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NS Southern Illinois line

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Posted by waltersrails on Monday, July 3, 2006 9:33 AM
i live near the tracks and my work place is by the tracks here in fairfield, il any where from 10-22 trains in a 24 hour day. i like to stayup all night and wacth the trains every once in while.
I like NS but CSX has the B&O.
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Posted by nanaimo73 on Friday, June 30, 2006 10:30 AM
From http://www.cityofgrayville.com/news.htm

Ethanol Plant to be built at Grayville
A local company plans to construct a fuel ethanol plant on Grayville's south side as well as restore rail lines through the area to serve the plant.

The project was announced Friday, October 7th, 2005, afternoon by Ed Bailey of Browns, chief executive officer and president of Illini Cropland & Energy, and the company's vice president, Allen Wilson of Fairfield, at the site of the ethanol plant just east of the Super 8 motel south of Grayville. Joining them was Mike Bryan, CEO of Colorado-based BBI International, a consulting firm to the renewable fuels industry, which conducted the feasibility study for the project and will guide development of the new plant.

The size of the plant is "yet to be determined," Bryan said, but he estimated it to cost between $75 and $100 million, producing 60 to 75 million gallons of fuel ethanol each year. When completed, the plant will employ "someplace around 50 people," Bryan said. Construction will take from 12 to 14 months and will create 50 to 100 construction jobs, he said. It will be constructed on an 80-acre site Bailey purchased earlier this year from SJD Farms, based in Evansville, Ind. Total annual revenue for the plant will be $80 to $120 million, depending on
the size of the plant, with 20 percent of that coming from the production of high-quality distiller's grain for a number of agricultural purposes, Bryan
said.

The plant will use between 20 and 30 million bushels of corn per year. Bailey said he anticipates development of a distribution center at the site
to handle the outflow of the plant's products.
Bryan said it will take 16 to 21 months before IC&E is ready to break ground at the site. "Basically, it's a 2 1/2-year project until there's steam coming out of the stack," he said. Bailey said there is no timetable for restoration of the rail line, the
first phase of which will run from the Norfolk-Southern line at Browns to the plant site at Grayville. The second phase will entail reconstruction of the old Illinois Central bridge across the Wabash River to reach the CSX
line at Poseyville, Ind. A section of the bridge caved in during last January's record flood.

Bailey said he has received permission from the federal Surface Transportation Board to reclaim the right-of-way for rail use. Part of the property constituting the old Indiana Hi-Rail system was held by the Indiana Trails Fund for use as a bicycle trail.
Bailey praised the White County Economic Development Group as well as the City of Grayville and the Greater Wabash Regional Planning Commission for their assistance with the project.
Among those on hand for the announcement were WEDG Executive Director JoEllen Seil and her assistant, Sandra Irvine, Grayville Mayor Joe Bisch and GWRPC Executive Director Brandi Stennett.
Dale
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Posted by wabash1 on Friday, June 30, 2006 10:12 AM
first off we dont run trains on the bnsf line ( we have trackage rights but dont run on them ) from centralia to points west. and we have trackage rights on the ic from centralia south but dont run any trains there either. all trains go from st.louis to louisville . I have heard of no plans to lay rail to grayville,il and connect it with the csx. train d76 is a local it dont run to louisville and we dont have a d77.
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Posted by Lear35A on Tuesday, June 20, 2006 2:24 AM
Here's a decent list from the St Louis area:

NS Train Symbols St. Louis Region (Kansas City-Decatur-St. Louis)

111 Kansas City, Ks Roanoke, Va St. Louis District
112 Roanoke, Va Kansas City, Ks “
115 Princeton, In Kansas City, Mo Tuesday-Saturday
115 St. Louis, Mo Kansas City, Mo Monday only
122 Kansas City, Mo Oakwood, Mi
123 Decatur, Il Chattanooga, Tn Brooklyn/StLouis
124 Chattanooga, Tn Decatur, Il “
145 Buffalo, Ny Kansas City, Mo Hannibal District
167 Decatur, Il Knoxville, Tn St. Louis District
168 Louisville, Ky Granite City, Il “
17J Detroit, Mi St. Louis, Mo Brookly District
181 Oakwood, Mi. St. Louis, Mo Brooklyn District
186 E.St. Louis (UP) Bellevue, Oh “
18K Mitchell, IL (AS) Elkhart, In “
18Q Madison, Il (TRRA) Detroit, Mi “
223 Kansas City, Mo Atlanta, Ga St. Louis District
224 Atlanta, Ga Kansas City, Mo “
239 Georgetown, Ky Kansas City, Mo (UP) “
240 Argentine, Ks (BNSF) Sandusky, Oh Hannibal District
255 Oakwood, Mi Argentine, Ks (BNSF) Hannibal District
255 Oakwood, Mi Voltz, MO (Saturday only) Hannibal District
256 Mitchell, Il Sanduskey, Oh Brooklyn District
260 Voltz, Mo Detroit, Mi St.Louis/Brooklyn
263 Detroit, Mi Voltz, MO Hannibal District
267 Ft. Wayne, In Mitchell, Il Brooklyn District
272 Kansas City, Mo Detroit North Yard “
277 Crescent, Va Voltz, Mo
278 Kansas City, Mo (UP) Chicago, Il “
283 Granite City, Il Jacksonville, Fl St. Louis District
285 Kansas City, Mo Bowden, Fl “
293 Gibson City, IL (CN) Kansas City, MO ??????????????
20A St. Louis, Mo Harrisburg, Pa Brooklyn District
20T Kansas City, Mo Rutherford, Pa Hannibal District
21A Rutherford, Pa St. Louis, Mo Brooklyn District
21T Rutherford, Pa Voltz, Mo Hannibal District
27V Detroit, Mi Kansas City, Mo (UP) Hannibal District
301 Decatur, Il Granite City, Il Brooklyn District
302 Granite City, Il Decatur, Il “
315 Decatur, Il Argentine, Ks (BNSF) Hannibal District
316 Argentine, Ks Decatur, Il Hannibal District
318 St. Louis, Mo Decatur, Il Brooklyn District
363 Decatur, Il Kansas City, Mo Hannibal District
375 Columbus, Oh E. St. Louis, Il (AS) St. Louis District
398 Kansas City, Mo Decatur, Il
31Z St. Louis, Mo Moberly, Mo “
33J Decatur, IL Kansas City, Mo
33Q ?????? Madison, Il (TRRA) Brooklyn District
35N Conway, Pa Mitchell, Il (AS) “

Info provided by the StLouisRailroadInfo Yahoo! Group:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/StLouisRailroadInfo/

D76/D77 runs between Centralia and The Lou; didn't see it in the list above...
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Posted by nanaimo73 on Tuesday, June 20, 2006 1:36 AM
QUOTE: Originally posted by jeaton

The CN's (ex-IC) Edgewood cut-off is flat and almost tangent from Edgewood to the Ohio River, but everything south of Carbondale, Marion and Harrisburg is in low hill country.
Jay

They did the best they could to make it straight. IC built the cutoff with a 63 mile tangent on the north end, but needed 3 tunnels to keep it as straight as possible the rest of the way to the Ohio.
The only tunnel, and the highest point, on the GM&O was also in southern Illinois.
Alto Pass, 749'
http://terraserver.microsoft.com/image.aspx?T=2&S=12&Z=16&X=369&Y=5200&W=1&qs=%7calto%7cillinois%7c
Dale
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Posted by emd_SD_60 on Monday, June 19, 2006 9:52 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by jeaton

QUOTE: Originally posted by Murphy Siding

Is the southern tip of Illinois really hilly, like southern Indiana? Or, does the line we're talking about follow the Ohio river, on a fairly flat grade?

Call it kind of hilly. The CN's (ex-IC) Edgewood cut-off is flat and almost tangent from Edgewood to the Ohio River, but everything south of Carbondale, Marion and Harrisburg is in low hill country. Actually foot hills of the Ozarks, I believe. ` Don't know what grades are involved, but the CN (IC) to Cairo (pronounce that Caaro) does curve around a bit.
Jay


Yep, we got the Cobden Hill. Usually a southbound will leave a cut of cars at South Carbondale (if it doesn't feel it's going to make the hill) that another southbound (a shorter one or one with more power) will pick up and take back down south. This happened just last week.
It does get pretty curvy south of Carbondale, from there to Anna (as far south as I have been) especially. Makanda most notably.

My pics @ emd_sd_60.rrpicturearchives.net!
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Posted by jeaton on Monday, June 19, 2006 7:47 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by Murphy Siding

Is the southern tip of Illinois really hilly, like southern Indiana? Or, does the line we're talking about follow the Ohio river, on a fairly flat grade?

Call it kind of hilly. The CN's (ex-IC) Edgewood cut-off is flat and almost tangent from Edgewood to the Ohio River, but everything south of Carbondale, Marion and Harrisburg is in low hill country. Actually foot hills of the Ozarks, I believe. ` Don't know what grades are involved, but the CN (IC) to Cairo (pronounce that Caaro) does curve around a bit.
Jay

"We have met the enemy and he is us." Pogo Possum "We have met the anemone... and he is Russ." Bucky Katt "Prediction is very difficult, especially if it's about the future." Niels Bohr, Nobel laureate in physics

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Posted by chicagorails on Monday, June 19, 2006 6:18 PM
been in tolono ill. cn and ns cross here. ns up to 50 trains a day and cn up to 30 a day.
tolono is only 2000 people but has all the comforts except a hotel.
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Posted by Murphy Siding on Sunday, June 18, 2006 9:31 PM
Is the southern tip of Illinois really hilly, like southern Indiana? Or, does the line we're talking about follow the Ohio river, on a fairly flat grade?

Thanks to Chris / CopCarSS for my avatar.

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Posted by gabe on Sunday, June 18, 2006 3:51 PM
Dave was mentioning NS' right of way at Litchfiled, and I was trying to see if he was still talking about NS' ex Southern RR line, as the Litchield line was the ex Wabash line and goes through central Illinois rather than Southern.

Yes, the coal for Coffeen is delivered from just a little south of Carlinville. I remember you asking me about what a particular track was on route four. The track you were asking about runs to the mine about a mile away from where you crossed it.

It is a fairly short haul. My guess is about 60 miles. I am told the power station is no looking to get Powder River Basin Coal from the UP. I can't see how that would be cheaper than what they are getting now. But, maybe that is why I do not run a power plant.

Gabe
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Posted by MP173 on Sunday, June 18, 2006 3:19 PM
Gabe: Good to see you back...hope things are well for you.

I am not sure what you mean by the connection betwene the Wabash (is it the Decatur to St. Louis line?) and the Southern line.

According to St. Loius Regional Railfan Timetable 1 (published by Soft Rails) and well worth the $13.00 I paid for it, the Wabash line enters the East St. Louis area and runs down to Brooklyn Yard. There is also an NS line which runs from Brooklyn to Coapman Yard which is the "Southern Yard".

It would seem that they would use the BNSF line from Centralia to Litchfield, if they would have movements.

Where does the coal for Coffeen originate? Isnt it over by Carlinville? If so, then that is a pretty short run, Carlinville to Coffeen.

ed
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Posted by gabe on Sunday, June 18, 2006 2:27 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by nanaimo73

QUOTE: Originally posted by nanaimo73

NS trains head the other way at Centralia. NS has rights on BNSF from Centralia NW through Sorento (connecting with a piece of NKP) to the KC line at Jacksonville, IL.


This appears to be wrong. The map in the February 2004 Trains shows the rights extend north to Jacksonville. The map in the October 2005 Trains show the rights ending at Litchfield, on the St. Louis to Decatur route.
The NS website shows the rights as being Centralia to Litchfield as well.

NS has coal trains going to the generating station in Coffeen which use these rights between Litchfield and Sorento.

http://www.dot.state.il.us/officialrailmap.pdf


I grew up about 8 miles from the NS/BNSF diamond in Litchfield where the cross over occurs. I have seen well over 200 coal trains go from the NS to BNSF line--however every one of them was the same train on the way to Coffeen. I have never seen another train use these traffic rights.

Also, NS often parks the Coffeen coal train right one the switch over, so I don't think it is in use for other trians.

Finally, what is the connection between this line (the ex Wabash) main and the Southern Illinois line (ex Southern line).

Gabe
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Posted by nanaimo73 on Sunday, June 18, 2006 1:30 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by nanaimo73

NS trains head the other way at Centralia. NS has rights on BNSF from Centralia NW through Sorento (connecting with a piece of NKP) to the KC line at Jacksonville, IL.


This appears to be wrong. The map in the February 2004 Trains shows the rights extend north to Jacksonville. The map in the October 2005 Trains show the rights ending at Litchfield, on the St. Louis to Decatur route.
The NS website shows the rights as being Centralia to Litchfield as well.

NS has coal trains going to the generating station in Coffeen which use these rights between Litchfield and Sorento.

http://www.dot.state.il.us/officialrailmap.pdf
Dale
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Posted by samfp1943 on Sunday, June 18, 2006 9:07 AM
Sou Illinois Guys:
A couple ofg months back we had a pretty lengthy discusion on lines in Souther Illinois from St. Louis to Centralia. BNSF was running and upgrading their line from NW Ill. into the area, and it seemed like BNSF was poised to make some traffic increases. Did that ever happen? The NS South down thru the area towards Jackson, Tn., and to Corintn, Ms is now a regional [West Tenn. RR ?] .
In another thread by railfanespee 4449 he had a photo posted of CO&E # 17
" Chinese Steam-Check this out"
What is the status of the CO&E, are they doing anything at all? at one time they were doing some 'bridge-line' business, but by that time had parked their active steam and gone to diesel? I have heard nothing about them in some time? THe way the railroad map has changed in the last ten years and with railroads making all kinds of trackage deals, Southern Ill is a prime area, what with the North-South CN and all the other lines present there.
Thanks,
Sam

 

 


 

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Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, June 17, 2006 6:56 PM
I definetely remember seeing a black Conrail Observation Car, but I'm not 100% sure about the E8(A) that could have been on the front. What might have been on the front could have been a NS locomotive pulling the Conrail car. Unfortunately, I didn't get any photos of this.
Also, recently a Union Pacific Passenger Car came through here pulled by a single NS GP50, GP38-2, or a GP40-2 going west towards St. Louis.
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Posted by MP173 on Saturday, June 17, 2006 4:57 PM
You probably dont remember if it was pulled by the E units do you?

Back in about 1980 I was able to photograph a similar train of Southern Railway cars and E units as they inspected the NW. Quite a sight.

ed
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Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, June 17, 2006 3:04 PM
I have one other small event to mention. Back in 1997 and 1998 we lived in a house about 400 feet from the tracks. I had heard from TRAINS magazine that NS and CSX were pursuing a merger with Conrail. Back then, I didn't know or completely understand all the details to this as I was only about 10 years old.
One day, I remember seeing Conrail's Officer Car Special train through here. I found that to be a very Odd occurance. I suppose they were inspecting the line here because of the upcoming merger. I did some research and found out that Conrail's Officer Car Special also traveled down south on the CSX to inspect their system before the merger. I suppose I was one of the few people who witnessed this, as most people have no recollection of this.

Just figured you all would want to know this.
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Posted by MP173 on Saturday, June 17, 2006 2:50 PM
NS Railfan:

Thanks for the info. There isnt much more business now than there was back in the day (1970's). I made a couple of day trips back then to Mt. Carmel and Centralia and have a few photos.

I obviously wasnt aware of the discontinuation of the trackage rights on the IC. Nor was I aware they use the BNSF up to Jacksonville. It would make sense, to avoid St. Louis. Anything running on those rights?

If memory serves me, there were 7 scheduled trains each way back in the 70's.

ed
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Posted by MP173 on Saturday, June 17, 2006 2:44 PM
wabash1:

It wasnt me. I tend to take law enforcement seriously.

My interest in the line is that I grew up "down there" and am just curious.
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Posted by SSW9389 on Saturday, June 17, 2006 2:36 PM
The line to Louisville actually goes further east to a place called North Wye. North Wye is just North of Danville, KY.
COTTON BELT: Runs like a Blue Streak!
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Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, June 17, 2006 2:33 PM
Perhaps I can provide you with assistance; (Hint: I Live within 1 mile of this line.)
The track is track warrant control with automated block signals. There are about 5 - 15 trains a day through here. Most of the locomotives seen are NS and former BIG BLUE CR units. There's a local train that usually has a former CR or NS unit(s) pulling it. At Browns Illinois, a new track is being installed to run from the NS line to Grayville IL and Poseyville IN (I think it might eventually connect with CSX). Near Maud IL, a new track is being installed to service a coal mine. This Main line through here is fairly quiet with an approximate interval of 30 min to 4 hours between Trains. Princeton IN is the place to be to see trains. There, this line and the very very Busy CSX Chicago to Nashville (old C&EI line) share the same roadbed running side by side through town. CSX recently installed a passing siding with automatic remote turnouts just south of the diamond. Though this line through here is a quiet line, you can still have a lot of fun watching trains on it. A lot of times, I take a book and go and park beside the tracks and read between trains; this helps to pass the time.
Wabash1, you might see me down by the tracks sometime between Boyleston IL and Sims IL. Part of my relatives own farm ground down there. The exact spot I go to watch trains is at the west end of moon (Boyleston) siding.
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Posted by nanaimo73 on Saturday, June 17, 2006 11:32 AM
QUOTE: Originally posted by MP173

Number of trains per day, including turning south at Centralia on the CN (if any).


Ed,
NS trains head the other way at Centralia. NS has rights on BNSF from Centralia NW through Sorento (connecting with a piece of NKP) to the KC line at Jacksonville, IL.

During 1988 Southern (or NS if you prefer) bought the ICG line from Fulton, KY 202 miles to Haleyville, AL. They also got 154 miles of trackage rights from Fulton to Centralia. Traffic did not pan out, and the southern end from Corinth, MS to Haleyville went to the Redmont Railway.
The section from Fulton to Corinth was leased to the West Tennessee during 2001 (August 1 ?). These sites are before the lease-
http://members.aol.com/wtnnrr/wtnn1.html
http://alcoworld.railfan.net/wtnn.htm

I believe the rights between Centralia and Fulton were dropped during 2001, but had probably not been used for some time. This was the second Southern mistake in southern Illinois. The previous one involved the purchase of a Conrail line from Mount Carmel SW about 120 miles almost to Cairo. They only had that for about 5 years before it was abandoned.
Dale
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Posted by wabash1 on Friday, June 16, 2006 8:07 PM
i cant prove it and it dont matter if it was you or not who laughed and said the police blowed out of porpotion about a bomb that was found on this line you question about now. ill give you the answers just not all of them. the line is track warrent control and single track. lots of talk and went as far as serveying for double track . type of trains run here all of the above. how many i wont say. how do i know all of this info this is the line i run on....
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Posted by MP173 on Thursday, June 15, 2006 10:22 PM
anybody out there in Southern Illinois?

ed
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NS Southern Illinois line
Posted by MP173 on Thursday, June 15, 2006 6:39 AM
Can someone give me a profile of the NS St. Louis - Louisville line that runs across Southern Illinois?

Single track? CTC? Track warrents? etc.

Number of trains per day, including turning south at Centralia on the CN (if any).

Types of trains (manifest, intermodal, auto, grain, coal).

thanks,

ed

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