CSX is made up of two systems that were themselves conglomerations (well, with the conrail split up 3, but we'll ignore that.) The Chessie System and the Seaboard System. Both were owned by CSX prior to the name change.
Chessie was primarily made up of the Chesapeake and Ohio, the Baltimore and Ohio and the Western Maryland. I believe they also took over the Virginian Railroad.
The Seaboard system consists of the Atlantic Coast line, the Seaboard Air Line (was there a 3rd?) along with the family lines of which I can only remember the Louisville and Nashville.
I'm sure someone more well versed in these things can fill in the gaps.
YoHo1975 wrote: CSX is made up of two systems that were themselves conglomerations (well, with the conrail split up 3, but we'll ignore that.) The Chessie System and the Seaboard System. Both were owned by CSX prior to the name change.Chessie was primarily made up of the Chesapeake and Ohio, the Baltimore and Ohio and the Western Maryland. I believe they also took over the Virginian Railroad.The Seaboard system consists of the Atlantic Coast line, the Seaboard Air Line (was there a 3rd?) along with the family lines of which I can only remember the Louisville and Nashville. I'm sure someone more well versed in these things can fill in the gaps.
i have an "offical CSX Corp." service lane map dated 1982 that used to hang in the former Chessie(C&O/PM) depot in Howell MI...even though it says "CSX Corp" with the crossed and slanted C and S making the "X" the Chessie lines and the Family Lines are different colors and "common" terminals are marked as such "Shared terminals"...also the Richmond Fredricksburg & Potomic is listed on the map seperately...this lines was a wholly owned subsidary of the C&O....i think...but it become part of CSX..... the actual date of the 2 two lines Chessie lines and Seaboard lines merger was around 1984...i think
The Virginian went to Norfolk and Western.
The CSX background can go all the way back to the start of steam railroads, with the Baltimore & Ohio in the 1820s.
Don U. TCA 73-5735
this old ....lol......Howell Mi 1992ish
Rail-Roadwarrior wrote:From what I've read and been told from the guys who worked for the railroads that became CSX, it was formed in 1980. It was called CSX Corp. and I think at the time it was a holding company.The SCL,L&N, The Georgia Railroad, The Clinchfield Railroad, The Atlantic and Western and The Western Railway of Alabama(the latter two were nicknamed the West Point Route) comprised The Family Lines System. The Family Lines was not an actual railroad, but a marketing slogan, and all railroads invloved retained their corporate idinities. The Seaboard System was formed in the later part of 1982. A few years later in 1986 The Seaboard System was merged with The Chessie System to become CSXT.
That sounds about right to me. - a.s.
Never too old to have a happy childhood!
The railroad CSX Transportation was formed in 1987 by a series of mergers. They did not occur all at once.
In 1986-87 CSX Transporation locos and cars had C&O, B&O, SBD reporting marks and numbers.
Andrew
Watch my videos on-line at https://www.youtube.com/user/AndrewNeilFalconer
Andrew Falconer wrote: The railroad CSX Transportation was formed in 1987 by a series of mergers. They did not occur all at once. In 1986-87 CSX Transporation locos and cars had C&O, B&O, SBD reporting marks and numbers. Andrew
I don't know if I'll ever understand the transition from L&N/Clinchfield into "Family Lines" and then "Seaboard System."
One thing I do know is that CSX should never have gotten rid of Chessie. So much fondness for an icon is rare and they just turned their back on it to look corporately cool or something. Bad show! - a.s.
i think CSX Corp. and what we know as CSX Trans. are\were 2 different things...CSX Corporation was formed when the Holding Companies that owned the "Family Lines" and the Chessie System Railroad merged in 1980....the railroad holdings werent merged until 1987 under CSX Transportation....C&O\B&O is easy...they merged....the "Family Lines" were railroads under common ownership of Seaboard Coastlines Industries but more or less retained their independence but shared routing and billing and a paint scheme and such.....atleast thats the way i understand it....critiques welcome and expected...
well i found my old CSX Corp map from 1980....this is the Corprate logothat thankfully never made it to the side of their engines...the map is wall size so this is all ya get ...lol
J. Edgar wrote: well i found my old CSX Corp map from 1980....this is the Corprate logothat thankfully never made it to the side of their engines...the map is wall size so this is all ya get ...lol
I've got one of those folded away somewhere.
Rail-Roadwarrior wrote: I've got one of those folded away somewhere.
this one hung in the then open operators office in the now removed Howell Mi depot...the OP that worked there in 1982 gave it to me when they closed the doors...
J. Edgar wrote: Rail-Roadwarrior wrote: I've got one of those folded away somewhere.this one hung in the then open operators office in the now removed Howell Mi depot...the OP that worked there in 1982 gave it to me when they closed the doors...
i use one of them folded to level my table.
Rail-Roadwarrior wrote: J. Edgar wrote: well i found my old CSX Corp map from 1980....this is the Corprate logothat thankfully never made it to the side of their engines...the map is wall size so this is all ya get ...lolI've got one of those folded away somewhere.
That logo looks a lot like Microsoft's Excel icon, though I wouldn't confuse a railroad with a spreadsheet:)
Lyon_Wonder wrote: Rail-Roadwarrior wrote: J. Edgar wrote: well i found my old CSX Corp map from 1980....this is the Corprate logothat thankfully never made it to the side of their engines...the map is wall size so this is all ya get ...lolI've got one of those folded away somewhere.That logo looks a lot like Microsoft's Excel icon, though I wouldn't confuse a railroad with a spreadsheet:)
Why not, the executives the railroads often do.
Hey-O
I'm here all week folks.
What's a "CSX"?....Ohhhh......it's that future UP acquisition thingy.
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