Fairmont Subdivision
Overview
StatusActive
OwnerCSX Transportation
LocaleWest Virginia
Termini
Service
TypeFreight rail
SystemCSX Transportation
Operator(s)CSX Transportation
Technical
Number of tracks1-2
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Route map

MP.0
NS Loveridge Secondary
306.3
Catawba Junction
B&O line
to Point Marion
ND Paper Fairmont
Unknown Junction
B&O Roundhouse (Razed)
B&O line
to Mannington
Federal
Junction
303.4
WD Tower
302.1
300.9
Gaston Junction
B&O line
to Shinnston
300.6
284.2
CY Tower
Dyna Mix Industrial siding
Industrial siding
280.2
D Tower

The Fairmont Subdivision is a railroad line owned and operated by CSX Transportation in the U.S. state of West Virginia. The line runs from Grafton northwest to Rivesville[1] along the old Baltimore and Ohio Rail Road main line and a former branch of it.[2][3]

At its southeast end, the Fairmont Subdivision junctions with the Mountain Subdivision near its west end, where it becomes the Bridgeport Subdivision. The northwest end is at a junction with the Norfolk Southern Railway's Loveridge Secondary, along which CSX has trackage rights north to the Mon Subdivision near Brownsville, Pennsylvania.

History

The majority of the Fairmont Subdivision, from Grafton to Fairmont, was opened in 1852 as part of the B&O's main line.[4] A short piece in Fairmont opened around 1890 as part of the Fairmont, Morgantown and Pittsburgh Railroad.[5] The entire line became part of the B&O and CSX through leases and mergers.

References

  1. "CSX Timetables: Fairmont Subdivision". Archived from the original on November 26, 2002.
  2. "FT-Fairmont Sub". RadioReference.com.
  3. "CSX Huntington East Timetable" (PDF). MultimodalWays.
  4. "PRR Chronology, 1852" (PDF). Pennsylvania Railroad Technical & Historical Society. March 2005. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2006-03-16.
  5. Ross, Phil (1994). "The Scotts Run Coalfield from the Great War to the Great Depression: A Study in Overdevelopment". West Virginia History. Vol. 53. West Virginia Department of Arts, Culture and History. pp. 21–42.


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