Hamlet Subdivision
CSX
S 254.2
South Hamlet
North Carolina
South Carolina
S 269.3
Wallace
S 271.8
Cheraw
S 284.9
Patrick
S 292.0
Middendorf
Robinson Spur
S 299.3
McBee
S 307.0
Bethune
S 312.6
Cassatt
S 326.5
Camden Amtrak
S 330.3
Lugoff
S 339.0
Elgin
Norfolk Southern Railway
B Line
Norfolk Southern Railway
W Line
S 358.5
Elmwood Junction
CSX
CSX

The Hamlet Subdivision is a railroad line owned by CSX Transportation in North Carolina and South Carolina. The line runs from Hamlet, North Carolina, to Columbia, South Carolina, for a total of 105.2 miles. At its north end it continues south from the Hamlet Terminal Subdivision and at its south end it continues south as the Columbia Subdivision.[1][2]

Historic Seaboard Air Line Railway Depot in Patrick on the Hamlet Subdivision

The Hamlet Subdivision runs along CSX's S Line. The line notably carries Amtrak's Silver Star which travels from New York to Florida.

History edit

From Columbia north to Camden, the line was built by the Florida Central and Peninsular Railroad as an extension of the South Bound Railroad in the late 1890s.[3]

From Camden to Cheraw, the line was built by the Chesterfield and Kershaw Railroad, which was chartered by the South Carolina General Assembly in 1899.[4]

From Cheraw to Hamlet, the line was built by the Palmetto Railroad, which was completed in 1887.[5]

The Florida Central and Peninsular Railroad, the Chesterfield and Kershaw Railroad, and the Palmetto Railroad all became part of the Seaboard Air Line Railroad in 1900. The unified line became a segment of the Seaboard main line. The Seaboard Air Line designated this segment of the main line as the Hamlet Subdivision, which it is still known as today.[6] Seaboard would eventually become CSX by the 1980s.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "HA-Hamlet Sub - The RadioReference Wiki". wiki.radioreference.com. Retrieved 2017-04-07.
  2. ^ CSX Florence Division Timetable
  3. ^ South Carolina Railroads, South Bound Railroad
  4. ^ WikiProject Trains, ICC valuations, Seaboard Air Line Railway
  5. ^ Annual report of the Board of Railroad Commissioners of North Carolina, Volume 1, 1892, page 529
  6. ^ "CSX Florence Division Timetable" (PDF). Multimodalways.org. Retrieved 2016-11-16.
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