Callahan Subdivision

The Callahan Subdivision is a CSX Transportation railroad subdivision within the Jacksonville Division on the former Seaboard Air Line Railroad. The sub extends northward 20 miles from Baldwin, Florida, where the Jacksonville Terminal Subdivision's S Line and Florida Gulf & Atlantic Railroad meet just north of Baldwin Yard, a classification yard. According to Jacksonville Division Timetable Number 4 published in 2005,[1] the sub runs from milepost SM 0.18 to milepost SM 20.0, where it joins the Nahunta Subdivision, a former Atlantic Coast Line Railroad, in Callahan, Florida. The line serves as a bypass to Jacksonville.

Callahan Subdivision
fmr. FC&P Southern Division
to Yulee
former Gross Cutoff (SAL)
to Gross
CSX
SM 20.0
Callahan
Norfolk Southern Railway
Valdosta District
SM 12.3
Crawford
SM 4.2
Fouraker
fmr. Jacksonville and Southwestern Railroad (ACL)
← to Newberry · to Jacksonville
SM 0.0
Baldwin
Florida Gulf & Atlantic Railroad
CSX S Line (Jacksonville Terminal Subdivision)
CSX

Operation

The sub has three direct traffic control blocks (DTC), double tracks on its full entire route and two defect detector locations over its length. The first defect detector is at milepost SM 1.3 and the first siding, Fouraker, at a length of 6,690 feet (2,040 m), extends from milepost SM 3.5 to SM 5.0. The second defect detector is found at milepost SM 12.3 and the second siding, Crawford, a 10,900-foot (3,300 m) siding, runs from milepost SM 13.3 to SM 15.4. The three DTC blocks are Baldwin from milepost SM 0.18 to SM 5.0 followed by Fouraker from the SM 5.0 to SM 15.4 and last is Crawford from SM 15.4 to SM 20.0.

The sub crosses the Norfolk Southern Railway at milepost SM 15.5.

The subdivision's dispatcher is known as the JE Dispatcher on channel 14 and 32: 160.320 MHz and 160.590 MHz respectively.[2]

History

The line was originally built by the Florida Railroad as part of a line that ran from Fernandina Beach to Cedar Key. The first train ran in 1861. The Florida Railroad would be acquired by the Florida Central and Peninsular Railroad by 1899.[3] The line would later become part of the Seaboard Air Line Railroad, who acquired the FC&P, in 1903.[4]

The Seaboard Air Line became the Seaboard Coast Line Railroad in 1967. In the Seaboard Coast Line-era, the line was known as the Gross Subdivision, which also included the Seaboard Air Line's Gross Cutoff route.[5] In 1980, the Seaboard Coast Line's parent company merged with the Chessie System, creating the CSX Corporation. The CSX Corporation initially operated the Chessie and Seaboard Systems separately until 1986, when they were merged into CSX Transportation.

Track east of Callahan to Yulee was abandoned in 1954, and the Gross Cutoff was abandoned in 1985.[6][7]

gollark: Although it also means things presumably couldn't have those nice trip-safe magnetic charging ports.
gollark: I guess.
gollark: Wait, are they applying this to laptops too?
gollark: Phones and such.
gollark: Lots of devices only have one port though.

See also

References

  1. "CSX Transportation: Jacksonville Division Timetable No. 4" (PDF). Multimodalways.org. Retrieved 2013-08-17.
  2. CSX Callahan Sub
  3. Pettengill, Jr., George W. (1998) [1952]. The Story of the Florida Railroads (Reprint ed.). Boston, Massachusetts: The Railway and Locomotive Historical Society. p. 56.
  4. Turner, Gregg (2003). A Short History of Florida Railroads. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7385-2421-4.
  5. Seaboard Coast Line Railroad Savannah & Waycross Division Timetable (1982)
  6. "Yulee to Callahan, FL". Abandoned Rails. Retrieved 6 May 2020.
  7. "The Gross Cutoff". Abandoned Rails. Retrieved 6 May 2020.
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