option would have been a 1.8% grade, with fewer tunnels and tighter curves. Much of construction of the 3Cs in the late 1880s did use these lesser standards, with grades as high as 2%, tight curves, and very few tunnels.

The map shows the general routing of the 3Cs Loops based on Clinchfield’s survey (purple), and the actual Clinchfield Loops (yellow)

3Cs/Clinchfield Loops Interactive Map

For a closer look, click here for a Google Interactive Map showing the comparison of the Clinchfield Loops with how the 3Cs Loops might have been built.

For More Information – Sources and Resources

The following are excellent resources for those of you wanting to explore and learn more about the history and operation of the Appalachian Railroads. These sources of information also serve as reference and historical materials for Appalachian-Railroads.org. Much of the content on the website is verified across multiple sources.

  • Associations and their Archives
    • ACL & SCL Railroads Historical Society
    • Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Historical Society
    • Chesapeake & Ohio Historical Society
    • Carolina Clinchfield Chapter National Railway Historical Society
    • ET&WNC Railroad Historical Society and their Facebook Page
    • George L. Carter Railroad Historical Society (Johnson City Railroad Experience)
    • Louisville & Nashville Railroad Historical Society
    • Norfolk & Western Historical Society
    • Pennsylvania Railroad Technical and Historical Society
    • Southern Railway Historical Association
    • Watauga Valley Railroad Historical Society
  • Personal Maps & Memorabilia: Documents, maps, timetables, and track charts
  • Archives of Appalachia: ETSU, Johnson City TN
  • Newspaper Articles: Newspapers.com
  • Magazines/Online: ‘Trains‘, ‘Classic Trains‘
  • Books
    • Castner, Flanary & Dorin: Louisville & Nashville Railroad The Old Reliable‘
    • Davis: The Southern Railway, Road of the Innovators‘
    • Drury: The Historical Guide to North American Railroads
    • Dixon: ‘Chesapeake & Ohio, Superpower to Diesels‘, Chesapeake & Ohio in the Coalfields, and ‘C&O Allegheny Subdivision‘
    • Flanary: The Louisville & Nashville Cumberland Valley Division
    • Flanary, Lindsey & Oroszi. The Southern Railway‘
    • Flanary, Oroszi & McKee: ‘The Louisville & Nashville in the Appalachians‘
    • Goforth: ‘Building the Clinchfield‘ and ‘When Steam Ran the Clinchfield‘
    • Graybeal: ‘The Railroads of Johnson City‘
    • Huddleston: ‘Appalachian Crossings – The Pocahontas Roads‘
    • Irwin & Stahl: ‘The Last Empire Builder: The Life of George L. Carter‘
    • Lindsey: ‘Norfolk Southern 1995 Review‘
    • King: ‘Clinchfield Country‘
    • Lindsey: ‘Norfolk Southern 1995 Review‘
    • Marsh: ‘Clinchfield in Color‘
    • Oroszi & Flanary: ‘Dixie Lines, The Louisville & Nashville Railroad‘
    • Poole: ‘A History of Railroading in Western North Carolina‘
    • Poteat & Taylor: ‘The CSX Clinchfield Route in the 21st Century‘
    • Prince: ‘Nashville Chattanooga & St Louis Railway‘
    • Stevens & Peoples: ‘The Clinchfield No. 1 – Tennessee’s Legendary Steam Engine‘
    • Way: ‘The Clinchfield Railroad, the Story of a Trade Route Across the Blue Ridge Mountains‘
    • Webb: ‘The Southern Railway System: An Illustrated History‘
    • Wolfe: ‘Southern Railway Appalachia Division‘
    • Wolfe, Wilson & Mandelkern: ‘Norfolk & Western’s Clinch Valley Line‘
    • Young: ‘Appalachian Coal Mines and Railroads In Color,’ Volume 1: Kentucky and Volume 2: Virginia
  • Online Article: Flanary: ‘The Quick Service Route, The Clinchfield Railroad‘; Scientific American: ‘The Costliest Railroad in America‘
  • Online Videos: Ken Marsh on Kingsport area railroads and region’s history Video #1 | Video #2:
  • Websites:
    • Carolana.com – North Carolina Railroads, South Carolina Railroads
    • Diesel Shop
    • HawkinsRails.net
    • Multimodalways
    • StateOfFranklin.net which hosts Johnson’s Depot
    • RailFanGuides.us for Johnson City and for Erwin
    • SteamLocomotive.com
    • VirginiaPlaces.org – Railroad History of Virginia
    • WvncRails.org – North Carolina and West Virginia Railroads

Contact Us

Would enjoy hearing from you if you have questions, suggestions, edits, or content that you are willing to share. Don’t hesitate to reach out if you have similar interests in the railroads or model railroading.

Go back

Your message has been sent

Warning
Warning
Warning
Warning.

3Cs Websites

Appalachian-Railroads.org | Clinchfield.org | Southern-Railroads.org

Copyright © 2025 - Rails Across the Appalachians, a non-commercial personal blog intended for educational, historical, and entertainment use. Unless attributed to another individual, content on this website is shareable. Please attribute and link back. Commercial use of content is not allowed without permission. Even though most content is verified across multiple sources, we cannot guarantee total accuracy. My goal is to create new railfans, and to preserve this information for future generations.

Theme: Oceanly Premium by ScriptsTown