Bristol Line traffic patterns
nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org
nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org
Fri Dec 3 08:18:42 EST 2004
Ben:
Be careful. If you try to rationalize NS's traffic patterns, you'll go
nuts. Don't
know if it's still running, but 10 years ago, NS had a Hagerstown-
Sheffield, AL
run-through. Forget the shortest distance between two points is a straight
line. The train made a left at Riverton, Jct. and went to Manassas, then
Atlanta
and Birmingham. By Roanoke, Bristol, and Chattanooga, the route is 299
miles shorter.
Two summers ago, NS was doing maintenance of way work on the Altavista
District. For the cost of three units and an engineer, the coal trains were
pushed
across Blue Ridge giving the MW forces more track time. Good economics.
Long before the N&W/SOU merger was consummated, the department I was
assigned to did some preliminary studies of allowing Southern trackage from
Bristol to Montview (Lynchburg). It was about 90 miles shorter than
Southern's
route from New Line, TN thru Asheville and Salisbury. For every two trains
out
of Salisbury to Asheville, it takes an Old Fort Turn to get the overflow
tonnage
into Biltmore. Likewise, it takes three trains out of Asheville to Old Fort
to
get two trains into Linwood. One night, I was riding Amtrak from New York to
DC. The conductor notified Graham Claytor (also on board) that there was an
N&W man back in the coaches. He came back and we had a chat. Casually,
without letting him know of the study, I pursued the Bristol-Montview
possibilities.
"NO," he said. Southern was only looking for a way from Cincinnati to
Chicago.
Go figure! To this day, the preferred route for traffic out of Knoxville is
via
Asheville and Salisbury. Double stacks excepted.
Harry Bundy
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