Aberdeen and Rockfish Railroad

This article is about the North Carolina Railroad from Aberdeen to Fayetteville. For the North Carolina railroad from Aberdeen to Star, see Aberdeen, Carolina and Western Railway. For other uses of Aberdeen, see Aberdeen (disambiguation).
Aberdeen and Rockfish Railroad

Aberdeen and Rockfish EMD GP7 No. 205 in the company's yard
Reporting mark AR
Locale North Carolina
Dates of operation 1892 (1892)
Length 47 miles (76 km)
Headquarters Aberdeen, North Carolina
Website Official website

The Aberdeen and Rockfish Railroad (reporting mark AR) is a short-line railroad operating in North Carolina. At one time the AR was a Class 2 railroad. The railroad has 47 miles (76 km) of track that runs from Aberdeen to Fayetteville, North Carolina.

History

The AR was incorporated in 1892 by businessman John Blue. He built the railroad to get his timber and turpentine products to market. On June 30, 1895, the first stretch of road was opened from Aberdeen to Endon. In 1898 the company added a line from Ashley Heights to Raeford which soon became the main line with the Endon line as a branch. Shortly thereafter, the Endon branch was extended to Juniper. The main line was extended to Dundarrach in 1900, Rockfish in 1902, Fenix in 1904 and a branch from Rockfish to Hope Mills was added in 1905. For a while, Aberdeen–Hope Mills became the main line, with branches to Juniper and Fenix.

On November 14, 1909, another branch from Raeford to Wagram was opened. In 1912, the company abandoned the Endon branch and used the rails to construct an extension from Fenix to Fayetteville which opened on December 23 that year. At the same time the line to Hope Mills was abandoned, as it became unnecessary with the new link to the main line of the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad in Fayetteville. Over the years the railroad's traffic has shifted from lumber to agriculture products. The AR has successfully focussed on customer service and celebrated its 100th birthday in 1992.[1] The AR is still owned by the Blue family and operates freight trains from Aberdeen to Fayetteville. The Wagram branch was sold to the Laurinburg and Southern Railroad in 1921. Passenger service ended in 1949.[2]

Traffic

Route

See also

Notes

  1. Wrinn, Jim and Lewis, Edward. "The Road of Personal Service: A Centennial History" (1992, Aberdeen & Rockfish Railroad Co.).
  2. Lewis 1991, p. 9

References

Further reading

External links

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