The Atlanta and St. Andrews Bay Railroad (reporting mark ASAB), also known as the Bay Line, was a Class I railroad which operated in Alabama and Florida. The company was founded in 1906 and opened its mainline between Dothan, Alabama, and Panama City, Florida, in 1908. Later reclassified as a short-line railroad, its assets were acquired by the Bay Line Railroad in 1994.
Overview | |
---|---|
Reporting mark | ASAB |
Locale | Alabama and Florida |
Dates of operation | 1906 | –1994
Successor | Bay Line Railroad |
Technical | |
Track gauge | 4 ft 8 1⁄2 in (1,435 mm) |
History
editAs with many railroads in the region, the A&SAB began in the minds of timber investors and land developers seeking to access the agricultural resources of the Florida Panhandle and South Alabama. Chief among them was A. B. Steele, who created the railroad to build south out of Dothan towards the Gulf Coast.[1][page needed] The company incorporated on February 14, 1906, and opened its 82-mile (132 km) line between Dothan and Panama City on July 15, 1908.[2] Panama City was incorporated the following year at the terminus of the line. Plans were soon made to extend the railroad north to Atlanta, however financial difficulties and pressure from the Central of Georgia railroad put an end to any plans for extension.[3][page needed]
World War II brought about a considerable increase in traffic on the A&SAB. Several military bases in the vicinity of Panama City ensured the Bay Line would remain a hotbed of activity for the duration of the war. Shortly after the war in 1947, the A&SAB was granted Class I status.[3][page needed] The company offered sleeper and coach passenger train service nightly between Panama City and Atlanta Union Station via Albany and Macon. The trains went over Central of Georgia Railway tracks from Dothan, Alabama, to Atlanta. At some point between 1955 and 1956 A&StA terminated all passenger service --coach and sleeping car service.[4][5]
TOFC service began in 1962 with the construction of ramps at Panama City and Cottondale. Additional expansion came with the construction of a branch line to Graceville in 1971. In 1979 International Paper sold the railroad to Southwest Forest Industries, and the railroad changed hands again with the sale of Southwest Forest Industries to the Stone Container Corporation in 1987.[3][page needed]
In 1989, Stone Container Corporation purchased from CSX Transportation a branch line from Grimes to Abbeville, Alabama. The new railroad, the Abbeville-Grimes Railway Company, was operated by the A&SAB.[6] On January 1, 1994, the Rail Management Corporation acquired the assets of the railroad and created a new company, the Bay Line Railroad, to operate it.[7]
Graceville branch
editConstruction of the branch spanning 7 miles (11 km) from Campbellton, Florida, to Graceville was completed on July 14, 1971.[6] Graceville was located at the terminus of the Georgiana branch of the Louisville and Nashville Railroad. This allowed for interchange between the two railroads and access to a Southwest Forest Industries woodchip mill located in Graceville that supplied the Panama City paper mill. In addition to the woodchip mill, Gold Kist operated a peanut mill in Graceville.[3][page needed]
The Seaboard System Railroad, successor to the Louisville and Nashville, abandoned the line into Graceville on January 16, 1984.[8] The A&SAB purchased the small yard and wye track in Graceville from the vacating Seaboard and continued serving the city.[3][page needed] Declining traffic prompted the abandonment of the branch by the mid 1990s.[citation needed]
Abbeville branch
editStone Container Corporation purchased the line between Grimes and Abbeville on March 1, 1989.[7] The primary source of traffic is a woodchip mill near Abbeville, which provides woodchips for the Panama City paper mill. The Bay Line accessed the Abbeville & Grimes branch via trackage rights with CSX between Grimes and Dothan.[1][page needed] The Abbeville branch was included in the sale to the Bay Line Railroad.[7] The A&G was formally merged into the Bay Line on June 26, 1996.[9]
Notes
edit- ^ a b Nelson 2005
- ^ Moody's 1921, p. 352
- ^ a b c d e Smiley 1989
- ^ 'Official Guide,' September 1955, 678
- ^ 'Official Guide,' October 1956, 680, freight only
- ^ a b Lewis 1991, pp. 8, 27
- ^ a b c Lewis 1996, pp. 40–41
- ^ Alabama 2008, p. 4.2
- ^ "STB Finance Docket No. 19936". 21 June 1996. Archived from the original on 7 June 2012. Retrieved 27 November 2010.
References
edit- "2008 Alabama Rail Plan" (PDF). December 2008. Archived from the original (PDF) on 14 August 2011. Retrieved 10 September 2010.
- Lewis, Edward A. (1991). American Shortline Railway Guide (4th ed.). Waukesha, WI: Kalmbach Publishing. ISBN 0-89024-109-0. OCLC 25150373.
- Lewis, Edward A. (1996). American Shortline Railway Guide (5th ed.). Waukesha, WI: Kalmbach Publishing. ISBN 0-89024-290-9. OCLC 35286187.
- Moody's Investor Service (1921). Moody's Manual of Investments, American and Foreign: Transportation.
- Nelson, Bruce (2005). "The Bay Line Railroad". The Railroad Press (65): 44–49.
- Smiley, Tom (1989). "Modeling the Bay Line Railroad". Prototype Modeler (January/February): 20–27.