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Ohio River Subdivision

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Ohio River Subdivision
Ohio River Subdivision crossing the Kanawha River at Point Pleasant, West Virginia in 2022
Overview
StatusActive
OwnerCSX Transportation
LocaleWest Virginia
Termini
Service
TypeFreight rail
SystemCSX Transportation
Operator(s)CSX Transportation
Technical
Number of tracks1
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Route map

MP.0
[1]
BN2.5
B&O Viaduct Bridge
AES spur
4.6
Kelly Asphalt spur
5.5
Highline Warren distribution
8.5
11.9
Little Grave Creek
B&O line
to Cameron
84 Lumber spur
15.7
Williams plant yard
16.0
Chesnut siding
20.6
Foster siding
21.5
AEP Mitchell Power Plant.
21.5
Certain Teed LLC.
22.3
Foster siding
22.5
26.1
26.3
Blue Racer Midstream LLC.
27.5
Westlake Chemical Inc.
29.3
Covestro industrial park
36.0
East Hannibal siding
McKees Rocks Inc.
37.8
East Hannibal siding
38.0
CSX yard
LHOIST dock
42.8
47.3
51.9
54.2
54.5
Integrity LLC.
55.5
56.7
siding
64.2
Pleasant Power Station
Axens Global
SimEx Vinyl
74.76
79.2
81.0
Williamstown
89.0
CSX yard
93.5
To High yard
Little Kanawha Industrial Track
Train on the Ohio River Subdivision crossing Sandy Creek in Ravenswood, West Virginia in 2011
Map
Map

The Ohio River Subdivision is a specific portion of a railroad system that runs along the Ohio River, owned and operated by CSX Transportation in the U.S. state of West Virginia. The line runs from Wheeling southwesterly along the east (left) shore of the Ohio River to Huntington[2] along a former Baltimore and Ohio Railroad line.[3][4]

The Ohio River Subdivision intersects the Short Line Subdivision at New Martinsville, the Marietta Subdivision at Parkersburg, and the Kanawha Subdivision at Huntington. It also intersects the Kanawha River Railroad at Point Pleasant, where CSX has trackage rights across the Ohio on the Point Pleasant Rail Bridge to the short Pomeroy Subdivision in the state of Ohio.

History

[edit]

The line south of Moundsville was built by the Ohio River Railroad in the 1880s.[citation needed] Though the Ohio River Railroad built a line from Moundsville north to Wheeling, the parallel tracks of the original B&O main line, opened in 1852, were used there.[5] The entire line became part of the B&O and CSX through leases and mergers.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ https://wiki.radioreference.com/index.php/OR-Ohio_River_Sub
  2. ^ "Ohio River Secondary Subdivision". CSX Timetables (Trainweb.org). Archived from the original on January 20, 2003.
  3. ^ "OR-Ohio River Sub". The RadioReference Wiki. December 29, 2017.[user-generated source?]
  4. ^ "CSX Huntington East Division Timetable" (PDF). MultiModalWays.org.
  5. ^ "PRR Chronology, 1852" (PDF). March 2005. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 16, 2006.