Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Railway
History and Steam Locomotives
Richard E. Prince
Richard E. Prince s long out-of-print encyclopedic study of the
Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Railway, "The Dixie Line,"
with hundreds of vintage photographs, schematics, maps, and
rosters.
Railroad buffs, historians, and casual readers alike will be
delighted by the reappearance of Richard E. Prince s Nashville,
Chattanooga & St. Louis Railway. It was originally published in
1967, and its reputation as the foremost work on this railroad is
still unchallenged.
The NC&StL Railway originated in 1845 as the Nashville and
Chattanooga RR. Taken over by the Union Army during the Civil War,
it suffered extensive damage from Confederate attack but was
rebuilt and operated by the U.S. Military Railroad for over two
years. Returned to its owners in September 1865, it became the
Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Ry. in 1873, after absorbing
the Nashville & Northwestern RR.
During the next 25 years, it became known to the public first as
the Tennessee Line, then as the Lookout Mountain Route. In 1890 it
gained entrance into Atlanta as lessee of the state-owned Western
& Atlantic RR. Paducah and Memphis were reached in 1896, when
lines of the former Paducah, Tennessee & Alabama RR were leased
from L&N. At its zenith in the 1920s, it operated approximately
1,259 miles of track, from the Mississippi and Ohio rivers through
Kentucky, Tennessee, and Alabama, to Atlanta, Georgia.
In 1880, to eliminate the threat of competition that was developing
between the two companies, the Louisville & Nashville RR
acquired control of the NC&StL Ry., much to the dismay of the
citizens of Nashville, and for the next 77 years it operated as a
prosperous subsidiary of the Old Reliable. It was actually absorbed
by the L&N organization in 1957 to become part of the Nashville
and W&A divisions. But it will always be remembered by the
people of Tennessee and Georgia as the original Dixie Line the
route of such Chicago-Florida passenger trains as the Dixie Flyer,
Dixie Limited, Dixie Express, Dixie Mail, Dixieland, Dixie Flagler,
and Dixiana.
Maps, schedules, rosters, diagrams, and hundreds of photographs
supplement historical information on the company and technical
information on the trains.
Richard E. Prince attended Georgia School of Technology in
Atlanta. During World War II, he joined the Merchant Marine and
sailed on steam Liberty ships. He worked in several capacities for
the L&N Railroad and the Union Pacific Railroad. Prince retired
in 1983 and lives in Omaha, Nebraska. He has written ten books on
railroads.
May 2001
196 pages, 348 b&w photos, 8 1/4 x 10 3/4, index
cloth 0-253-33927-8 $59.95 t / 45.00
Contents
Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Ry. Historical Sketch
Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Ry. The Tennessee Line
Western & Atlantic Railroad
Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Ry. -Lookout Mountain
Route
Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Ry. The Dixie Line
Steam Locomotives Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Ry.
Steam Freight and Passenger Trains NC&StL Ry.
Steam Locomotive Diagrams"
General
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