Stations of the Clinchfield Railroad
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- Clinchfield Model Railroads
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- Related Websites: Appalachian-Railroads.org | Southern-Railroads.org
Clinchfield Railroad Stations
The stations of the Clinchfield Railroad have evolved over the years since 1909. For example, the Elkhorn City Extension was added in 1915 adding 35 miles, and the Johnson City High Line removed 3 miles from the length of the railroad in 1969. The station in downtown Johnson City was effectively bypassed by the mainline.
As far as actual station buildings, there are only four remaining railroad stations today, Dungannon VA, Kingsport, Johnson City, Erwin. However, all three stations are in excellent shape.
The Dungannon station was moved several blocks in 1978 and is now preserved as a historical building. Click this Link to see the Dungannon Depot and Historical Marker.
Clinchfield Railroad Erwin Train Station
The Carolina Clinchfield & Ohio Railway (which became the Clinchfield Railroad) completed this new structure in 1925. A makeshift box car was used as the first Erwin train station until a better station could be built. Passenger service ended in 1954, so the building was then utilized for various offices for the operation of the railroad. It now houses the Unicoi Public Library.
Clinchfield Railroad Johnson City Train Station
Clinchfield.org Sources and Resources
- Personal Maps & Memorabilia – Documents, maps and track charts that I have from the CRR, CC&O, and S&W
- Archives of Appalachia
- Book – Drury: The Historical Guide to North American Railroads
- Book – Goforth: ‘Building the Clinchfield’
- Book – Goforth: ‘When Steam Ran the Clinchfield’
- Book – Graybeal: ‘The Railroads of Johnson City’
- Book – Helm: ‘The Clinchfield Railroad in the Coal Fields’
- Book – Irwin & Stahl: ‘The Last Empire Builder: The Life of George L. Carter’
- Book – King: ‘Clinchfield Country’
- Book – Marsh: ‘Clinchfield in Color’
- 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’
- Article – Flanary: ‘The Quick Service Route, The Clinchfield Railroad‘
- Article – Flanary: ‘Men Against Mountains, Running Trains on the Clinchfield‘ October 2001
- Video – Ken Marsh on Kingsport area railroads and region’s history Video #1
- Video – Ken Marsh on railroads and region’s history Video #2:
- Articles – ‘Johnson City Comet‘
- Article – Scientific American: ‘The Costliest Railroad in America‘
- Article – Classic Trains: ‘Remembering the Clinchfield Railroad‘
- Article – Railway Age: ‘This Coal Road Is Also A Speedy Bridge Line,’ Sept 1, 1952 edition
- Article – ‘Railway Signaling and Communications‘
- Website – Carolana.com – North Carolina Railroads, South Carolina Railroads
- Website – StateOfFranklin.net which hosts Johnson’s Depot
- Website – RailFanGuides.us for Johnson City and for Erwin
- Website – The Radio Reference Wiki
- Website – SteamLocomotive.com
- Website – Clinchfield Railroad 1982 Track Chart at Multimodayways.org
- Website – Newspapers.com
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3Cs Websites
Appalachian-Railroads.org | Clinchfield.org | Southern-Railroads.org