Timeline for Johnson City Tennessee
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Page Contents
Key Historical Dates for Johnson City Tennessee
Even though Johnson City TN was chartered later compared to other nearby towns and cities, it has now become the largest city in the Tri-Cities region of East Tennessee and Southwest Virginia. It first existed as a water tank along the rail line connecting Bristol TN and Knoxville TN. Within a short time it had become a rail hub for three railroads.
1800-1850
1831 – Estillville Convention (Gate City VA) met to discuss building a railroad connecting Atlantic coast with Midwest through East Tennessee
1849 – East Tennessee & Virginia Railroad (ET&V) chartered
1850-1900
1854 – Henry Johnson builds a store, residence, depot, and a water tank along ET&V, named Johnson’s Tank and later Johnson’s Depot
1858 – ET&V completed, 130 miles Knoxville to Bristol via Johnson’s Depot
1866 – East Tennessee & Western North Carolina Railroad (ET&WNC) Chartered
1869 – ET&V mergers with the East Tennessee & Georgia to form the East Tennessee, Virginia & Georgia Railway (ETV&G)
1869 – Johnson City is chartered
1881 – ET&WNC completes narrow gauge track to Hampton TN
1882 – ET&WNC extends narrow gauge to Cranberry NC
1883 – ET&WNC adds standard gauge to Elizabethton
1886 – Charleston, Cincinnati & Chicago Railroad (CC&C) chartered. Johnson City was the headquarters.
1893 – CC&C enters receivership
1893 – Ohio River & Charleston Railroad (OR&C) buys the assets of the CC&C
1894 – ETV&G mergers with the Richmond & Danville Railroad to form the Southern Railway
1900-1950
1902 – George Carter buys the Johnson City to Boonford NC segment of the OR&C. The rest of the OR&C is sold to other railroads. Carter names his railroad the South & Western Railroad (S&W).
1903 – Mountain Home VA Hospital opens
1907 – S&W moves its offices from Bristol to Johnson City
1908 – A charter is granted to expand the S&W from Spartanburg, through Johnson City, ending in Dante VA. The name was changed from S&W to the Carolina, Clinchfield & Ohio Railroad (CC&O).
1909 – CC&O is completed from Dante VA to Spartanburg SC
1909 – CC&O moves its primary offices and yard to Erwin TN
1913 – ET&WNC purchases the Linville River Railroad and then builds narrow gauge track to Boone NC
1924 – The CC&O is leased to the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad and the Louisville & Nashville Railroad. The name is changed to Clinchfield Railroad (CRR) and was operated independently from its headquarters in Erwin TN.
1940 – ET&WNC’s track in NC is damaged by devastating flood
During the first half of the 1900s, there were at least 15 passenger trains running through Johnson City. After the Southern built it’s new passenger station, there were three different passenger stations within a few blocks of each other. Passengers could easily make connections. All told, it was not uncommon to see and hear almost 40 trains each day running through the middle of the city. The train passenger board to the left lists the 8 Southern Railway passenger trains that were scheduled through city each day.
Courtesy of StateOfFrankline.net
1950-2000
1950 – ET&WNC narrow gauge abandoned
1952 – ET&WNC purchases two 2-8-0s from Southern Railway to use JC to Elizabethton
1954 – Clinchfield retires its last steam locomotive
1954 – Clinchfield ends passenger service
1967 – ET&WNC retires their 2-8-0s, replacing them with diesel RS-3s
1969 – Clinchfield completes the ‘high-line’, allowing the mainline to bypass downtown Johnson City
1970 – Southern Railway suspends passenger service
1972 – Clinchfield begins marketing itself as part of the Family Lines System. A common design is used on engines and rolling stock.
1982 – Southern Railway merges with the Norfolk & Western Railway to become the Norfolk Southern Railway (NS)
1982 – Clinchfield becomes part of the Seaboard System, but retains its CRR corporate name. Engines and rolling stock are repainted with the Seaboard System design and lettering.
1983 – ET&WNC is rechartered and named the East Tennessee Railway
1986 – Clinchfield is merged with Seaboard System and Chessie System to form CSX
2000 to Today
2003 – Last train departs Elizabethton for Johnson City, leaving the line dormant.
2005 – East Tennessee Railway (ETRY) takes over the Johnson City switching and yard work for both CSX and NS.
2007 – NS begins the Crescent Corridor program, adding extensive container traffic to its line through Johnson City.
2012 – ET&WNC Standard Gauge abandoned. The Tweetsie Trail (Rails-to-Trails) was built on the roadbed
2015 – CSX closes Erwin yard and shops. The original Clinchfield line is reported to be mothballed. Very few trains run on the line for the next two years.
2017 – CSX returns a daily set of trains to the original Clinchfield line. Since that time, rail traffic on the line has been slowly increasing
Links for More Information
http://www.stateoffranklin.net/johnsons/southern/index_so.htm
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.
- Association: Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Historical Society
- Association: Chesapeake & Ohio Historical Society
- Association: Carolina Clinchfield Chapter National Railway Historical Society
- Association: ET&WNC Railroad Historical Society and their Facebook Page
- Association: George L. Carter Railroad Historical Society
- Association: Louisville & Nashville Railroad Historical Society
- Association: Norfolk & Western Historical Society
- Association: Southern Railway Historical Association
- Association: Watauga Valley Railroad Historical Society
- Personal Maps & Memorabilia: Documents, maps, timetables, and track charts
- Archives of Appalachia: ETSU, Johnson City TN
- Book – Castner, Flanary & Dorin: Louisville & Nashville Railroad, The Old Reliable
- Book – Drury. The Historical Guide to North American Railroads
- Book – Flanary: The Louisville & Nashville Cumberland Valley Division
- Book – Flanary, Lindsey & Oroszi. The Southern Railway
- Book – Flanary, Oroszi & McKee: ‘The Louisville & Nashville in the Appalachians’
- Books – Goforth: ‘Building the Clinchfield‘ and ‘When Steam Ran the Clinchfield‘
- Book – Graybeal: ‘The Railroads of Johnson City‘
- Book – Irwin & Stahl: ‘The Last Empire Builder: The Life of George L. Carter‘
- Book – Lindsey: ‘Norfolk Southern 1995 Review’
- Book – King: ‘Clinchfield Country‘
- Book – Marsh: ‘Clinchfield in Color‘
- Book – Oroszi & Flanary: ‘Dixie Lines, The Louisville & Nashville Railroad’
- Book – Poole: ‘A History of Railroading in Western North Carolina‘
- Book – Poteat & Taylor: ‘The CSX Clinchfield Route in the 21st Century‘
- Book – Stevens & Peoples: ‘The Clinchfield No. 1 – Tennessee’s Legendary Steam Engine‘
- Book – Way: ‘The Clinchfield Railroad, the Story of a Trade Route Across the Blue Ridge Mountains‘
- Book – Webb: ‘The Southern Railway System: An Illustrated History’
- Book – Wolfe: Southern Railway Appalachia Division
- Magazines/Online: ‘Trains‘, ‘Classic Trains‘
- Newspaper Articles: Newspapers.com
- 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:
- Website: Carolana.com – North Carolina Railroads, South Carolina Railroads
- Website: HawkinsRails.net
- Website: StateOfFranklin.net which hosts Johnson’s Depot
- Website: RailFanGuides.us for Johnson City and for Erwin
- Website: SteamLocomotive.com
- Website: VirginiaPlaces.org – Railroad History of Virginia
- Website: 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.
3Cs Websites
Appalachian-Railroads.org | Clinchfield.org | Southern-Railroads.org