Amtrak's Crescent

Southern States


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RWH

southern_states

RWH

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Our Crescent route scrapbook runs southbound starting at New York City and ending at New Orleans

flag Alabama

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959
Anniston, Al

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typewriter n a spring day in 1872, Samuel Noble, representing his family's firm, walked into the Charleston, SC office of Alfred Tyler, vice-president and general manager of the South Carolina Railroad. The two men drew up an agreement forming the Woodstock Iron Company. In April 1873, Furnace #1 was built on the 2000 acres they had purchased in Alabama. As the business and surrounding village grew, the proprietors (headed mainly by Samuel Noble) sought to create a perfect town, "The Model City". Cottages were constructed for the workers with yards and gardens, streets were laid out and lined with trees, a company store was provided, a farm was operated to provide food and dairy products. Churches and schools were built, all as a part of this prosperous, planned, but closed community. In 1879, Furnace #2 began production.

anniston_logo Anniston remained predominantly an iron town until 1881 when a second major industry was added: cotton textiles. The wives and children of the ironworkers furnished the labor for the cotton mill. When application was made to incorporate this village called Woodstock, it was discovered there already was a Woodstock, Alabama. The founding fathers settled on the name Anniston, in honor of Tyler’s wife, Annie. On July 3, 1883 during an official ceremony, Anniston was opened to the public. The first Anniston Newspaper, The Hot Blast, revealed an exciting tale of rapid, almost overnight growth following the opening of the community. Anniston became the first city in Alabama to be lighted with electricity in 1882, and was enjoying the convenience of telephones as early as 1884. Each year the list of industries, businesses, churches, and schools grew as people came to Anniston to live, work and prosper.

City of Anniston

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Anniston, Al / Aug 2019 / RWH

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RWH

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Click to see the Anniston station area plotted on a Google Maps page

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Anniston, Al / Aug 2019 / RWH

Anniston
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1987 Amtrak timetable / collection

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Anniston, Al / Aug 2019 / RWH

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Anniston, Al / Aug 2019 / RWH

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Anniston, Al / Aug 2019 / RWH

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Anniston, Al / Aug 2019 / RWH

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Anniston, Al / Aug 2019 / RWH

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RWH

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Anniston, Al / Aug 2019 / RWH

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egyptian he Anniston depot, a red brick classical revival structure, was designed by Milo R. Hanker for Southern Railway and built in 1925. The façade features a pediment over three large round-arched windows. Cream-colored stone is used for the base of the building and is also employed as trim around the windows and entryways. A marquee over the main doors protects passengers from inclement weather and is embellished with elaborate metalwork in the form of scrolls and curlicues. A true intermodal facility, the depot is also served by the city’s bus system and acts as the interchange point for all lines. In the future, city planners hope that intercity bus providers will also use the multimodal center.

Great American Stations

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Aug 2019 / RWH

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Aug 2019 / RWH

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Aug 2019 / RWH

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Aug 2019 / RWH

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Aug 2019 / RWH

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Aug 2019 / RWH

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Anniston, Al / Aug 2019 / RWH

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Anniston, Al / Aug 2019 / RWH

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from Southern Railway Depots - Volume 2
- Ralph Ward / collection

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August 2019

anniston44 A trip to meet my family in Huntsville, Alabama, afforded me a stop en route in Anniston -- a town I had not visited in nearly 25 years. Living in Georgia now, I'm on a mission to document each station stop of the Crescent ... a goal I had for several other Amtrak routes during my years in Pennsylvania and Ohio. On a hot summer Thursday in August, my daughter and I found #19 running on time out of Atlanta. We got to the station early enough to find an eastbound intermodel in the hole waiting for westbound traffic to clear. That opposing traffic turned out to be not only the day's Crescent but also a fast-moving local that flushed through the station about 10 minutes ahead of 19. We positioned my daughter at the east end of the Anniston platform to shoot video of 19 on approach; meanwhile, I went to the west end to photograph the locomotives during the station stop. I'm glad I was in position, because 19's boss that day made quick work of the 2 passengers boarding at Anniston for points west and south. The train could not have been stopped more than 60 seconds before the horns sounded and the two Genesis units, in elephant positions, got 19 up and moving out of town in no time at all. Birmingham bound, with no time wasted in the Model City.

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See also our Southern Railway Steam-o-Rama scrapbook filmed in Anniston

herald_ns2NS Mainline Action

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Anniston, Al / Aug 2019 / RWH

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Anniston, Al / Aug 2019 / RWH

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Anniston, Al / Aug 2019 / RWH

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Anniston, Al / Aug 2019 / RWH

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southbound #19

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Anniston, Al / Aug 2019 / RWH

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Anniston, Al / Aug 2019 / ETH

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Anniston, Al / Aug 2019 / RWH

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Anniston, Al / Aug 2019 / RWH

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Anniston, Al / Aug 2019 / RWH

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Anniston, Al / Aug 2019 / RWH

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Amtrak #138

Anniston, Al / Aug 2019 / RWH

Amtrak #138

  • builder:General Electric
  • model:P42DC
  • type:B-B passenger unit
  • built:Jan 2001, GE #51818
  • series:321 produced 1992-2001
  • engine:GE 7FDL16 (16 cyl, 4250 hp)
  • notes:
  • 1 of 207 at top of AMTK roster
  • builder
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    Anniston, Al / Aug 2019 / RWH

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    Anniston, Al / Aug 2019 / RWH

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    Anniston, Al / Aug 2019 / RWH

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    Anniston, Al / Aug 2019 / RWH

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    Anniston, Al / Aug 2019 / RWH

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    Anniston, Al / Aug 2019 / RWH

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    Anniston, Al / Aug 2019 / ETH

    Anniston, Al / Aug 2019 / ETH

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    1023
    Birmingham, Al

    tag_closeup Terminal Station

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    Birmingham Terminal Station

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    Birmingham, Al / collection

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    Birmingham, Al / web

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    typewriter irmingham Terminal Station was owned and operated by Birmingham Terminal Co. which was incorporated in 1905. Originally each of the tenants (Southern, Alabama Great Southern, Central of Georgia, St. Louis-San Francisco, Illinois Central) owned an equal amount of stock. The station had its grand opening April 6, 1909. Festivities included a balloon race, parade and speeches.

    The Byzantine style structure was designed by P. Thornton Marye of Atlanta and cost $2 million to construct. The exterior was mottled brick with a terra-cotta roof and gray sandstone ornaments. A 100-foot high central dome was flanked by two 130-foot high towers. The 7,600 square foot main waiting room had walls covered up to 16 feet with gray Tennessee marble. The ceiling was constructed of four barrel vaults intersecting with a central dome 64 feet in diameter of terra-cotta tile. There were ten through loading tracks with two 780-foot long platforms and three 630-foot long platforms. Connecting the platforms with the station was a passenger subway 28 feet wide and nine feet high with two stairs to each platform and a stairway to the 5th Avenue subway. The original concrete platform sheds were later replaced by conventional butterfly sheds.

    After reaching a high of 54 trains a day, traffic fell to 26 trains in 1960 and just nine (the City of Miami ran every other day) by January 1969. The Frisco (SL-SF) discontinued their last train to Birmingham in 1967 and Seaboard Coast Line exited when their Silver Comet was cut back to Atlanta in January 1969. The post office moved out of the station January 1, 1969. The Alabama Public Service Commission gave Birmingham Terminal Co. permission to tear down the station and replace it with a new (smaller) one. In September the lunch room and jewelry store closed and construction began on a new station. T.M. Burgin Demolition began tearing down the south wing (former postal facility) on September 22. Demolition was completed in 1970 by which time the new Terminal Station on Seventh Avenue was completed and opened. It utilized the outermost platform and loading tracks of the old station.

    Plans for a new General Services Administration office building as well as a motel, other office buildings and parking facilities on the eleven acre site fell through. Birmingham Terminal Co. continued to operate the new station until Southern joined Amtrak in 1979 and the station's last train was moved to the Amtrak (ex-L&N) station. By that time Southern had bought out the other owners. Birmingham Terminal Co. was finally disolved June 1, 1986.

    Southern Railway Depots - Volume 2 — Ralph Ward

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    from Southern Railway Depots - Volume 2
    — Ralph Ward / collection

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    Birmingham, Al / Jun 2020 / RWH

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    Homewood, Al / Aug 2021 / RWH

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    Birmingham, Al / Jun 2020 / RWH

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    Click to see the Birmingham Intermodal Station plotted on a Google Maps page

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    1987 Amtrak timetable / collection

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    Birmingham, Al / Jun 2020 / RWH

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    Birmingham, Al / Jun 2020 / RWH

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    Birmingham, Al / Jun 2020 / RWH

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    Birmingham Celebrates New Intermodal Facility

    February 2018

    On Feb. 23, 2018, as a large crowd looked on, local and regional officials stood beneath a colorful balloon arch to cut the ribbon on the new $32 million Birmingham Intermodal Facility. The ceremony included remarks by Mayor Randall Woodfin, Birmingham-Jefferson County Transit Authority Executive Director Barbara Murdock and others, as well as live music from the Fairfield High Preparatory School Choir and singer Taylor Hicks.

    The modern intermodal station brings together Amtrak, local MAX and intercity buses and shuttles in one convenient location. Spanning the downtown blocks between the railroad viaduct and Morris Avenue from 16th to 19th Streets, the facility replaced smaller Amtrak and MAX stations in the vicinity. Two structures stand on the eastern end of the property: one houses a large waiting area for Amtrak and intercity bus passengers while the other provides space for MAX passengers; parking occupies the west end.

    Abundant natural light floods the interiors of the glass-enclosed buildings designed by Giattina Aycock Architecture Studio and Hoskins Architecture. A wide, overhanging roof protects travelers and pedestrians from the hot summer sun and inclement weather. Space for retail and eateries helps generate activity throughout the day and evening. The Birmingham-Jefferson County Transit Authority, which oversees the MAX system, also maintains offices at the station. Amtrak moved its operations to the new facility in late January 2018. It offers customers ticketing and baggage services and has accessible seating, restrooms, and ticket counters, as well as passenger information displays in audible and visual formats.

    The project was funded in part through $23.6 million in grants from the Federal Transit Administration’s Bus and Bus Facilities program and $6 million in city funds obtained through a voter-approved bond initiative. On the south side of the railroad viaduct is Railroad Park, former industrial land transformed into a 19-acre greenspace that opened in 2010. The campus of the University of Alabama at Birmingham is also within walking distance.

    In fiscal year 2017, customers began or ended more than 42,000 trips in Birmingham, which is served twice a day by the Crescent (New York-Atlanta-New Orleans).

    Great American Stations

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    Jun 2020 / RWH

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    Jun 2020 / RWH

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    Jun 2020 / RWH

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    Birmingham, Al / Jun 2020 / RWH

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    Jun 2020 / RWH

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    Birmingham, Al / Jun 2020 / RWH

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    Jun 2020 / RWH

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    Birmingham, Al / Jun 2020 / RWH

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    Birmingham, Al / Jun 2020 / RWH

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    See also our nearby Birmingham Railroad Park scrapbook in Preservation

    stationsign_amtrak_new Birmingham, AL
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    Birmingham, Al / Aug 2021 / RWH

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    Birmingham, Al / Mar 2021 / RWH

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    Birmingham, Al / Mar 2021 / RWH

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    Birmingham, Al / Mar 2021 / RWH

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    Birmingham, Al / Mar 2021 / RWH

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    Jun 2020 / RWH

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    southbound #19

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    Birmingham, Al / Mar 2021 / RWH

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    Birmingham, Al / Mar 2021 / RWH

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    Birmingham, Al / Mar 2021 / RWH

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    Birmingham, Al / Mar 2021 / RWH

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    Birmingham, Al / Mar 2021 / ETH

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    Birmingham, Al / Mar 2021 / RWH

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    Jun 2020 / RWH

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    Birmingham, Al / Mar 2021 / RWH

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    Birmingham, Al / Mar 2021 / RWH

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    Birmingham, Al / Mar 2021 / RWH

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    Birmingham, Al / Mar 2021 / RWH

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    Birmingham, Al / Mar 2021 / RWH

    Birmingham
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    typewriter hrough the mid-20th century, Birmingham was the industrial giant of the American South. Formally organized in 1871, the town quickly became a commercial center because of the natural abundance of coal, iron ore and limestone within the area—all necessary ingredients for making steel. Its rapid growth as an industrial hub earned it the nickname, "the Magic City." In the later 20th century, its economy diversified: large-scale banking, insurance, medicine, publishing and biotechnology all have come to the city. Today, Birmingham is recognized as one of the top cities for income growth in the South.

    Great American Stations

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    Birmingham, Al / Mar 2021 / RWH

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    Birmingham, Al / Mar 2021 / RWH

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    Birmingham, Al / Mar 2021 / RWH

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    Birmingham, Al / Aug 2021 / RWH

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    northbound #20

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    Birmingham, Alabama — Aug 2021 — Positioned on Richard Arlington Blvd overpass with view of Birmingham platform to catch 30 minute late Amtrak #20, northbound Crescent. Amtrak and CSX manifest paced toward station area, with CSX leader #5382 (GE ES44DC built 2006). Amtrak power: #193 and #165, Genesis units. Consist: 2 coaches, 1 lounge, 2 sleepers, 1 baggage/dorm.

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    Birmingham, Al / Aug 2021 / RWH

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    Click to see the Richard Arlington Blvd overpass plotted on a Google Maps page

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    Birmingham, Al / Aug 2021 / RWH

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    Birmingham, Al / Aug 2021 / RWH

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    Birmingham, Al / Aug 2021 / RWH

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    Birmingham, Al / Aug 2021 / RWH

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    Birmingham, Al / Aug 2021 / RWH

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    Birmingham, Al / Aug 2021 / RWH

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    Birmingham, Al / Aug 2021 / RWH

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    Birmingham, Al / Aug 2021 / RWH

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    Birmingham, Al / Aug 2021 / RWH

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    Birmingham, Al / Aug 2021 / RWH

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    Birmingham, Al / Aug 2021 / RWH

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    1078
    Tuscaloosa, Al

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    tuscaloosa_seal typewriter he site of the future City of Tuscaloosa on the "Fall Line" of the Black Warrior River had long been known to the various Native American tribes whose shifting fortunes brought them to West Alabama.

    The river shoals at Tuscaloosa represented the southernmost site on the river which could be forded under most conditions. Inevitably, a network of Native American trails converged upon the place, the same network that in the first years of the 19th century began to lead a few intrepid white frontiersmen to the area. The pace of white settlement increased greatly after the War of 1812, and a small assortment of log cabins soon arose near the large Creek tribe village at the Fall Line of the river.

    In honor of the legendary "Black Warrior," a great chief who had had a fateful encounter with explorer Hernando DeSoto centuries before somewhere in Southwest Alabama, the settlers named the place Tuscaloosa (from the Choctaw words "tushka" meaning warrior and "lusa" meaning black). In 1817 Alabama became a territory, and on Dec. 13, 1819 the territorial legislature incorporated the town of Tuscaloosa, exactly one day before Congress admitted Alabama to the Union as a state. Thus, the City of Tuscaloosa is one day older than the State of Alabama.

    From 1826 to 1846 Tuscaloosa was the state capital of Alabama. The University of Alabama was established during this period in 1831. These developments, together with the region's growing economy, increased the number of the town's inhabitants to 4,250 by 1845, but after the departure of the capital to Montgomery, population fell to 1,950 in 1850.

    City of Tuscaloosa

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    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    Click to see the Tuscaloosa Amtrak station plotted on a Google Maps page

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    Tuscaloosa station overhead / Google Maps

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    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    Nov 2019 / RWH

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    Nov 2019 / RWH

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    1987 Amtrak timetable / collection

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    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    typewriter ocated south of downtown, the Tuscaloosa depot sports a romantic castle-like bay with deep corbelling and a conical roof topped by a finial.

    The one story brick Tuscaloosa station, located about a mile south of downtown, was built in 1911 for the Southern Railway as a replacement for a depot erected in 1873. In addition to an Amtrak waiting room, the station has office space occupied by Norfolk Southern Railway.

    In May 2012, the Ceres Garden Club completed a cosmetic improvement project at the station in conjunction with the city’s Greensboro Avenue Beautification project. The garden club planted new shrubs and flowers, removed debris, painted the station and erected a flag pole. Amtrak installed new exterior benches and rebranded the signage on the depot.

    Tuscaloosa, also the seat of Tuscaloosa County, sits on the Black Warrior River. The city was named after the Chocktaw chieftain, Tuscaloosa, which means “black warrior”. The river shoals in this area of western Alabama were the southern-most reliable ford on the river, and thus the natural convergence of many trails from early times.

    Great American Stations

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    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    Nov 2019 / RWH

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    Nov 2019 / RWH

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    Nov 2019 / RWH

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    Nov 2019 / RWH

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    Nov 2019 / RWH

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    Nov 2019 / RWH

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    Nov 2019 / RWH

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    Nov 2019 / RWH

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    Nov 2019 / RWH

    herald_ns2NS Mainline Action

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    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    Norfolk Southern #6911

    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

    Norfolk Southern #6911

  • builder:Electro Motive Division
  • model:SD60E (rebuilt)
  • type:C-C special duty
  • built:Jul 1985, EMD #847023-37
  • series:1144 produced 1984-95
  • engine:EMD 710G3A (16 cyl, 3800 hp)
  • notes:
  • blt Norfolk Southern #6600
    rebuilt Norfolk Southern #6911
    1 of 132 rebuilt w NS designed cab
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    Norfolk Southern #3541

    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

    Norfolk Southern #3541

  • builder:Electro Motive Division
  • model:SD40-2
  • type:C-C special duty
  • built:Sep 1979, EMD #A3773
  • series:3982 produced 1972-89
  • engine:EMD 645E3 (16 cyl, 3000 hp)
  • notes:
  • blt Burlington Northern #7171
    to Helm Leasing #7171
    to Norfolk Southern #3541
  • builder
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    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    See also our complete Norfolk Southern featured scrapbook in Mainlines


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    southbound #19

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    journal_rwh
    December 2019

    On a Thanksgiving trek to Louisiana to see family, Ella and I timed our travels to put us in Tuscaloosa in time to catch #19 southbound and #20 northbound. Turns out both movements were running late, and with the prospect of chasing #19 southbound along highway 11 between Tuscaloosa and Meridian, we did not wait around for the late #20 to do its station work. But we did catch 19 making its station stop in all her glory. Elephant Genesis units on the point -- including the low-numbered #4 -- and a consist that included both a new Viewliner II dining car and a new baggage/dormitory combination (on the rear). Coach work took a few minutes, then a repositioning move to handle a sleeper customer, then it was highball railroad-south for Mississippi running. And ala Guy Clark, we put a few nickels on the rail so #4 could smash them "flatter than a dime." "Look out here she comes. Look out, there she goes."

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    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    Amtrak #4

    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

    Amtrak #4

  • builder:General Electric
  • model:P42DC
  • type:B-B passenger unit
  • built:Aug 1996, GE #49323
  • series:321 produced 1992-2001
  • engine:GE 7FDL16 (16 cyl, 4250 hp)
  • notes:
  • 1 of 207 at top of AMTK roster
  • builder
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    Nov 2019 / RWH

    amtk4a

    St. Paul, Mn / Jul 1997 / Al Seever

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    Amtrak #196

    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

    Amtrak #196

  • builder:General Electric
  • model:P42DC
  • type:B-B passenger unit
  • built:Sep 2001, GE #53052
  • series:321 produced 1992-2001
  • engine:GE 7FDL16 (16 cyl, 4250 hp)
  • notes:
  • 1 of 207 at top of AMTK roster
  • builder
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    Nov 2019 / RWH

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    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

    tag_closeup Viewliner II diners

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    Amtrak #68001 "Annapolis"

    Viewliner II diner / Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    Welcoming the Next Generation: Viewliner II

    October 25, 2013

    Amtrak invited press and media representatives to Elmira, N.Y. in late October to tour the manufacturing facility where CAF USA is building the railroad 130 new single-level long-distance cars. CAF USA, the American subsidiary of Spanish railway manufacturing firm Construcciones y Auxiliar de Ferrocarriles, S.A, won the $298 million contract in July 2010. Leading the tour were Amtrak President and CEO Joseph Boardman, CAF CEO Andrés Arizkorreta, and Tom Carper, member of the Amtrak Board of Directors. According to CAF USA, more than 400 employees were hired to perform manufacturing and final assembly jobs, and parts have been sourced from more than 120 suppliers in 25 states. Boardman commented, "Amtrak is a major driver in the rebirth of an American rail manufacturing and supplier base that is strengthening our national economic health."

    Known as Viewliner II, the stainless steel cars are modeled after the single-level Viewliner I cars built for Amtrak in the mid-1990s. The order includes 25 Sleeping cars, 25 Dining cars, 55 Baggage cars and 25 Baggage/Dormitory cars. Most cars will be deployed on eastern routes including the Lake Shore Limited, Cardinal and Silver Service, but the Baggage cars will be used across the country.

    This new equipment is a key component in the Amtrak Fleet Strategy Plan addressing the long-term need for rolling stock and locomotives. Its arrival will allow Amtrak to retire older Heritage equipment dating from the mid-20th century. The new cars will also supplement the existing fleet to support growth across the national passenger rail system, improve financial and on-time performance and foster a more modern, progressive image for the railroad. After one of each type of car is field tested over the winter, the first units should enter revenue service in summer 2014. The full order is expected to be delivered by late 2015.

    Each car measures approximately 85' long, 14' high and 10.5' across at the widest point. Capable of moving at speeds of up to 125 mph, the Viewliner II cars will be interoperable with the Viewliner I, Amfleet II (long-distance), Horizon and remaining Heritage cars, as well as all Amtrak electric and diesel road locomotives.

    The Sleeping cars include 11 Roomettes, two Bedrooms and one Accessible Bedroom. Interior components, which are installed in a modular system, are being manufactured separately by RailPlan. Unlike the Viewliner I design, the Roomettes do not include toilets; passengers will share two restrooms and a shower at one end of the car. The Dining cars seat 46 and include full-service galley kitchens; carts that roll on and off the cars allow for easier stocking via a side door. Bicycle racks have been added to the Baggage cars. Overall, the cars offer passengers modern interiors, improved lighting and more efficient air conditioning and heating systems.

    Amtrak History

    tuscaloosa72

    Viewliner II Diner Names

    Number Name
    68000 Albany
    68001 Annapolis
    68002 Atlanta
    68003 Augusta
    68004 Baton Rouge
    68005 Boston
    68006 Charleston
    68007 Columbia
    68008 Columbus
    68009 Concord
    68010 Dover
    68011 Frankfort
    68012 Harrisburg
    68013 Hartford
    68014 Jackson
    68015 Lansing
    68016 Madison
    68017 Montgomery
    68018 Montpelier
    68019 Nashville
    68020 Providence
    68021 Raleigh
    68022 Richmond
    68023 Springfield
    68024 Tallahassee
    tuscaloosa52 tuscaloosa53 tuscaloosa54

    Nov 2019 / RWH

    tuscaloosa56

    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

    viewliner1

    1988 Viewliner brochure / collection

    viewliner2
    viewliner3

    1988 Viewliner brochure / collection

    tuscaloosa57

    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

    tuscaloosa58

    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

    tuscaloosa59

    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

    tuscaloosa60

    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

    tuscaloosa61

    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

    tuscaloosa62

    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

    tuscaloosa63a tuscaloosa63b tuscaloosa63c

    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

    tuscaloosa64a tuscaloosa64b tuscaloosa64c tuscaloosa64d

    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

    tuscaloosa65

    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

    tuscaloosa66

    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

    tuscaloosa67

    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

    tuscaloosa68

    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

    tuscaloosa69

    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

    tuscaloosa70

    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

    tuscaloosa71

    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

    Tuscaloosa, Al / Nov 2019 / ETH

    stationsign_amtrak_new Tuscaloosa, AL
    tuscaloosa73

    Tuscaloosa, Al / Jun 2020 / RWH

    tuscaloosa74

    Tuscaloosa, Al / Jun 2020 / RWH

    tuscaloosa75

    Tuscaloosa, Al / Jun 2020 / RWH

    tuscaloosa76

    Tuscaloosa, Al / Jun 2020 / RWH

    tuscaloosa77

    Tuscaloosa, Al / Jun 2020 / RWH

    tuscaloosa78

    Tuscaloosa, Al / Jun 2020 / RWH

    tuscaloosa79

    Tuscaloosa, Al / Jun 2020 / RWH

    tuscaloosa80

    Tuscaloosa, Al / Mar 2021 / RWH

    tuscaloosa81

    Tuscaloosa, Al / Mar 2021 / RWH

    11
    tag_route1 Route 11 chase

    journal_rwh
    December 2019

    chase1 I love a good shortline chase; always have. The pace is slow, the leapfrogging from crossing to crossing is easy; the risk is mild. But chasing Amtrak is another matter. Always has been, which is why I usually don't attempt it. Assuming normal track conditions, a typical Amtrak consist is usually "hauling the mail," as I like to say. Too fast and too much risk ... where there are other things I want to do and see in this life! But after studying the map again of the old Southern main between Tuscaloosa and Meridian, I noticed a pretty good stretch along U.S. 11 where the highway and mainline travelled closely together. After Ella and I caught #19 in Tuscaloosa (above), we decided to give a chase a try. It was tight, catching up with it and getting into the position for video and stills ... but we did it. And it was fun! We caught the Southbound from an overpass east of Boligee, paced it along 11 west of Boligee, and managed to get into position over the Tombigbee River at Epes -- the last of which, with about 30 seconds to spare! Thank goodness Route 11 was basically empty through these lonely piney wood stretches. I'm especially proud of my daughter and her great work on the filming of video, which you can enjoy below.

    tag_pin

    Click to see this overpass location plotted on a Google Maps page

    chase3

    Allison, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

    chase2a chase2b chase2c chase2d chase2e chase2f chase2g chase2h chase2i

    Allison, Al / Nov 2019 / RWH

    chase4

    Allison, Al / Nov 2019 / ETH

    chase5

    Nov 2019 / RWH

    chase6

    Boligee, Al / Nov 2019 / ETH

    chase7

    Boligee, Al / Nov 2019 / ETH

    tag_quotes1

    Tombigbee River

    Length: 400 miles (644 kilometers)

    typewriter he Tombigbee River in Mississippi and Alabama is formed by joining of the East Fork of Tombigbee River (rises in Prentiss County, northeast Mississippi, flows south past Fulton approximately 70 miles) and Oldtown Creek in north Monroe County in northeast Mississippi; flows south through Aberdeen Lake and Columbus Lake reservoirs, past Columbus, Mississippi. through Aliceville Lake reservoir on Mississippi-Alabama border, past Gainesville and Demopolis, Alabama. Here it receives the Black Warrior River from northeast above Demopolis Dam, and continues south through Cofferville Dam, past Jackson, joining the Alabama River approximately 30 miles North of Mobile to form the Mobile River. The Tombigbee is an important artery for manufactured goods. Dams and locks improve navigation on the river. The Tennessee-Tombigbee Waterway was completed in 1985 to add an additional link between the Mississippi River System and the Gulf coast for barge traffic. The Waterway replaces the river’s original channel in its mid-course, parallels channel to the east in its upper course, above Aberdeen Lake.

    U.S. Rivers Information

    chase8a chase8b

    Epes, Al / Nov 2019 / ETH

    tombigbee_info

    Bridgehunter.com

    tag_pin

    Click to see the Tombigbee River bridge plotted on a Google Maps page

    chase9

    Epes, Al / Nov 2019 / ETH

    chase10a chase10b chase10c chase10d chase10e chase10f

    Epes, Al / Nov 2019 / ETH

    Nov 2019 / ETH

    flag Mississippi

    tag_mileage
    1175
    Meridian, Ms

    meridian12

    Meridian, Ms / Dec 2016 / RWH

    tag_pin

    Click to see the Meridian Union Station area plotted on a Google Maps page

    meridian13

    Meridian, Ms / Dec 2016 / RWH

    meridian14

    Meridian, Ms / Dec 2016 / RWH

    meridian21

    postcard / collection

    tag_quotes1

    typewriter he renovated Amtrak station (also called Meridian Multi-Modal Transportation Center and locally Union Station) is part of the Meridian Downtown Historic District, which is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The original Union Station was completed in 1907 in Mission Revival style and at a cost of $250,000. It included a central tower and east and west wings along Front Street. The tower was demolished in 1940, and the west wing in 1966. The remaining east wing served as the Amtrak station prior to renovation.

    Great American Stations

    Meridian
    meridian15

    Meridian, Ms / Dec 2016 / RWH

    meridian46

    Meridian, Ms / Dec 2025 / RWH

    meridian47a
    meridian47b
    meridian47c

    Dec 2025 / RWH

    meridian48

    Meridian, Ms / Dec 2025 / RWH

    meridian50a meridian50b meridian50c meridian50d

    Dec 2025 / RWH

    meridian51
    meridian52

    Dec 2025 / RWH

    meridian53

    Dec 2025 / RWH

    meridian54

    Dec 2025 / RWH

    meridian49a
    meridian49b
    meridian49c

    Meridian, Ms / Dec 2025 / RWH

    meridian44

    Meridian, Ms / collection

    tag_quotes2

    egyptian he city of Meridian was born of and experienced its greatest growth in conjunction with railroads. Even famous native son Jimmie Rodgers worked on the railroad before becoming a pioneering country-music star. The city has capitalized on its railroading heritage in the development of the Union Station Multi-Modal Transportation Center (MMTC). The site selected for the MMTC project, the Depot Historic District, is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and occupies four city blocks. Union Station accommodates several modes of passenger transportation, including Amtrak trains, Greyhound buses, and other providers of transit services.

    Visit Meridian Mississippi

    meridian22

    Meridian, Ms / Mar 2021 / RWH

    journal_rwh
    December 2016

    meridian20 My daughter and I made a major holiday road trip this season, from Pittsburgh to Baltimore to Bristol to New Orleans ... and return to Pennsylvania through Nashville, Cincinnati, etc. two weeks later. Road warriors, we. I try not to overdo the railfan stops with my family, but I manage to work some into the agenda. Thinking to myself midday, in Alabama, that the Crescent -- assuming she's on time -- should be somewhere in our vicinity. I fired up the Amtrak app on my phone and discovered, to my delight, that the Crescent and we would be arriving in Meridian at just about the same time.

    We arrived at the attractive Meridian station in time to do some exploring before #19 rolled in for her station work. When the consist pulled in for a stop, I was delighted to see two Genensis movers in "elephant" lashup, a tired old Heritage era diner still serving meals, and a brand new Viewliner II 4-door baggage car on the rear. All in all, that day's Crescent was a fine looking train. The conductor did his work in about 10 mins, and off again 19 went for points south in the Magnolia State ... with a Crescent City arrival by day's end.

    meridian2

    Meridian, Ms / Dec 2016 / RWH

    meridian3

    Meridian, Ms / Dec 2016 / RWH

    amtk85_roster

    Amtrak #85

    Meridian, Ms / Dec 2016 / RWH

    Amtrak #85

  • builder:General Electric
  • model:P42DC
  • type:B-B passenger unit
  • built:May 1997, GE #49623
  • series:321 produced 1992-2001
  • engine:GE 7FDL16 (16 cyl, 4250 hp)
  • notes:
  • 1 of 207 at top of AMTK roster
  • builder
    meridian4

    Meridian, Ms / Dec 2016 / RWH

    amtk118_roster

    Amtrak #118

    Meridian, Ms / Dec 2016 / RWH

    Amtrak #118

  • builder:General Electric
  • model:P42DC
  • type:B-B passenger unit
  • built:Sep 1997, GE #49970
  • series:321 produced 1992-2001
  • engine:GE 7FDL16 (16 cyl, 4250 hp)
  • notes:
  • 1 of 207 at top of AMTK roster
  • builder
    stationsign_amtrak_new Meridian, MS
    meridian6

    Meridian, Ms / Dec 2016 / RWH

    meridian5

    Meridian, Ms / Dec 2016 / RWH

    meridian7a meridian7b meridian7c

    Meridian, Ms / Dec 2016 / RWH

    meridian8

    Meridian, Ms / Dec 2016 / RWH

    meridian16

    Meridian, Ms / Dec 2016 / RWH

    meridian_name
    tag_listAmtrak #19 consist - December 21, 2016
    amtk85_roster

    Amtrak #85

    General Electric P42DC

    amtk118_roster

    Amtrak #118

    General Electric P42DC

    amtk25054

    Amtrak #25054

    Amfleet II Amcoach

    amtk25005

    Amtrak #25005

    Amfleet II Amcoach

    amtk25006

    Amtrak #25006

    Amfleet II Amcoach

    amtk28012

    Amtrak #28012

    "Diner lite" converted Amcoach

    amtk8527

    Amtrak #8527

    Heritage era diner

    amtk62041

    Amtrak #62041

    Viewliner I sleeper

    amtk62000

    Amtrak #62000

    Viewliner I sleeper

    amtk25098

    Amtrak #25098

    Amfleet II Amcoach

    amtk61016a

    Amtrak #61016

    Viewliner II baggage

    amtk61016b

    all photos above: Meridian, Ms / Dec 2016 / RWH

    meridian_timetable

    1987 Amtrak timetable / collection

    meridian10

    Meridian, Ms / Dec 2016 / RWH

    meridian18

    Meridian, Ms / Dec 2016 / RWH

    meridian9

    Meridian, Ms / Dec 2016 / RWH

    meridian11

    Meridian, Ms / Dec 2016 / RWH

    meridian41

    Meridian, Ms / JCH

    meridian42

    Meridian, Ms / JCH

    meridian43

    Meridian, Ms / JCH

    meridian29

    Meridian, Ms / Oct 1998 / JCH

    meridian30

    Meridian, Ms / Oct 1998 / JCH

    meridian31

    Meridian, Ms / Oct 1998 / JCH

    meridian32

    Meridian, Ms / Oct 1998 / JCH

    meridian33

    Meridian, Ms / Oct 1998 / JCH

    meridian34

    Meridian, Ms / Oct 1998 / JCH

    meridian35

    Meridian, Ms / Oct 1998 / JCH

    meridian36

    Meridian, Ms / Oct 1998 / JCH

    meridian37

    Meridian, Ms / Oct 1998 / JCH

    meridian_map

    Meridian railroad notes / JCH

    meridian24

    Meridian, Ms / May 2000 / JCH

    meridian25

    Meridian, Ms / May 2000 / JCH

    meridian26

    Meridian, Ms / May 2000 / JCH

    meridian27

    Meridian, Ms / May 2000 / JCH

    meridian28

    Meridian, Ms / May 2000 / JCH

    meridian38

    Meridian, Ms / May 2000 / JCH

    meridian39

    Meridian, Ms / May 2000 / JCH

    meridian40

    Meridian, Ms / May 2000 / JCH

    meridian23a meridian23b meridian23c meridian23d meridian23e meridian23f

    Meridian, Ms / Mar 2021 / RWH

    meridian22

    Meridian, Ms / Mar 2021 / RWH

    arunde1

    Arunde, Ms / Jan 1989 / RWH

    arunde2

    Arunde, Ms / Jan 1989 / RWH

    arunde3

    Arunde, Ms / Jan 1989 / RWH

    tag_mileage
    1231
    Laurel, Ms

    laurel_postcard

    postcard / collection

    tag_quotes1

    laurel_seal typewriter rom its oak-lined streets to its lovely, turn-of-the-century homes, Laurel is a charming and gracious southern town. Located in the southeast region of Mississippi known as the Pine Belt, the city of Laurel was originally established in 1882. It flourished during the growth of the timber industry just over a century ago. In 1893, a decade after the railroad opened the region for large-scale timber production, Eastman-Gardiner & Company opened the first giant lumber mill. The Eastman-Gardiner mill was soon followed by many others, making Laurel a very large milling town. By the early 1900’s, Laurel milled and shipped more yellow pine than anywhere else in the world.

    City of Laurel

    laurel1

    Laurel, Ms / Nov 2019 / RWH

    tag_pin

    Click to see the Laurel Amtrak depot plotted on a Google Maps page

    laurel3

    Laurel, Ms / Nov 2019 / RWH

    laurel4

    Laurel, Ms / Nov 2019 / RWH

    Laurel
    laurel_timetable

    1987 Amtrak timetable / collection

    laurel2

    Laurel, Ms / Nov 2019 / RWH

    laurel5

    Laurel, Ms / Nov 2019 / RWH

    tag_quotes1

    laurel_inset typewriter ocated in the Mississippi Pine Belt, Laurel was established in 1882 and flourished with the lumber industry. The historic 1913 depot includes a waiting room and community meeting space.

    Restoration of the Laurel depot came about as a collaboration between the city of Laurel and Leadership Jones County, a community-based service group. Leadership Jones County petitioned the city to obtain the station facility from Norfolk Southern Railway. When the city took it over in 1994, the structure was sound, but the interior significantly decayed. The building was open to vandalism and considered an eyesore at that time.

    Restoration of this 1913 brick structure included functional redesign of the existing rooms and adding a waiting area, replicating and repairing as many of the historic characteristics as possible. The original terrazzo floor in the main room was restored, turn-of-the-century style light fixtures were installed, and the original wooden benches repaired. The building now serves as not only a working passenger station but also as a community meeting place. Rehabilitation was completed in 1998, and the next year the project won an award of excellence from the Mississippi Heritage Trust.

    Great American Stations

    laurel6

    Laurel, Ms / Nov 2019 / RWH

    laurel9

    Nov 2019 / RWH

    laurel7

    Laurel, Ms / Nov 2019 / RWH

    laurel8

    Laurel, Ms / Nov 2019 / RWH

    laurel10

    Nov 2019 / RWH

    laurel15

    Nov 2019 / RWH

    laurel13a laurel13b laurel13c laurel13d laurel13e laurel13f

    Nov 2019 / RWH

    laurel11

    Laurel, Ms / Nov 2019 / RWH

    laurel12

    Laurel, Ms / Nov 2019 / RWH

    laurel14

    Laurel, Ms / Nov 2019 / RWH

    stationsign_amtrak_new Laurel, MS
    laurel16

    Laurel, Ms / Mar 2021 / RWH

    laurel17

    Laurel, Ms / Mar 2021 / RWH

    tag_mileage
    1260
    Hattiesburg, Ms

    hattiesburg4

    Hattiesburg, Ms / May 2000 / JCH

    hattiesburg2

    Hattiesburg, Ms / Jan 1989 / RWH

    hattiesburg3

    Hattiesburg, Ms / May 2000 / JCH

    tag_pin

    Click to see the Hattiesburg station area plotted on a Google Maps page

    hattiesburg6

    Hattiesburg, Ms / Jul 1989 / RWH

    hattiesburg7

    Hattiesburg, Ms / Jul 1989 / RWH

    hattiesburg5

    Hattiesburg, Ms / May 2000 / JCH

    tag_quotes1

    typewriter he 14,000-square foot brick Hattiesburg Southern Railway station was originally completed in 1910. One of the larger and more elaborate surviving passenger depots in Mississippi, the station has been in continuous use since it first opened. It was built in an Italian Renaissance style with a hipped roof originally done in clay tile and tin, and was noted for its 924-foot canopy, which was partially removed in 1958.

    Great American Stations

    hattiesburg9

    Hattiesburg, Ms / May 2000 / JCH

    Hattiesburg
    hattiesburg31

    Hattiesburg, Ms / Jan 2025 / RWH

    hattiesburg29

    Hattiesburg, Ms / Jan 2025 / RWH

    hattiesburg30a
    hattiesburg30b

    Hattiesburg, Ms / Jan 2025 / RWH

    hattiesburg38

    Hattiesburg, Ms / Jan 2025 / RWH

    hattiesburg42a hattiesburg42b hattiesburg42c hattiesburg42d

    Jan 2025 / RWH

    hattiesburg_timetable

    1987 Amtrak timetable / collection

    hattiesburg_name
    hattiesburg41a
    hattiesburg41b

    Jan 2025 / RWH

    hattiesburg40

    Hattiesburg, Ms / Jan 2025 / RWH

    hattiesburg39

    Hattiesburg, Ms / Jan 2025 / RWH

    hattiesburg55a
    hattiesburg55b
    hattiesburg55c

    Jan 2025 / RWH

    hattiesburg45

    Hattiesburg, Ms / Jan 2025 / RWH

    hattiesburg56a hattiesburg56b hattiesburg56c hattiesburg56d hattiesburg56e hattiesburg56f hattiesburg56g hattiesburg56h

    Jan 2025 / RWH

    hattiesburg57

    Jan 2025 / RWH

    hattiesburg43

    Hattiesburg, Ms / Jan 2025 / RWH

    hattiesburg44

    Jan 2025 / RWH

    hattiesburg58a
    hattiesburg58b

    Hattiesburg, Ms / Jan 2025 / RWH

    tag_closeup Baldwin #300 display

    Bonhomie & Hattiesburg Southern #300

    Bonhomie & Hattiesburg Southern #300

    Hattiesburg, Ms / Mar 1961 / JCH

    Bonhomie & Hattiesburg Southern #300

  • builder:Baldwin Locomotive Works
  • arrangement:2-8-2 "Mikado"
  • built:Feb 1925, Baldwin #58241
  • fuel:soft coal / water
  • notes:
  • 19x26" cylinders, 52" drivers
  • blt Bonhomie & Hattiesburg Sou #300
    retired, Oct 1961
    on display, Hattiesburg MS
  • builder
    hattiesburg10

    Hattiesburg, Ms / May 2000 / JCH

    hattiesburg11

    Hattiesburg, Ms / May 2000 / JCH

    hattiesburg12

    Hattiesburg, Ms / May 2000 / JCH

    hattiesburg13

    Hattiesburg, Ms / May 2000 / JCH

    hattiesburg14

    Hattiesburg, Ms / May 2000 / JCH

    bhs300i

    Hattiesburg, Ms / Jan 2025 / RWH

    bhs300l

    Jan 2025 / RWH

    bhs300o

    Jan 2025 / RWH

    bhs300n1

    Jan 2025 / RWH

    bhs300j

    Hattiesburg, Ms / Jan 2025 / RWH

    bhs300p

    Jan 2025 / RWH

    bhs300q

    Hattiesburg, Ms / Jan 2025 / RWH

    bhs300n2

    Jan 2025 / RWH

    bhs300r

    Hattiesburg, Ms / Jan 2025 / RWH

    bhs300m

    Hattiesburg, Ms / Jan 2025 / RWH

    bhs300s

    Jan 2025 / RWH

    tag_jump

    See also our complete Bonhomie & Hattiesburg Southern scrapbook in Shortlines

    hattiesburg33

    Hattiesburg, Ms / Jan 2025 / RWH

    hattiesburg34

    Southern Railway #4531

    Hattiesburg, Ms / Jan 2025 / RWH

    hattiesburg35

    Hercules Powder #35

    Hattiesburg, Ms / Jan 2025 / RWH

    Hercules Powder #35

  • builder:Heisler Locomotive Works
  • arrangement:0-4-0F fireless
  • built:1935, Heisler #34
  • fuel:plant steam
  • notes:
  • blt Hercules Powder #35
    to City of Hattiesburg
    on display in Kamper Park
    to display at Southern station
  • builder
    hattiesburg36

    Hattiesburg, Ms / Jan 2025 / RWH

    hattiesburg37

    Jan 2025 / RWH

    tag_closeup 2003 Open House

    tag_quotes1

    typewriter n early 1998, the city of Hattiesburg began negotiating with Norfolk Southern Railway to purchase the depot. The transfer of the depot and surrounding 2.28 acres to the city took place in the summer of 2000. The first phase of construction was approved in March, 2002 and completed in the summer of 2003, consisting of a new roof and extensive structure repairs. Phase II completed exterior and interior restorations, repurposing the depot for use as an intermodal transportation center. This included restoration of the ornamental plaster, original flooring, and other historic features, particularly the Grand Hall.

    The restored station was rededicated on April 21, 2007, celebrated by a Grand Gala black-tie event the night before. The construction project included restoration of the exterior envelope and rehabilitation of the interior, focusing on windows, doors, repairs, and repainting; roof, canopy and metal awning restoration; accessibility, new interior climate control and fire sprinkler systems; and passenger and other interior spaces. The platform canopy was also restored; and additional parking, grounds, street and traffic issues addressed. The restoration and extensive improvements cost $10 million overall, and took five years to complete. The station now also boasts a wireless network zone.

    Great American Stations

    hattiesburg15

    Hattiesburg, Ms / Oct 2003 / JCH

    hattiesburg16

    Oct 2003 / JCH

    hattiesburg8

    Hattiesburg, Ms / Oct 2003 / JCH

    hattiesburg17a hattiesburg17b hattiesburg17c hattiesburg17d

    Oct 2003 / JCH

    hattiesburg18

    Oct 2003

    hattiesburg19

    Oct 2003 / David Price collection

    hattiesburg20

    Oct 2003 / David Price collection

    hattiesburg21

    Hattiesburg, Ms / Oct 2003 / JCH

    hattiesburg22

    Hattiesburg, Ms / Oct 2003 / JCH

    hattiesburg23

    Hattiesburg, Ms / Oct 2003 / JCH

    hattiesburg24

    Hattiesburg, Ms / Oct 2003 / JCH

    hattiesburg25

    Oct 2003 / JCH

    hattiesburg26

    Hattiesburg, Ms / Oct 2003 / JCH

    hattiesburg27

    Hattiesburg, Ms / Oct 2003 / JCH

    hattiesburg28

    Hattiesburg, Ms / Oct 2003 / JCH

    hattiesburg60a
    hattiesburg60b

    Hattiesburg, Ms / Jan 2025 / RWH

    hattiesburg63

    Jan 2025 / RWH

    hattiesburg64

    Jan 2025 / RWH

    hattiesburg65

    Jan 2025 / RWH

    hattiesburg61a
    hattiesburg61c
    hattiesburg61b

    Jan 2025 / RWH

    hattiesburg62

    Jan 2025 / RWH

    hattiesburg59

    Jan 2025 / RWH

    stationsign_amtrak_new Hattiesburg, MS
    hattiesburg48

    Hattiesburg, Ms / Jan 2025 / RWH

    hattiesburg49

    Jan 2025 / RWH

    hattiesburg50b
    hattiesburg51

    Hattiesburg, Ms / Jan 2025 / RWH

    hattiesburg52

    Jan 2025 / RWH

    hattiesburg53

    Hattiesburg, Ms / Jan 2025 / RWH

    hattiesburg54

    Hattiesburg, Ms / Jan 2025 / RWH

    hattiesburg46

    Hattiesburg, Ms / Jan 2025 / RWH

    hattiesburg47

    Jan 2025 / RWH

    tag_closeup Union @ Night

    hattiesburg66

    Hattiesburg, Ms / Jan 2025 / RWH

    hattiesburg67

    Hattiesburg, Ms / Jan 2025 / RWH

    hattiesburg68

    Jan 2025 / RWH

    hattiesburg69

    Jan 2025 / RWH

    hattiesburg_nineteen
    hattiesburg70

    Jan 2025 / RWH

    hattiesburg71

    Jan 2025 / RWH

    hattiesburg72

    Hattiesburg, Ms / Jan 2025 / RWH

    hattiesburg73

    Hattiesburg, Ms / Jan 2025 / RWH

    amtk329_roster

    Amtrak #329

    Hattiesburg, Ms / Jan 2025 / RWH

    Amtrak #329

  • builder:Siemens
  • model:ALC-42 "Charger"
  • type:B-B passenger power
  • built:Apr 2021, Siemens #CHR129
  • series:460 produced 2016-2025
  • engine:Cummins QSK95 (4200 hp)
  • notes:
  • blt Amtrak #329
    1 of 125 blt new for Amtrak
  • builder
    hattiesburg74a hattiesburg74b hattiesburg74c hattiesburg74d hattiesburg74e hattiesburg74f

    Hattiesburg, Ms / Jan 2025 / RWH

    hattiesburg75

    Hattiesburg, Ms / Jan 2025 / RWH

    hattiesburg76

    Hattiesburg, Ms / Jan 2025 / RWH

    hattiesburg77

    Jan 2025 / RWH

    hattiesburg1

    Hattiesburg, Ms / Mar 2021 / RWH

    tag_pinLumberton, Ms

    lumberton1

    Lumberton, Ms / Jun 1989 / RWH

    lumberton2

    Lumberton, Ms / Jun 1989 / RWH

    lumberton3

    Lumberton, Ms / Jun 1989 / RWH

    lumberton5

    Lumberton, Ms / Jun 1989 / RWH

    lumberton4

    Lumberton, Ms / Jun 1989 / RWH

    tag_mileage
    1324
    Picayune, Ms

    tag_quotes1

    Picayune is a precious coin in the purse of the south.

    picayune_logo typewriter icayune is a rare name for a unique place. Search the world and the only city named Picayune is found in South Mississippi. The appeal of the area is obvious to anyone who visits the area. However, how Picayune got its name traces back to a Spanish coin and a well-renowned newspaper still published today. When the railroad came through in the 1880’s the then known community of Hobolochitto turned to one of its prestigious residents Eliza Jane Poitevent Nicholson, better known by her pen name “Pearl Rivers,” to name the area. Mrs. Nicholson was the owner and publisher of the New Orleans Daily Picayune named after a Spanish coin called a “picayune”. She chose to name the city after her beloved newspaper. Today the paper is still published but is now called the Times-Picayune. In 1904, Picayune was incorporated as a township under the name given by Poitevent. Seventeen years later Picayune was incorporated as a city.

    City of Picayune

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    Picayune, Ms / Jul 2019 / RWH

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    RWH

    tag_pin

    Click to see the Picayune station area plotted on a Google Maps page

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    Picayune, Ms / Jul 2019 / RWH

    Picayune
    picayune_shay_clipping

    collection

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    Picayune, Ms / Jul 2019 / RWH

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    Picayune, Ms / Jul 2019 / RWH

    tag_quotes1

    typewriter he Picayune station was built with the look of a classic early-twentieth century passenger depot, including a porte-cochere and waiting room. The previous station was an open waiting area near the platform, similar to a gazebo. The cost to construct the center was mostly funded through a grant from the Federal Transit Administration, which paid for 80 percent of the estimated $875,000. The remaining 20 percent was paid for by the city. The ribbon cutting and grand opening for the Picayune Intermodal Transportation Center took place on October 16, 2008.

    Great American Stations

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    Picayune, Ms / Jul 2019 / RWH

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    Picayune, Ms / Jul 2019 / RWH

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    Picayune, Ms / Jul 2019 / RWH

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    Picayune, Ms / Jul 2019 / RWH

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    northbound view / Picayune, Ms / RWH

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    southbound view / Picayune, Ms / RWH

    tag_closeup Crosby Chemicals #2027

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    RWH

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    Picayune, Ms / Jul 2019 / RWH

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    Picayune, Ms / Jul 2019 / RWH

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    Picayune, Ms / Jul 2019 / RWH

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    Picayune, Ms / Jul 2019 / RWH

    stationsign_amtrak_new Picayune, MS
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    Picayune, Ms / Jul 2019 / RWH

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    Picayune, Ms / Jul 2019 / RWH

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    Picayune, Ms / Jul 2019 / RWH

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    Picayune, Ms / Jul 2019 / RWH

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    Picayune, Ms / Jul 2019 / RWH

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    Picayune, Ms / Jul 2019 / RWH

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    Picayune, Ms / Jul 2019 / RWH

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    Picayune, Ms / Jul 2019 / RWH

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    Picayune, Ms / Jul 2019 / RWH

    amtk51_roster

    Amtrak #51

    Picayune, Ms / Jul 2019 / RWH

    Amtrak #51

  • builder:General Electric
  • model:P42DC
  • type:B-B passenger unit
  • built:Jan 1997, GE #49699
  • series:321 produced 1992-2001
  • engine:GE 7FDL16 (16 cyl, 4250 hp)
  • notes:
  • 1 of 207 at top of AMTK roster
  • builder
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    Sep 2019 / RWH

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    Picayune, Ms / Jul 2019 / RWH

    amtk25_roster

    Amtrak #25

    Picayune, Ms / Jul 2019 / RWH

    Amtrak #25

  • builder:General Electric
  • model:P42DC
  • type:B-B passenger unit
  • built:Nov 1996, GE #49344
  • series:321 produced 1992-2001
  • engine:GE 7FDL16 (16 cyl, 4250 hp)
  • notes:
  • 1 of 207 at top of AMTK roster
  • builder
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    Picayune, Ms / Jul 2019 / RWH

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    Picayune, Ms / Jul 2019 / RWH

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    Picayune, Ms / Jul 2019 / RWH

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    Picayune, Ms / Jul 2019 / RWH

    tag_mileage
    1342
    Slidell, La

    tag_quotes1

    slidell_logo typewriter lidell, Louisiana was founded around 1882 during construction of a major new railroad from New Orleans to Meridian, Mississippi, connecting there with Cincinnati, Ohio and eventually with New York, NY. The New Orleans and Northeastern (N.O.N.E.) Railroad established a building camp at first high ground north of Lake Pontchartrain which eventually grew into the city. Slidell was chartered as a town in 1888 by the Louisiana legislature.

    Sometime prior to Slidell’s formal incorporation in 1888, its first streets were laid out in a grid pattern, mostly east of the railroad, running three blocks along the road by four blocks deep. Bonfouca Street, now Bayou Lane, lay in the short stretch between the railroad and the bayou. East of the tracks, the north-south streets were Bayou (now Front), First, Second, Third and Fourth. The east-west streets were Fremaux, Erlanger, Bouscaren and Cousin.

    Erlanger, slightly wider than the others and designated as an avenue, was named by Baron Frederick Erlanger, head of the banking syndicate which financed the railway. Baron Erlanger named the town for his deceased father-in-law, John Slidell, who had been a prominent state, national and confederate political figure. Col. Leon J. Fremaux, a prominent Louisiana engineer and planner, drew the original plans for Slidell and named Fremaux Avenue for himself. Bouscaren Street was named for G. Bouscaren, the chief engineering officer of the railroad. Cousin Street took its name from the locally prominent Cousin family.

    In the thirty or so years after its founding, Slidell developed a creosote plant, one of the country’s largest brick manufacturing facilities, a large lumber mill and a shipyard. The Slidell shipyard contributed significantly to the national effort in both World Wars. Slidell residents worked in New Orleans ship, tank and airplane construction during World War II.

    City of Slidell

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    Slidell, La / Dec 2016 / RWH

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    Slidell, La / Dec 2016 / RWH

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    Slidell, La / Dec 2016 / RWH

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    Slidell, La / Dec 2016 / RWH

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    Slidell, La / Dec 2016 / RWH

    journal_rwh
    December 2016

    slidell6 While visiting family for Christmas in the New Orleans area, I made a couple of trips over to Slidell to catch some Amtrak action at the depot and on the lake crossing. On the first attempt, a late start from the house plus morning interstate traffic meant I missed the northbound altogether. On my second attempt, I found the depot full of holiday travellers but also surrounded by a thick morning fog. A call on the scanner revealed that #20 had cleared the drawbridge and would be rolling up in town soon enough. Soon the familiar triad of Genesis headlights broke through the pea soup fog only about a block away and the movement braked into the depot area with a long squeal. No matter the throttle setting, the trailing unit that morning was smoking like a steam engine taking coal. #10 belched black throughout the station work, and belched even more -- channelling its inner Alco, perhaps -- when the cabman notched out for points north. New York City, here comes a smoking Crescent ... just in time for Christmas Day.

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    Slidell, La / Dec 2016 / RWH

    tag_listAmtrak #20 consist - December 23, 2016
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    Amtrak #39

    General Electric P42DC

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    Amtrak #10

    General Electric P42DC

    amtk25088

    Amtrak #25088

    Amfleet II Amcoach

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    Amtrak #25063

    Amfleet II Amcoach

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    Amtrak #25101

    Amfleet II Amcoach

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    Amtrak #25123

    Amfleet II Amcoach

    amtk28022

    Amtrak #28022

    "Diner Lite" conversion Amcoach

    amtk8507

    Amtrak #8507

    Heritage era diner

    amtk62034

    Amtrak #62034

    Viewliner I sleeper

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    Amtrak #62044

    Viewliner I sleeper

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    Amtrak #25114

    Amfleet II Amcoach

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    Amtrak #61045

    Viewliner II baggage

    all photos above: Slidell, La / Dec 2016 / RWH

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    Slidell, La / Dec 2016 / RWH

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    Slidell, La / Dec 2016 / RWH

    Slidell, La / Dec 2016 / RWH

    Slidell
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    Slidell, La / Dec 2016 / RWH

    tag_pin

    Click to see the Slidell depot area plotted on a Google Maps page

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    Slidell, La / Dec 2016 / RWH

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    Slidell, La / Dec 2016 / RWH

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    Slidell, La / Dec 2016 / RWH

    tag_quotes1

    typewriter he brick Olde Towne Railroad Depot in Slidell was built around 1903 for the New Orleans & Northeastern and New Orleans & Great Northern railroad, supplanting an earlier wooden passenger depot which was located on the west side of the tracks between Maine and Pennsylvania Streets. In the early 1990s, the city of Slidell submitted a grant application to the Louisiana Department of Transportation and Development (LDOTD) to receive funding under the Intermodal Surface Transportation Enhancement Act (ISTEA) of 1991 to renovate, preserve and operate the depot.

    Before renovations began, the Norfolk Southern Railway donated the depot and about two acres of land to the city, and resolutions were made authorizing the mayor to enter into agreements with the LDOTD for depot renovation. Later that same year, the building was put on the National Register of Historic Places, protecting the historic character of the building.

    Great American Stations

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    Slidell, La / Dec 2016 / RWH

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    Slidell, La / Feb 2020 / RWH

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    Slidell, La / Feb 2020 / RWH

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    Slidell, La / Feb 2020 / RWH

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    Slidell, La / Feb 2020 / RWH

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    Slidell, La / Feb 2020 / RWH

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    Feb 2020 / RWH

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    Slidell, La / Feb 2020 / RWH

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    Slidell, La / Feb 2020 / RWH

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    Slidell, La / Feb 2020 / RWH

    tag_closeup Station Murals

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    Slidell, La / Dec 2016 / RWH

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    Slidell, La / Dec 2016 / RWH

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    Slidell, La / Sep 1988 / RWH

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    Slidell, La / Sep 1988 / RWH

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    Slidell, La / Sep 1988 / RWH

    amtk269_roster

    Amtrak #269

    Slidell, La / Sep 1988 / RWH

    Amtrak #269

  • builder:Electro Motive Division
  • model:F40PHR
  • type:B-B passenger unit
  • built:Dec 1977, EMD #777018-15
  • series:475 produced 1975-92
  • engine:EMD 645E3 (16 cyl, 3000 hp)
  • notes:
  • blt Amtrak #269
    to Ohio Central #460
    to Ohi-Rail #460
  • builder
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    Sep 1988 / RWH

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    Slidell, La / Sep 1988 / RWH

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    Slidell, La / Sep 1988 / JCH

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    Slidell, La / Sep 1988 / JCH

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    Slidell, La / Sep 1988 / JCH

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    Slidell, La / Aug 1989 / RWH

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    Slidell, La / Aug 1989 / RWH

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    Slidell, La / Aug 1989 / RWH

    stationsign_amtrak_new Slidell, LA
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    Slidell, La / 2000 / JCH

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    Slidell, La / 2000 / JCH

    tag_jump

    See also our Southern Railway in Louisiana scrapbook for more Slidell images

    tag_pinLake Pontchartrain

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    North Shore, La / Feb 2020 / RWH

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    North Shore, La / Dec 2016 / RWH

    tag_pin

    Click to see this railfan location plotted on a Google Maps page

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    North Shore, La / Dec 2016 / RWH

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    North Shore, La / Dec 2016 / RWH

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    North Shore, La / Dec 2016 / RWH

    icon_wikipedia

    Norfolk Southern's Lake Pontchartrain Bridge is a bridge that carries a single-track of Norfolk Southern rail line between Slidell and New Orleans, Louisiana. At 5.8 miles long, it is the longest railroad bridge in the United States and likely the longest rail bridge over water in the world. The bridge is heavily used by Norfolk Southern freight trains, and Amtrak's Crescent passenger train crosses the bridge once daily in each direction.

    Wikipedia

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    North Shore, La / Dec 2016 / RWH

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    North Shore, La / Dec 2016 / RWH

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    North Shore, La / Dec 2016 / RWH

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    North Shore, La / Dec 2016 / RWH

    tag_closeup Crescent Crossings

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    North Shore, La / Dec 2016 / RWH

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    North Shore, La / 2000 / JCH

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    North Shore, La / 1978 / collection

    North Shore, La / Dec 2016 / RWH

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    North Shore, La / Dec 2016 / RWH

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    North Shore, La / Dec 2016 / RWH

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    lake view / Mar 2021 / RWH

    tag_jump

    See also our Southern Railway in Louisiana scrapbook for more Lake Pontchartrain images


    tag_pinMetairie, La

    tag_quotes1

    metairie_inset typewriter urying the dead in a place built below sea level was a problem that faced the earliest residents of the French settlement that became New Orleans. The solution agreed upon, to entomb the departed in elaborate marble chambers above ground, created one of the city’s most lingering attractions: cemeteries that are both historic and hauntingly beautiful. Wander the purported resting places of voodoo queen Marie Laveau, musician Al Hirt and Civil War general P.G.T. Beauregard, all residents of what is known in New Orleans as the Cities of the Dead. Many offer guided tours, others you can explore on your own.

    New Orleans

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    Metairie, La / Jul 2019 / RWH

    tag_pin

    Click to see this location plotted on a Google Maps page

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    Metairie, La / Jul 2019 / RWH

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    Metairie, La / Jul 2019 / RWH

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    Metairie, La / Jul 2019 / RWH

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    Metairie, La / Jul 2019 / RWH

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    Metairie, La / Jul 2019 / RWH

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    Metairie, La / Jul 2019 / RWH

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    Metairie, La / Jul 2019 / RWH

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    Metairie, La / Jul 2019 / RWH

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    Metairie, La / Jul 2019 / RWH

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    Metairie, La / Jul 2019 / RWH

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    Metairie, La / Jul 2019 / RWH

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    Metairie, La / Jul 2019 / RWH

    Metairie, La / Jul 2019 / RWH

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    New Orleans, La / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    New Orleans, La / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    New Orleans, La / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    New Orleans, La / Nov 2019 / RWH

    tag_pin

    Click to see this overpass location plotted on a Google Maps page

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    New Orleans, La / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    New Orleans, La / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    New Orleans, La / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    New Orleans, La / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    New Orleans, La / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    New Orleans, La / Nov 2019 / ETH

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    New Orleans, La / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    New Orleans, La / Nov 2019 / RWH

    New Orleans, La / Nov 2019 / ETH

    tag_mileage
    1379
    New Orleans, La

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    New Orleans, La / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    RWH

    tag_jump

    See also our complete New Orleans Union Passenger Terminal scrapbook in Amtrak Great Stations

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    New Orleans, La / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    New Orleans, La / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    New Orleans, La / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    New Orleans, La / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    New Orleans, La / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    New Orleans, La / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    New Orleans, La / Nov 2019 / RWH

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    Mar 2021 / RWH

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    New Orleans, La / Mar 2021 / RWH

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    New Orleans, La / Mar 2021 / RWH

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    New Orleans, La / Mar 2021 / RWH

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    Mar 2021 / RWH

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    New Orleans, La / Mar 2021 / RWH

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    New Orleans, La / Mar 2021 / RWH

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    New Orleans, La / Mar 2021 / RWH

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    New Orleans, La / Mar 2021 / RWH

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    New Orleans, La / Mar 2021 / RWH

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    New Orleans, La / Mar 2021 / RWH


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    This page was updated on 2026-01-04