South End Subdivision

The South End Subdivision is a railroad line owned by CSX Transportation in the U.S. states of North Carolina and South Carolina. The line runs from Rocky Mount, North Carolina, to Florence, South Carolina, for a total of 172.8 miles. At its north end the line continues south from the North End Subdivision and at its south end the line continues south as the Charleston Subdivision.[1][2] The South End Subdivision is a part of CSX's A Line, one of their mainline which ultimately extends from Richmond, Virginia to Tampa, Florida.

South End Subdivision
CSX
A 120.1
Rocky Mount
CSX
Rocky Mount Yard
A 130.5
Elm City
A 135.8
Wilson
Carolina Coastal Railway
Wilson Yard
CSX
A 146.8
Aycock
A 151.0
Kenly
A 161.1
Selma
Norfolk Southern Railway
H Line
A 164.4
Smithfield
A 172.0
Four Oaks
A 194.6
Godwin
A 197.1
Wade
Norfolk Southern Railway
VR Line
A 209.7
Fayetteville
Aberdeen and Rockfish Railroad
Little Rockfish Creek
A 218.6
Hope Mills
Rockfish Creek
Red Springs & Northern Railroad
A 227.7
Rex
A 241.0
Pembroke
CSX
North Carolina
South Carolina
A 262.2
Dillon
CSX
A 269.4
Latta
A 275.5
Sellers
A 286.3
Mars Bluff
Florence Yard
A 292.6
Florence
CSX
The South End Subdivision as it goes under Interstate 95 in Dillon County, South Carolina.

History

CSX Freight train heads north on the South End Subdivision as it crosses a Norfolk Southern Railway line at the historic Selma Union Depot.
Track from Selma north

The South End Subdivision is made up of various historical railroads. It was originally the Wilmington and Weldon Railroad, chartered in 1835, from Rocky Mount, North Carolina to Wilson, North Carolina.[3] It was the Wilson and Fayetteville Railroad from Wilson to North Carolina/South Carolina state line. The segment from the state line to Pee Dee, South Carolina was originally the Florence Railroad, which opened in 1888.[4] From there south to Florence, it was the Wilmington and Manchester Railroad, which began operation in 1853.[5]

These railroads all eventually became part of the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad. The Atlantic Coast Line and Seaboard Air Line merged in 1967, with the merged company becoming CSX by 1986.

gollark: This makes so much sense, in retrospect.
gollark: APL is the antipython?
gollark: Which should have been inverted. I don't know why GPT-3 didn't do that.
gollark: Except the "one way to do it" thing.
gollark: Wow, that actually fits really well.

See also

References

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