Great Smoky Mountains Railroad history

Share


There’s some nice history here about the Great Smoky Mountains Railroad:

Dillsboro, NC – March 2008 – The Murphy Branch of the Western North Carolina Railroad delivered thousands of mountaineers from the wilderness of their landlocked hills. A year after iron rails reached Asheville in 1880, workers scattered to the west of the city, digging, filling, and blasting an extension of the line that stretched 116 miles to Murphy, providing thousands with a path to reach the outside world.

The iron horse beat riding a wagon, but in many ways the young railroad was still primitive. In 1892, a visitor from Chicago described it as “little more than two streaks of rust and a right-of-way.” With tongue in cheek, he told the Chicago Tribune, “when the wind is just right, the fastest train on the line, the ‘Asheville Cannon Ball,’ can make 10 miles an hour.”

1 Comment

Dad March 12, 2008 - 3:59 pm

Aaahh, the ‘Asheville Cannonball’, kinda has a nice ring to it.

Post Comment