Cleveland Terminal Subdivision

41°28′39.8″N 81°40′30.1″W / 41.477722°N 81.675028°W / 41.477722; -81.675028

Cleveland Terminal Subdivision
Map
Map
Overview
StatusActive
OwnerCSX
LocaleCleveland
Service
TypeLocal freight, Inter-city rail
SystemCSX Transportation
Operator(s)CSX, Amtrak
Technical
Number of tracks2
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Route map

MP.0
[1]
Port of Cleveland Main Gate
Waterfront Line Amtrak
181.8
Amtrak Connection
181.4
Control Point 181
181.0
179.0
Cleveland defect detector
Doan Brook
175.8
CP 176
Flow Polymers
Nine Mile Creek
174.8
Track #2 to Short Line
174.7
CP 175
174.0
CP 174
173.6
Station W
171.5
Station E
Euclid Creek
171.3
CP 171


The Cleveland Terminal Subdivision is a railroad line owned by CSX Transportation in the U.S. state of Ohio. The line runs from a point northeast of downtown Cleveland southwest to downtown[2] along the former New York Central Railroad main line.

At its east end, known as CP-175 by CSX Transportation, the Cleveland Terminal Subdivision and the Short Line Subdivision come together and become the Erie West Subdivision. Through freights diverge at this location onto the Short Line Subdivision to bypass downtown Cleveland. The west end of the Cleveland Terminal Subdivision is at a junction with the Norfolk Southern Railway's Cleveland Line and Chicago Line, a point called CP-181 by the railroad. [3] [4]

The Cleveland Terminal Subdivision is principally used by Amtrak's Lake Shore Limited to access Cleveland Lakefront Station, however local freights and coal trains occasionally use the line as well. Though downgraded and single-tracked, the Cleveland Terminal Subdivision still has its Traffic Control System in place. The line is dispatched from CSX's "G" desk at their dispatching office in Indianapolis, Indiana.

History

[edit]

The line was built by the Cleveland, Painesville and Ashtabula Railroad and opened in 1851.[5] Through mergers, leases, and takeovers, it became part of the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway, New York Central Railroad, Penn Central and Conrail. When Conrail was broken up in 1999, the main line east of downtown Cleveland, including the Cleveland Terminal Subdivision, was assigned to CSX.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ https://wiki.radioreference.com/index.php/CZ-Cleveland_Terminal_Sub
  2. ^ CSX Timetables: Cleveland Terminal Subdivision
  3. ^ "CZ-Cleveland Terminal Sub - the RadioReference Wiki".
  4. ^ http://www.multimodalways.org/docs/railroads/companies/CSX/CSX%20ETTs/CSX%20Great%20Lakes%20Div%20ETT%20%236.1%201-1-2014.pdf CSX Great Lakes Division Timetable
  5. ^ "PRR Chronology, 1851" (PDF). (83.5 KB), March 2005 Edition