Winamac Southern Railway

The Winamac Southern Railway (reporting mark WSRY) is a short-line railroad in northern Indiana, United States, operated under lease by the Toledo, Peoria and Western Railway. It owns two lines radiating from Logansport to Kokomo and Bringhurst, and formerly a third to Winamac, all former Pennsylvania Railroad lines acquired from Conrail in 1993. It hauls mainly outbound grain and inbound agricultural supplies,[2] connecting with the Toledo, Peoria and Western Railway at Logansport and with the Central Railroad of Indianapolis at Kokomo. Until 2009, the Central Railroad of Indianapolis (a RailAmerica subsidiary) operated the company as agent.

Winamac Southern Railway
Overview
HeadquartersKokomo, Indiana[1]
Reporting markWSRY
LocaleNorthern Indiana
Dates of operation1993
Technical
Track gauge4 ft 8 12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge

History

As the Pennsylvania Railroad assembled its system in northern Indiana, Logansport became a major hub, with seven lines radiating in all directions (the only other service to the city was a line of the Wabash Railroad, now Norfolk Southern Railway).[3] Conrail took over four of these in 1976,[4] and abandoned the line to Marion in the 1980s.[5][6] The remaining lines to Winamac, Kokomo, and Bringhurst, known as the "Logansport Cluster", were spun off to the Winamac Southern, which began operations in March 1993.[7] The new railroad was controlled by Daniel R. Frick of Frick Services, a storage and handling company,[8] who also owned J.K. Line, Inc. to the north.[1][2][9]

In September 1995, Winamac Southern sold the line from Winamac to the yard at 18th Street in Logansport to A&R Line, Inc., another new shortline owned by Frick, which was operated by J.K. Line employees using a locomotive leased from that company. Winamac Southern retained trackage rights through Logansport, in order to connect its Bringhurst and Kokomo lines.[10] Subsequently, the Central Railroad of Indianapolis (CERA), which serves Kokomo, began operating the remaining Winamac Southern lines as agent.[1][2][11]

The arrangement between Winamac Southern and CERA was to end at the end of 2008, and the U S Rail Corporation filed with the Surface Transportation Board to lease and operate the Winamac Southern, as well as a CERA-operated segment near Kokomo owned by the Kokomo Grain Company.[12] However, the parties discovered that the trackage rights over A&R, which had since been merged into the Toledo, Peoria and Western Railway, had never been authorized, and concurrently filed for approval of the 1995 agreement. The STB rejected the latter notice of exemption, citing the opposition of the TP&W to continuance of trackage rights, thus requiring a more extensive proceeding.[13] U S Rail began operating the Winamac Southern as its Kokomo Division in early 2009.[14]

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References

  1. Edward A. Lewis, American Shortline Railway Guide, 5th Edition, Kalmbach Publishing, 1996, ISBN 0-89024-290-9, p. 337
  2. Richard S. Simons and Francis H. Parker, Railroads of Indiana, Indiana University Press, 1997, ISBN 0-253-33351-2, pp. 183-186
  3. Pennsylvania Railroad, map of Logansport Division, ca. 1926
  4. Consolidated Rail Corporation, system map, March 16, 1976
  5. Consolidated Rail Corporation, system map, April 1983
  6. Consolidated Rail Corporation, system map, October 1986
  7. Railroad Retirement Board, Employer Status Determination: Winamac Southern Railway Company, 1993
  8. Susan Erler, Northwest Indiana and Illinois Times, Storage, handling firm expands services to include packaging in Indiana, August 11, 2004
  9. Interstate Commerce Commission, Finance Docket No. 32258, Daniel R. Frick — Continuance in Control Exemption — Winamac Southern Railway Co., 1993
  10. Railroad Retirement Board, Employer Status Determination: A&R Line, Inc., 1996
  11. STB Finance Docket No. 33813, November 16, 1999
  12. STB Finance Docket No. 35205, December 31, 2008
  13. STB Finance Docket No. 35208, January 9, 2009
  14. U S Rail Corporation, Kokomo Division, accessed March 2009
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