Southern Railway (U.S.) - Roads Owned By The Southern Railway

Roads Owned By The Southern Railway

  • Alabama Great Southern Railroad (AGS)
  • Atlantic & Eastern Carolina Railway (A&EC)
  • Central of Georgia Railway (CofG)
  • Cincinnati, New Orleans and Texas Pacific Railway (CNO&TP)
  • Georgia and Florida Railroad (G&F)
  • Georgia Northern Railway (GANO) — acquired in 1967
  • Georgia Southern and Florida Railway (GS&F)
  • Knoxville and Charleston Railroad
  • Louisiana Southern Railway (LS)
  • New Orleans and North Eastern Railway (NO&NE)
  • New Orleans Terminal Company (NOTCO)
  • Tennessee, Alabama and Georgia Railway (TA&G)
  • Carolina and Northwestern Railway (C&NW)

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    We joined long wagon trains moving south; we met hundreds of wagons going north; the roads east and west were crawling lines of families traveling under canvas, looking for work, for another foothold somewhere on the land.... The country was ruined, the whole world was ruined; nothing like this had ever happened before. There was no hope, but everyone felt the courage of despair.
    Rose Wilder Lane (1886–1968)

    Speak as you think, be what you are, pay your debts of all kinds. I prefer to be owned as sound and solvent, and my word as good as my bond, and to be what cannot be skipped, or dissipated, or undermined, to all the eclat in the universe. This reality is the foundation of friendship, religion, poetry, and art.
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    ... so far from thinking that a slaveholder is bound by the immoral and unconstitutional laws of the Southern States, we hold that he is solemnly bound as a man, as an American, to break them, and that immediately and openly ...
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    Her personality had an architectonic quality; I think of her when I see some of the great London railway termini, especially St. Pancras, with its soot and turrets, and she overshadowed her own daughters, whom she did not understand—my mother, who liked things to be nice; my dotty aunt. But my mother had not the strength to put even some physical distance between them, let alone keep the old monster at emotional arm’s length.
    Angela Carter (1940–1992)