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Virginia & Carolina Southern

Transportation Company - Virginia & Carolina Southern - Railroad
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Company NameVirginia & Carolina Southern
CategoryRailroad
Year Founded1907
Final Year of Operation1968
TerminationMerged
Successor/ParentSeaboard Coast Line (Details)
CountryUnited States (Details)
Source of TextBluford Shops
Text Credit URLLink
Transportation Company - Virginia & Carolina Southern - Railroad



Company History: The V&CS opened in 1907 running 25 miles from a connection with Atlantic Coast Line in Hope Mills, North Carolina to Lumberton. There was a branch from St. Paul, NC to Elizabethtown which was 29 miles – 4 miles longer than the mainline. The V&CS also connected with Seaboard Air Line in Lumberton but in 1922, ACL leased the V&CS then over time acquired all the stock making it a wholly owned subsidiary. At that point, interchange with the Seaboard ended although physically they remained joined. The ACL and Seaboard merged in 1967 to form Seaboard Coast Line and the Virginia & Carolina Southern was merged into SCL the following year.
Successor/Parent History:
The Seaboard Coast Line Railroad (reporting mark SCL) is a former Class I railroad company operating in the Southeastern United States beginning in 1967. Its passenger operations were taken over by Amtrak in 1971. Eventually the railroad was merged with its affiliate lines to create the Seaboard System in 1983.

At the end of 1970 SCL operated 9230 miles of railroad, not including A&WP-Clinchfield-CN&L-GM-Georgia-L&N-Carrollton; that year it reported 31293 million ton-miles of revenue freight and 512 million passenger-miles.

The Seaboard Coast Line emerged on July 1, 1967, following the merger of the Seaboard Air Line Railroad with the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad. The combined system totaled 9,809 miles (15,786 km), the eighth largest in the United States at the time. The railroad had $1.2 billion in assets and revenue with a 54% market share of rail service in the Southeast, facing competition primarily from the Southern.

On November 1, 1980, CSX Corporation was created as a holding company for the Family Lines and Chessie System Railroad. In 1983 CSX combined the Family Lines System units as the Seaboard System Railroad and later became CSX Transportation when the former Chessie units merged with the Seaboard in December 1986. Effective January 1, 1983, the Seaboard Coast Line Railroad became Seaboard System Railroad after a merger with the Louisville and Nashville Railroad and Clinchfield Railroad. For some years prior to this, the SCL and L&N had been under the common ownership of a holding company, Seaboard Coast Line Industries (SCLI), the company's railroad subsidiaries being collectively known as the Family Lines System which consisted of the L&N, SCL, Clinchfield and West Point Routes. During this time, the railroads adopted the same paint schemes but continued to operate as separate railroads.

Read more on Wikipedia.
Brief History:
The U.S. is a country of 50 states covering a vast swath of North America, with Alaska in the northwest and Hawaii extending the nation’s presence into the Pacific Ocean. Major Atlantic Coast cities are New York, a global finance and culture center, and capital Washington, DC. Midwestern metropolis Chicago is known for influential architecture and on the west coast, Los Angeles' Hollywood is famed for filmmaking.
Item created by: gdm on 2022-05-11 09:55:35

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