Pee Dee River Railway

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The Pee Dee River Railway is a South Carolina railroad that serves the far eastern portion of the state.

The Aberdeen and Rockfish Railroad established the Pee Dee River Railway between McColl, South Carolina, and Bennettsville, South Carolina, in 1987.[1]

The line operated by the Pee Dee River Railway was begun in 1884 by the South Carolina Pacific Railway, a South Carolina railroad chartered in 1882.[2]

It was leased to the Cape Fear and Yadkin Valley Railway Company beginning in 1884.[3]

The Cape Fear and Yadkin Valley was placed in receivership in 1894 and for several decades ownership of the carrier changed hands repeatedly, until a North Carolina Supreme Court decision in 1924. The southern routes of the Cape Fear and Yadkin Valley, including the South Carolina Pacific, went to the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad.[4]

The lease for the South Carolina Pacific passed to the Atlantic Coast Line. The company was merged into the Seaboard System in 1983, with the South Carolina Pacific being officially dissolved.[5]

Marlboro County, South Carolina, purchased the line following abandonment by CSX in 1987 and leased the operation to the Pee Dee River Railway.[6]

The line operates seven days a week, serving several major industrial operations, including the Domtar paper mill, two Flakeboard mills, Mohawk Carpet, Hanson Aggregates and Southern States, a feed and fertilizer producer.[7]

Update as of 2017 Pee Dee River no longer runs 7 days a week since they lost Hanson Aggregates, Southern States and Mohawk Carpet. Only customers left are the Domtar Paper Mill/Tatum distribution center and the flakeboard plant across from the mill. Operations are now 5 days a week and only one way trips each day now except both ways one of the days

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Pee Dee River Railway
  2. ^ Poor's Manual of Railroads of the United States, Henry Poor, 1889, page 554
  3. ^ Poor's Manual of Railroads of the United States, Henry Poor, 1889, page 554
  4. ^ Cox, Jim (2011). Rails Across Dixie: A History of Passenger Trains in the American South. Jefferson, NC: McFarland. p. 386. ISBN 9780786445288. OCLC 609716000.
  5. ^ [Railroading in the Carolina Sandhills, Volume 1: The 19th Century (1825-1900); S. David Carriker, page 85]
  6. ^ Pee Dee River Railway
  7. ^ Pee Dee River Railway