Georgia Florida and Alabama Railroad explained

Railroad Name:Georgia Florida and Alabama Railroad
Marks:GF&A
Locale:Southwest Georgia, Northwest Florida
Start Year:1895
End Year:1944
Gauge: (standard gauge)
Length:180miles
Hq City:Arlington, Georgia

The Georgia, Florida and Alabama Railroad[1] [2] (the GF&A), known as the Sumatra Leaf Route, and colloquially as the Gopher, Frog & Alligator[3] [4] was a 180miles-long railroad from Richland, Georgia to Carrabelle, Florida.[5] It was founded in 1895 as a logging railroad, the Georgia Pine Railway.

The northern and southern ends of the railroad have been abandoned, but the section from Cuthbert, Georgia, to Tallahassee, Florida, remains in use by various railroads.

Route description

The northern terminus of the line was at Richland, where it met the Savannah, Americus and Montgomery Railway and the Columbus Southern Railway. It ran almost due south through Cuthbert and Edison to reach Arlington, where it crossed the Central of Georgia Railway. It continued through Colquitt and Bainbridge before crossing the Flint river and entering Florida. It continued through Sopchoppy and Tallahassee and on to its southern terminus in Carrabelle on the Florida Gulf Coast.[6]

History

Construction and early years

Hannibal Kimball promoted the Bainbridge, Cuthbert and Columbus Railroad to run north-to-south through southwest Georgia in 1869. Although work began on construction in 1870, it was never completed, and in 1872 the project was abandoned amidst financial problems and bond endorsement issues that stirred allegations of impropriety against Kimball. During the 1880s, attempts were made to revive the railroad, with some activity taking place in the middle of that decade, but this too came to nothing.

Finally, in 1895 local entrepreneur J. D. Williams laid rails on part of the route creating the Georgia Pine Railroad connecting Bainbridge to Arlington. The railroad had only been intended for logging, but since it provided an additional rail route from Georgia into Florida and connected with other railroads, traffic increased.[7] By 1898, the railroad was renamed the Georgia Florida and Alabama Railroad[8] and by 1901, it had been extended north to Richland.[6] In 1902, the GF&A completed the section from Tallahassee to Bainbridge.[9]

Tallahassee to Carrabelle

In 1906, the Georgia Florida and Alabama Railway purchased the Carrabelle, Tallahassee & Georgia Railroad (CT&G), which ran from Tallahassee south to Carrabelle on the Gulf of Mexico. The CT&G from Carrabelle north was first chartered as the Thomasville, Tallahassee and Gulf Railroad in 1883. Construction began from Carrabelle to the Sopchoppy River, but it stopped there since the company could not obtain funding to build a bridge over the river.[7]

The line was reorganized as the Augusta, Tallahassee and Gulf Railroad in 1889. It was then purchased by William Clark who owned 175,000 acres of pine lands near the railroad. Clark reincorporated the line as the Carrabelle, Tallahassee & Georgia Railroad on January 5, 1891. Construction was complete to Tallahassee by October 1893.

CT&G also had stops at Hilliardville, Crawfordville, MacIntyre, and Lanark (site of an elegant casino/hotel). From Carrabelle, the paddle steamer Crescent City, owned by the CT&G, made daily round trips to Apalachicola, to which there was no road or rail access at the time.

Once the Georgia Florida and Alabama Railroad acquired the CT&G, the GF&A reached its greatest extent from Richland, Georgia to Carrabelle, Florida, a distance of 180 miles.

Later years

The GF&A was leased to the Seaboard Air Line Railway in 1927. The Seaboard went into receivership at the end of 1930,[10] and the lease was revoked in 1931. The Seaboard was reformed after receiving government loans, and it agreed to operate, but not lease the GF&A. In 1944, the court that was overseeing the Seaboard's receivership authorized the company to purchase 90% of the GF&A's bonds.[11] Once under Seaboard ownership, they designated the line north of Bainbridge as their Richland Subdivision and south of there as the Bainbridge Subdivision.[12] [13]

In 1948, the line was abandoned from Carrabelle to Tallahassee.

The Seaboard Air Line became part of CSX Transportation by 1980. In 1983, the former GF&A line north of Bainbridge was sold off to the South Carolina Central Railroad, and in 1989 it became part of the Georgia Southwestern Railroad.[14] In 1997, the portion of the GF&A route from Richland south to Cuthbert was abandoned,[15] and in 2002 the Georgia Department of Transportation acquired the remaining Cuthbert to Bainbridge section. The Georgia Southwestern remains the operator of the line.[16] [17]

Current conditions

North of Bainbridge

The segment from Cuthbert to Bainbridge segment is now owned by the Georgia Department of Transportation and operated by the Georgia Southwestern Railroad.

Bainbridge Subdivision

The segment from Bainbridge to Tallahassee is still in service. This segment is still known as the Bainbridge Subdivision and it is operated by CSX from Bainbridge to Attapulgus.[18] CSX sold the remaining segment from Attapulgus to Tallahassee to the Florida Gulf & Atlantic Railroad in 2019.[19]

Currently, the line's milepost numbers begin in Tallahassee at 52 and increase from there. This is due to the fact that the numbering still reflects the line's full length to Carrabelle, which was mile 0 before the track between there and Tallahassee was abandoned.[20]

South of Tallahassee

A 2.4-mile part of the abandoned Tallahassee-Carrabelle segment of the GF&A is now the Tallahassee-Georgia Florida and Alabama (GF&A) Trail in the Apalachicola National Forest.[21] [22] [23] Research work on the rail-to-trail project was done by Genesis Group.[24]

Historic stations

StateMilepostCity/LocationStationConnections and notes
FLSLC 0.0CarrabelleCarrabelle
SLC 5.0LanarkLanark
SLC 13.5McIntyre
SLC 15.0Curtis Mill
SLC 19.2SopchoppySopchoppy
SLC 21.4Ashmore
SLC 29.5CrawfordvilleCrawfordville
SLC 30.9Raker's Mill
SLC 37.0HilliardvilleHilliardville
SLC 40.1Spring Hall
SLC 41.9Turner
SLC 50.0TallahasseeTallahasseejunction with Florida Central and Western Railroad (FC&P/SAL)
SLC 58.5Lake JacksonLake Jackson
SLC 66.6HavanaHavana
SLC 68.3HinsonHinson
SLC 70.9Jamieson
GASLC 77.8AttapulgusAttapulgus
SLC 82.3Jamieson
SLC 90.3BainbridgeBainbridgejunction with Savannah, Florida and Western Railway (ACL)
SLC 96.2Lynn
SLC 101.0Eldorendo
SLC 105.7Babcock
SLC 110.9ColquittColquitt
SLC 114.9Corea
SLC 119.7DamascusDamascus
SLC 125.4Rowena
SLC 129.5ArlingtonArlingtonjunction with Central of Georgia Railway
SLC 139.2EdisonEdison
SLC 145.4CarnegieCarnegie
SLC 154.7CuthbertCuthbert
SLC 163.7Benevolence
SLC 168.5Troutman
SLC 174.6Kimbroughjunction with Columbus Southern Railway (SAL)
SLC 181.0RichlandRichlandjunction with:

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: An Act To authorize the Georgia, Florida and Alabama Railway . . 20 June 1906 .
  2. Sources differ on the use of Railroad vs Railway in the official name of the company.
  3. Web site: Historical & Educational.
  4. Book: Hallberg, M.C. . RAILROADS IN NORTH AMERICA Some Historical Facts and An Introduction to an Electronic Database of North American Railroads and Their Evolution . 21 December 2009.
  5. Book: Prince, Richard E. . Seaboard Air Line Railway: Steam Boats, Locomotives, and History . 2000 . Indiana University Press . 0-253-33695-3 . 97.
  6. Book: Caldwell, Wilber W. . The Courthouse and the Depot: The Architecture of Hope in an Age of Despair : a Narrative Guide to Railroad Expansion and Its Impact on Public Architecture in Georgia, 1833-1910 . 2001 . Mercer University Press . 978-0-86554-748-3 . 298, 507–513.
  7. Web site: Hensley . Donald R. . The story of the Georgia Florida & Alabama RR . Taplines . 18 November 2022.
  8. Book: Florida Public Service Commission . Report . 1898 . 10.
  9. Book: Florida Railroad and Public Utilities Commission . Report . 1902 . 6, 36.
  10. Book: Prince, Richard E. . Seaboard Air Line Railway: Steam Boats, Locomotives, and History . Indiana University Press . 2000 . 1966 . 978-0-253-33695-8.
  11. Book: United States. Congress. House. Committee on the Judiciary. Special Subcommittee on Bankruptcy and Reorganization. Railroad Reorganization: Hearings Before Special Committee on Bankruptcy and Reorganization, Eightieth Congress, First Session, on H.R. 3237. 1947. U.S. Government Printing Office. 242–.
  12. http://www.rrpicturearchives.net/rspicture.aspx?id=704319 Seaboard Air Line Railroad South Carolina Division Timetable (1944)
  13. Seaboard Air Line Railroad North Florida Division Timetable (1949)
  14. Book: Lewis, Edward A. . American Shortline Railway Guide . 1996 . Kalmbach Publishing, Co. . 978-0-89024-290-2 . 183.
  15. Thornhill . Tommy . 2002 . Pig Trails of Southwest Georgia: Part 2 . Lines South . White River Productions . 19 . 1 . 22–29 .
  16. Web site: STB Finance Docket No. 34057 . 18 January 2002 . 13 September 2010 .
  17. Web site: STB Finance Docket No. 34057 . 30 April 2002 . 13 September 2010 .
  18. http://www.multimodalways.org/docs/railroads/companies/CSX/CSX%20ETTs/CSX%20Jacksonville%20Div%20ETT%20%234%201-1-2005.pdf CSX Jacksonville Division Timetable
  19. Web site: Florida Gulf & Atlantic Railroad . RailUSA . 19 August 2021.
  20. Web site: Harmon . Danny . How To Read Trackside Signs & Markers . YouTube . 12 December 2018.
  21. Web site: GF&A Trail . USDA Forest Service . 19 October 2019.
  22. Web site: Apalachicola National Forest - History & Culture.
  23. Web site: Georgia Florida & Alabama Trail (GF&A Trail) | Florida Trails | TrailLink. www.traillink.com.
  24. Web site: Genesis. Genesis - Engineering, Planning, Landscape Architecture, Survey, and GIS.