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Appalachian Railroads, Yesterday and Today

Railroads of Asheville, North Carolina

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Page Contents

  • Asheville, North Carolina
    • Asheville Stats
    • For More Information – Sources and Resources
    • 3Cs Websites

Asheville, North Carolina

Asheville Railroads

Since the 1880s, Asheville has been an important railroad hub for Western North Carolina and the Eastern United States. Four separate rail lines were built between 1880 and 1890. The initial railroads were the Western North Carolina, the East Tennessee Virginia & Georgia, and the Asheville & Spartanburg (see stats below). By 1900, the Southern Railway had bought or merged these railroads into their system. In the past few decades, rail traffic from and through Asheville has declined dramatically, with several of the rail lines being closed or mothballed.

Map courtesy of the Library of Congress.

This and the Asheville stats below are initial content for this page, with much more to be added in future months.

Asheville Stats

  • Coordinates: 35.595556,-82.551944
  • Elevation: 2,134 feet above sea level
  • Originally known as: Morristown
  • Founded: 1797
  • Population: 94,589 (2020)
  • County: Buncombe
  • First Railroad: Western North Carolina Railroad was completed in 1880 to Salisbury NC. In later years the railroad became part of the Richmond & Danville Railroad (R&D), the Southern Railway (SOU), and finally the Norfolk Southern (NS) This rail line connected Asheville to eastern North Carolina and cities up and down the east coast. The design and beauty of this railroad was unique with the Old Fort Loops.
  • Second Railroad: East Tennessee Virginia & Georgia Railway (ETV&G) in the early 1880s to Knoxville TN using the French Broad and Holston Rivers to navigate the mountains. This rail link connected Asheville to Tennessee and western and mid-western cities.
  • Third Railroad: Asheville & Spartanburg Railroad (A&S) in 1886 to Spartanburg SC. This line included the infamous Saluda Grade which reached 4.7% of incline near Saluda as it ascended/descended the Blue Ridge. It was an expensive railroad to operate, and lives were lost throughout the years due to runaway trains. This rail line connected Asheville to South Carolina and many southern U.S. Cities.
  • Fourth Railroad: In 1891 the Western North Carolina Railroad built the Murphy Branch westward to Canton, Waynesboro, Sylva, Dillsboro, and Murphy NC.

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 collective railroad history data points on this website are verified across multiple sources.

  • Personal Maps & Memorabilia: Documents, maps, timetables, and track charts
  • Associations, Historical Societies 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
  • Archives of Appalachia: ETSU, Johnson City TN
  • Newspaper Articles: Newspapers.com
  • Magazines/Online: ‘Trains‘, ‘Classic Trains‘
  • Books
    • Drury: The Historical Guide to North American Railroads
    • Appalachian Region
      • Grant: ‘The Louisville, Cincinnati & Charleston Rail Road’
      • Graybeal: ‘The Railroads of Johnson City
      • Huddleston: ‘Appalachian Crossings – The Pocahontas Roads‘ and ‘Appalachian Conquest‘
      • Poole: ‘A History of Railroading in Western North Carolina‘
      • Timko and Young: ‘Appalchian Coal Mines and Railroads, Vol. 1, 2, & 3‘
      • Roberts: ‘Sand Patch, Clash of the Titans‘
      • Yanosey: ‘Tidewater Triangle’
    • Atlantic Coast Line Railroad
      • Calloway: ‘Atlantic Coast Line, The Diesel Years‘
      • Griffin: ‘Atlantic Coast Line, The Standard Railroad of the South‘
      • Goolsby: ‘Atlantic Coast Line Passenger Service, The Postwar Years‘
    • Baltimore & Ohio Railway
      • Jacobs: ‘The History of the Baltimore & Ohio’
      • McGuirk: ‘Baltimore & Ohio Railroad in the Potomac Valley‘
      • Ori, Salamon and Oroszi: Baltimore & Ohio/Reflections of the Capitol Dome‘ and ‘Baltimore & Ohio/Sunburst Trail to Chicago’
    • C&O Railway/Chessie System
      • Dixon: ‘Chesapeake & Ohio, Superpower to Diesels‘, Chesapeake & Ohio in the Coalfields, ‘C&O Allegheny Subdivision‘, and ‘Chesapeake & Ohio Railway – A Concise History and Fact Book‘, and ‘The Chessie Era’
      • Dorin: ‘The Chesapeake & Ohio Railway’
      • Huddleston: ‘Riding the New River Train‘
      • Ori – ‘Chessie System‘
      • Paton: ‘Allegheny with an A’
      • Turner: ‘Chessie’s Road‘
    • Clinchfield Railroad
      • Beach: ‘The Black Mountain Railway’
      • Goforth: ‘Building the Clinchfield‘ and ‘When Steam Ran the Clinchfield‘
      • Helm: ‘The Clinchfield Railroad in the Coal Fields‘
      • Irwin & Stahl: ‘The Last Empire Builder: The Life of George L. Carter‘
      • King: ‘Clinchfield Country‘
      • Marsh: ‘Clinchfield in Color‘
      • Poteat & Taylor: ‘The CSX Clinchfield Route in the 21st Century‘
      • 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‘
    • CSX Railroad
      • Springirth: ‘CSX Transportation Heritage‘
    • ET&WNC: Listed on the website’s ET&WNC pages
    • Interstate Railroad
      • Wolfe & Wolfe: ‘Appalachian Coal Hauler’
      • Wolfe: ‘The Interstate Railroad‘
    • L&N Railroad
      • Castner, Flanary & Dorin: Louisville & Nashville Railroad The Old Reliable‘
      • Flanary: The Louisville & Nashville Cumberland Valley Division
      • Flanary, Oroszi & McKee: ‘The Louisville & Nashville in the Appalachians‘
      • Oroszi & Flanary: ‘Dixie Lines, The Louisville & Nashville Railroad‘
    • NC&StL Railway
      • Prince: ‘Nashville Chattanooga & St Louis Railway‘
    • Norfolk Southern
      • Esposito: ‘Norfolk Southern Railroad’
      • Lindsey: ‘Norfolk Southern 1995 Review‘
    • Norfolk & Western Railway
      • Newton: ‘Rails Remembered, Volumes 1-6
      • Warden: ‘Norfolk & Western: Diesel’s Last Conquest‘ and ‘Norfolk & Western’s Passenger Service’
      • Wolfe, Wilson & Mandelkern: ‘Norfolk & Western’s Clinch Valley Line‘
    • Pennsylvania Railroad
      • Jacobs: ‘The History of the Pennsylvania Railroad‘
    • Seaboard Air Line, Seaboard Coast Line, Seaboard System
      • Calloway and Withers: ‘Seaboard Motive Power‘
      • Carleton: ‘Locomotives of the Seaboard System‘
      • Griffin: ‘Seaboard Coast Line and Family Lines Railroad‘ and ‘All Lines North of Raleigh‘
      • Johnson: ‘Through the Heart of the South‘
    • Southern Railway
      • Davis: The Southern Railway, Road of the Innovators‘
      • Flanary, Lindsey & Oroszi. The Southern Railway‘
      • Webb: ‘The Southern Railway System: An Illustrated History‘
      • Wolfe: ‘Southern Railway Appalachia Division‘
    • Virginian Railway
      • Reisweber: ‘Virginian Rails’
      • Wiley & Wallace: ‘The Virginian Railway Handbook‘
  • 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:
    • American-Rails.com
    • AppalachianRailroadModeling.com
    • 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
    • Wikipedia.org
    • WvncRails.org – North Carolina and West Virginia Railroads


3Cs Websites

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


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