Caption: | Grenada Railroad Logo |
Railroad Name: | Grenada Railroad LLC |
Logo Filename: | File:Grenada-Railroad-Logo.png |
Marks: | GRYR |
Length: | 230miles |
Successor Line: | Grenada Railroad LLC |
Predecessor Line: |
|
Locale: | Southern United States |
Start Year: | 2009 |
Hq City: | Grenada, Mississippi |
The Grenada Railroad (reporting mark GRYR) is a 228-mile long (290 km) shortline railroad that runs from Southaven, Mississippi to Canton, Mississippi, along the former Illinois Central Railroad trackage operated by Gulf & Atlantic Railways LLC.
The main commodities the Class III railroad hauls include chemicals, flour, lumber, paper, plastics, and petroleum.[1] The GRYR interchanges at Canton, Mississippi, with the Canadian National, and at Memphis, Tennessee with CN, Norfolk Southern, Union Pacific, Canadian Pacific Kansas City, BNSF and CSX.
The line was part of Illinois Central Railroad's Grenada District and was mostly used by its premier Chicago-New Orleans passenger trains, the City of New Orleans and the Panama Limited, running in the postwar period at speeds up to 100 miles per hour on some stretches. It is notable as it is the line on which Casey Jones, the famed railroader, was killed.[2]
On September 10, 1995 Amtrak's City of New Orleans operated over the Grenada District for the last time. A few years later in 1998, Canadian National bought the Illinois Central Railroad and diverted more traffic over to the Yazoo District.
The Grenada Railway was formed in 2009 when Canadian National spun off the 175-mile branch line from the Tennessee border south through Grenada to Canton due to low traffic. On May 14, 2009, the Grenada Star reported, "The Grenada Branch Line, the Water Valley Branch Line, and the Natchez Branch Line were sold to Grenada Railway, LLC, and Natchez Railway, LLC, both non-carrier affiliates of V&S Railway and A&K Railroad Materials."[3] The 81-mile section running south from Grenada to Canton was taken out of service in 2011 and was the subject of a dispute between Grenada Railway, the local towns and the counties along the tracks and the Surface Transportation Board.[4] GRYR claimed there was not enough traffic to justify keeping the line open, while the towns and counties bordering the tracks argued that abandoning the railroad would hurt them economically. The railroad eventually withdrew its application to abandon the trackage in November 2011.[5]
In 2015, the North Central Mississippi Regional Railroad Authority purchased the entire rail line for $43 million from previous owner A&K Railroad Materials. The state of Mississippi contributed a $30 million bond, while Iowa Pacific Holdings paid the remaining $13 million. Iowa Pacific then leased the line from the Authority, the lease payments being applied to pay back the state bond. It was reported that Iowa Pacific would continue to operate the Grenada Railway, as well as work to rebuild the trackage between Grenada and Canton.[6] Currently, tracks had been in use for car storage as far south as Winona, Mississippi.
In 2016 Iowa Pacific sent their passenger train (decorated in the colors of the Illinois Central) to Batesville, MS to run a polar express train. The train was such a success that Iowa Pacific bought a warehouse and planned to run regular dinner trains.
In August 2018 it was announced that International Rail Partners (IRP) had concluded a lease-purchase agreement with the NCMRRA, and would operate the line under the new name Grenada Railroad LLC.[7]
Two months later in October, it was announced that IRP had partnered with Equity Group Investments in a $200 million deal to form a railroad holding subsidiary, RailUSA LLC; thus placing the Grenada Railroad in the group.[8] They planned on continuing to upgrade the track to class 3 (40 MPH).
In November 2022 Grenada Railroad Receives 286K GWR Certification.[9]
On April 27th, 2023, Grenada Railroad LLC (GRR) announced it had bought Grenada Railway LLC (GRY) and it's 228 miles trackage.
In August of 2023, the parent company of Grenada announced the celebration of the complete restoration of its 235-mile line that runs between Canton, Miss., and Memphis, Tenn.[10]