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gcwht_logoGordon Depot & Railroad Museum

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Gordon, a town of 2,158 in Wilkinson County in middle Georgia, was named for William Washington Gordon, the first president of the Central Railroad and Banking Company. The town was Station No. 17 on the railroad. Among other historic places in town are the old City Gordon Jail, built in 1917. It now houses the Wilkinson County Historical Society's History & Research Center. The 1853 Gordon City Cemetery is home to the original founders of Gordon and early business owners and their families.

NorthGeorgia.com

gdrm_state egyptian he Gordon Depot & Railroad Museum is located in the the 1885 Central of Georgia Railway depot at Gordon, Georgia -- a town in Wilkinson County, 20 miles east of Macon. The historic depot structure was rehabilitated in 2003 with Transportation Enhancement funds. Today it houses a railroad museum in the former waiting rooms and depot agent's office. The former freight room now is used as a community meeting space. Outside displays include a double-door boxcar, a Southern Railway bay window caboose, and a narrow-gauge Mack industrial switcher and cars. The adjacent mainline outside, former Central of Georgia trackage, is still in service as Norfolk Southern's busy Savannah-Macon line.

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Click to see the Gordon museum area plotted on a Google Maps page

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1910 Official Guide map / collection

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1910 Official Guide timetable / collection

Depot

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Oct 2019 / RWH

tag_closeup William Washington Gordon

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gordon Washington Gordon, an accomplished lawyer and public servant, was one of Georgia's most distinguished citizens. He was also the first president of the Central Railroad and Banking Company (later the Central of Georgia Railway), the corporation that constructed the first rail line connecting the port of Savannah with the cotton-growing interior of the state.

Gordon's greatest contribution to Georgia was his work with the Central Railroad and Banking Company. The construction of a railroad from Savannah to the interior became crucial to the economy of Georgia in 1833, when South Carolina completed a 136-mile rail line from the port of Charleston to Hamburg, a town directly across the Savannah River from Augusta. This new railroad, the longest in the world at that time, threatened to divert the upland cotton export trade to Charleston. The cotton previously had been transported down the Savannah River from Augusta to Savannah, for export to England and the northern states.

Gordon and his associates were determined to maintain Savannah's primacy as the port of outlet for Georgia's principal export. In 1833 the legislature granted charters to three railroad companies, including the Central Railroad and Canal Company of Georgia, which in 1835, after banking powers were granted to railroad companies, became the Central of Georgia Railroad and Banking Company. While in the legislature, Gordon had been a strong supporter of the bill that granted banking privileges to railroads. As an alderman and mayor, he struggled successfully to obtain the initial financing for the railroad.

In March 1836 Gordon was named to the company's board of directors and appointed its president. The demands of this challenging post led him both to abandon his law practice and to resign as Savannah's mayor. Gordon labored mightily to bring about the completion of a rail line that would reach the heart of Georgia's central cotton belt, and construction commenced in late 1836. The financial panic of 1837 was an impediment to progress, but by May 1839 seventy-six miles of track had been laid, and stagecoaches were providing transportation from the end of the line to Macon. Gordon traveled constantly throughout the state, supervising construction, negotiating rights-of-way with planters, and dealing with labor disputes. But he did not live to see the last spike driven in 1843. Worn down by his labors, Gordon died in March 1842 at the age of forty-six.

Honors were heaped upon Gordon following his death. In 1850 Gordon County was created and named in his honor. In 1883 a magnificent cenotaph, constructed in Savannah's Wright Square by the Central of Georgia Railway, was dedicated as a memorial to Gordon, the company's first president and longtime leader. One side of the monument bears this description of a great railroad builder: "The pioneer of works of internal improvement in his native State and first President of the Central of Georgia Railroad and Banking Company of Georgia, to which he gave his time, his talents, and finally his life."

New Georgia Encyclopedia

Displays

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Southern Railway Historical Society / collection

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Oct 2019 / RWH

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See more bay window cabooses in our Southern Railway Bay Window scrapbook in Mainlines

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On display beside the depot is this gas-electric 0-4-0 locomotive. Built in 1930 by Mack Truck, Inc. of Allentown, PA (as its no. 171010), it served the former Edgar Brothers Kaolin Company at nearby McIntyre. Locally called a “bogey," the 15-ton unit and two side-dump ore cars were donated to the museum by Engelhard Corporation. The local mines built their tracks to the 3-foot gauge. Four-wheel ore cars could dump their loads on either side. Constructed of wood and steel, they used link-and-pin couplers. Railcars full of kaolin continue to be part of the scene in Gordon.

NorthGeorgia.com

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Oct 2019 / RWH

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Gordon, Ga / Oct 2019 / RWH

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Gordon, Ga / Oct 2019 / RWH

Norfolk Southern #3388

  • builder:Electro Motive Division
  • model:SD40-2
  • type:C-C road power
  • built:Oct 1978, EMD #786148-15
  • series:3982 produced 1972-89
  • engine:EMD 645E3 (16 cyl, 3000 hp)
  • notes:
  • blt Conrail #6455
    to Norfolk Southern #3388
  • builder
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    Gordon, Ga / Oct 2019 / RWH

    Links / Sources

    This page was updated on 2019-10-22