Piedmont and Northern Railway


The Piedmont & Northern Railway was a heavy electric interurban company operating over two disconnected divisions in North and South Carolina. Tracks spanned total between the two segments, with the northern division running from Charlotte, to Gastonia, North Carolina, including a three-mile spur to Belmont. The southern division main line ran from Greenwood to Spartanburg, South Carolina, with a spur to Anderson. Initially the railroad was electrified at 1500 volts DC, however, much of the electrification was abandoned when dieselisation was completed in 1954.
Unlike similar interurban systems the Piedmont & Northern survived the Great Depression and was later absorbed into the Seaboard Coast Line Railroad in 1969. Although part of the railroad was abandoned between Greenwood and Honea Path and Belton to Anderson, much of the original system exists today as shortlines. Once part of CSX, it is now owned by the North Carolina Department of Transportation, which awarded a contract in May 2010 to Patriot Rail Corporation to restore the track and operate trains along the line.

History

Although interurban railroads were not nearly as common in the sparsely populated and largely agrarian Deep South, there were a number of small electric networks constructed in the region throughout the early 20th century. Among them was the Anderson Traction Company, created on June 22, 1904, to build and operate within the city of Anderson. Eventually the railroad expanded to complete construction of an extension to Belton by 1910. The railroad was acquired by James B. Duke of Duke Power around the same time.
On March 20, 1909, the Greenville, Spartanburg and Anderson Railway was chartered and presided over by Duke. The company used the Anderson Traction Company rails terminating at Belton as a starting point for northward construction to Greenville and construction toward Greenwood to the south, with both cities connected in November 1912. An extension from Greenville to Spartanburg was completed in April 1914. The North Carolina division started with the Piedmont Traction Company, also owned by Duke, and completed its route between Charlotte and Gastonia, North Carolina on July 3, 1912.
Both sections were electrified to 1,500 volts DC with power supplied from mainly hydroelectric sources. Additionally both segments were built to steam road standards with minimal street running.

Consolidation

The Piedmont & Northern was created in 1914 to consolidate both the Greenville, Spartanburg & Anderson in South Carolina and the Piedmont Traction Company in North Carolina. In 1916 the railroad completed a spur to Belmont, North Carolina. On numerous occasions the company sought to link the two disconnected segments and expand to Durham, North Carolina, however, the plans never materialized due to stiff resistance from the Southern Railway, which the P&N paralleled in both states.
Although many railroads were hostile to the Piedmont & Northern, a friend was found with the Seaboard Air Line, which connected with the P&N at Charlotte and Greenwood. Throughout its existence the P&N stressed interchange traffic over its efficient electric lines, and with good reason: the railroad shared numerous interchanges with several major railroads.

Network

The P&N's network in 1964 was connected to the Clinchfield Railroad, Carolina and North Western Railroad, Georgia and Florida Railroad, Norfolk Southern, Seaboard Air Line Railroad, Southern Railway, Atlantic Coast Line Railroad, Greenville and Northern Railroad, Charleston and Western Carolina and Ware Shoals Railroad.
Though owned by Duke Power, the P&N operated coal trains over a branch from Mount Holly, NC, to Terrell, NC, supplying Duke Power's Lake Norman powerplants.
MileStationInterchangeNotes
0.0CharlotteSouthern, NSPiggyback ramps
3.8Chemway
4.1PinocaSALShops
5.4Toddville
6.9Thrift
10.6Sodyeco
11.1Mount Holly
--------
0.0Mount Holly
Riverbend
Cowans Ford
Denrock
Denver
Terrell
--------
13.5North Belmont
--------
0.0North Belmont
3.1BelmontSouthern
--------
16.5McAdenville Junction
17.6McAdenville
17.9Lowell
19.7Ranlo
21.7Groves
23.4GastoniaSouthern, C&NWPiggyback ramp

MileStationInterchangeNotes
0.0SpartanburgACL, Southern, Clinchfield, C&WCPiggyback ramp
3.9Saxon
6.6Clevedale
10.2StartexSouthern
12.0LymanSouthern
13.4Duncan
18.3GreerSouthern
Chick Springs
23.1TaylorsSouthern
27.1Paris
33.5Greenville ACL, G&N, Southern, C&WCPiggyback ramp
36.5White Horse
Golden Grove
43.7PiedmontSouthern
48.4PelzerSouthern
50.5WilliamstonSouthern
Thomason/Cheddar
58.0BeltonSouthern, C&NW
--------
0.0BeltonSouthern, C&NW
Campbell
Toxaway
11.6AndersonC&NW, ACL, C&WC
--------
65.8Honea PathSouthern
71.4Donalds
74.3Shoals JunctionSouthern, Ware Shoals RR
80.2Hodges
83.9DownsSouthern
Harris
88.9GreenwoodACL, G&F, SAL, Southern, C&WCPiggyback ramp

Extension

Plans to connect the North and South Carolina divisions between Spartanburg, SC and Gastonia, NC, and to expand northwards towards Winston-Salem, NC, were successfully blocked by appeals by the Southern Railway and other entities in court cases in the 1930s, specifically and .

Traffic

The P&N, though involved in extensive passenger operations, was primarily a heavy freight carrier. The most important commodity transported was coal and coke, but also of significance were cotton and paper.
CommodityCarloads,
1954
Carloads,
1955
Change
Grain and
Grain Products
32213258+37
Packing House
Products
22002381+181
Fruits and
Vegetables
18741838-36
Coal and Coke3020337995+7792
Building
Materials
44654966+501
Cotton and
Wastes
80938907+814
Textile
Products
27462842+96
Sand and
Stone
21962521+325
Automobiles18892061+172
Oil and
Gasoline
29202738-182
Fertilizer and
Fertilizer Products
40563176-880
Machinery613732+119
Paper and
Paper Products
64806786+306
Clay and
Fullers Earth
18971805-92
Iron and
Steel Articles
27463297+37
Forest
Products
22572054-203
Merchandise47674350-417
Miscellaneous1712817986+858

Motive power

Road NumberBuilderBuild DateEngine NumberTractive EffortNotes
5000Baldwin-Westinghouse10-19113712413,700Built with two trolley poles; pantograph installed 1935
5001Baldwin-Westinghouse10-19113715013,700Built with two trolley poles; pantograph installed 1935
5002Baldwin-Westinghouse10-19113715113,700Built with two trolley poles; pantograph installed 1935
5003Baldwin-Westinghouse10-19113715213,700Built with two trolley poles; pantograph installed 1935
5004Baldwin-Westinghouse11-19113727213,700Built with two trolley poles; pantograph installed 1935
5005Baldwin-Westinghouse11-19113727310,000Built with two trolley poles; pantograph installed 1935
5006Baldwin-Westinghouse4-19174450812,000Ex Salt Lake & Utah #102, bought by P&N in 1947
5100GE 63t boxcab12-1913465113,000GE class 404-E-120-4-GE-212F 63 ton boxcab.
5101GE 63t boxcab12-1913465213,000GE class 404-E-120-4-GE-212F 63 ton boxcab.
5102GE 63t boxcab12-1913465313,000GE class 404-E-120-4-GE-212F 63 ton boxcab.
5103GE 63t boxcab12-1913465413,000GE class 404-E-120-4-GE-212F 63 ton boxcab. Preserved at North Carolina Transportation Museum, Spencer, NC. Originally preserved by the Atlanta Chapter NRHS at the Southeastern Railway Museum, Duluth, Ga until 1996.
5104GE 63t boxcab12-1913465513,000GE class 404-E-120-4-GE-212F 63 ton boxcab.
5105GE 63t boxcab12-1913465613,000GE class 404-E-120-4-GE-212F 63 ton boxcab.
5106GE1912380614,800Ex Oregon Electric #25; Sold to Utah-Idaho Central as #25, 1945; bought by P&N in 1948
5500P&N Pinoca Shops1917-14,800Built from bodies of 4000-series express motors
5501P&N Pinoca Shops1918-17,072Built from bodies of 4000-series express motors
5502P&N Pinoca Shops1918-17,072Built from bodies of 4000-series express motors
5600P&N Pinoca Shops1918-27,072Built from body of 4000-series express motors; rebuilt with steel cab in 1937; rebuilt as #5612 in 1949
5601P&N Greenville Shops1924-22,400Baldwin trucks
5602P&N Greenville Shops1928-25,600Baldwin trucks
5610P&N Greenville Shops1938-69,000GE trucks
5611GE1941-34,500Built by GE to P&N design
5612P&N Greenville Shops1949-75,000Rebuilt from #5600

Road NumbersBuilder / Dates BuiltModelLiveryNotes-
1000–10056Alco / 1954S-4gloss black, yellow striping
1600–160910Alco /1950-1951RS-3gloss black, yellow stripingFormerly numbers 100-109
2000–20012Alco / 1965C420gloss black, yellow striping

Road NumbersTypeBuilder / Dates BuiltConstructionSeatsNotes-
1BirneyBrill, 1916Steel32Use and fate unknown-
2CityStephenson, 1917Wood-
4CitySouthern Car, 1917Wood-
350CombineAC&F, 1913Steel26Purchased from Pennsylvania Railroad - wrecked on February 21, 1941-
351ExpressP&N, 1942Steel-Rebuilt from wreck of #350-
400-403TrailerPRR, 1913Steel72Bought from the Pennsylvania Railroad; ran for a while with old nos. 325, 400, 408, 428-
404TrailerJewett, 1911Wood60Original trailer coach no. 2404-
405-407TrailerPRR, 1913Steel60Bought from Long Island Rail Road, ex-numbers 401, 402, 405-
2000–2022CombineJewett, 1911–1912Wood60-
2050–2051CombineP&N, 1928Wood36Rebuilt by P&N from number 2014 and 2008-
2060ExpressP&N, 1942Wood-Rebuilt from #2005-
2100–2101CombineSouthern Car, 1914Steel54Former 2500 class trailer, powered in 1919-
2102CombineSouthern Car, 1914Steel68Former 2500 class trailer powered in 1919, 10' express section added in 1924. Preserved at The Museum Greenwood, SC.-
2103–2107CoachSouthern Car, 1914Steel68Former 2500 class trailer, powered in 1919-
2108CoachSouthern Car, 1914Steel68Electric coach rebuilt from parlor-observation car "Catawba" in 1928-
2200Parlor-ObservationSouthern Car, 1914Steel-Open observation parlor-observation car "Catawba". Rebuilt in 1935 with glassed-in solarium section-
2201Parlor-ObservationSouthern Car, 1914Steel-Open observation parlor-observation car "Saluda". Rebuilt with extra large back platform as business car "Carolina". Preserved at The Museum Greenwood, SC with original furniture.-
2300Express1912WoodFormer freight car; doors built onto ends for train access.-
2400–2405Coach trailerJewett, 1911Wood60Demotorised 2000-class rebuilt into 2100-class-
2500–2507Coach trailerSouthern Car, 1914Steel54Motorised 1923-1925-
3000-3004Coach trailerNiles, 1910Wood54Five coaches obtained for military transport by USRA from Louisville & Northern Railway-
4000-4007ExpressSouthern Car, 1911Wood-Later used to build 5500 and 5600 class electric locomotives

Fate of the rolling stock

Some of the electric locomotives were shipped to South America, the rest were scrapped. The diesels were taken over by the Seaboard Coast Line in 1969 after that railroad took over the P&N; of them, all have been scrapped except for one S-4 surviving in the US on the Laurinburg and Southern, and four that were sent to Venezuela.
The interurban #2102, Office Car 2201 "Carolina" and Caboose x-23 are preserved and on display to the public at the Railroad Historical Center in Greenwood, SC.

Remnants

Only four of the stations built for the P&N, designed by Charles Christian Hook are still in existence today in North Carolina.
The Thrift depot in the Paw Creek community in Charlotte, NC is the only remaining P&N station in Mecklenburg County, NC; it is presently for sale."
In Gaston County, several structures are still standing. The depot in Mount Holly, North Carolina is still standing and is used as a hair salon. The former P&N depot in Belmont, NC has been restored and was a P&N museum until 2004, when the lease ran out and was not given extension by the owner. The former P&N station in Gastonia, NC, burned down in 1995. Lastly, the small depot of McAdenville, NC is still standing, though it has been relocated from its previous location.

In South Carolina, at least five stations are still standing: Donalds, Hodges, Greer, Piedmont and Anderson. The abandoned depot at Pelzer burned on the night on January 26, 2011.
In Piedmont, SC, the building is still standing, and appears to be in use as a storage shed in reasonable condition.
Nothing remains of the P&N in Honea Path, SC, apart from power poles still standing, delineating the former right-of-way.
The station at Taylors, SC was still standing in 1987. Though it is now gone, a former substation - including some overhead poles of the P&N line - can still be found near the CSX's Enoree River viaduct.
Some of the P&N's former lines are still in existence, with limited amounts still in operation. The track from Pelzer, SC to Spartanburg, SC is the CSX's Belton Subdivision. The segment from Pelzer to Belton was taken over by the Greenville and Western Railway in 2006. The track from Mt. Holly, NC to Gastonia, NC and from Mount Holly to Belmont, NC is still in place. Initially the track belonged to CSX; it is now owned by the North Carolina Department of Transportation, which awarded a contract in May 2010 to Patriot Rail Corporation to restore the track and operate trains along the line.
The former P&N RR Charlotte terminal freight depot was in the Mint/Graham/SecondSt /Third St block, while the Charlotte terminal passenger depot was in the Mint/Graham/Third St/Fourth St block in Charlotte. BB&T Ballpark now sits on the former depot site.