The Ohio Southern Railroad operated between Ironton, Ohio, and Lima, Ohio, from 1893 and 1905. Beginning in 1878 as the narrow gauge Springfield, Jackson and Pomeroy Railroad, it ran from Jackson-Wellston, Jackson County to Springfield, Ohio.[1] The line was converted to a standard gauge by 1880 and renamed the Ohio Southern Railroad in 1881.[1] From Jeffersonville, branch lines were started towards Columbus to the northeast and Cincinnati to the southwest, but never completed.[1] By September 1893, the Ohio Southern had reached north to Lima with a bridge over the Great Miami River at Quincy.[2] At Lima, the freight could link to the Lima Northern Railway for points further north. In 1898, the Lima Northern became the Detroit and Lima Northern Railroad (D&LN). Ohio Southern depots continue to stand in St. Johns, Uniopolis, Jackson Center, Quincy, and Rosewood.[2]
History
Planned as a narrow gauge railroad from the southeastern Ohio mineral lands connecting to Springfield, Fort Wayne and on to Chicago, the Ohio Southern Railroad never left the state of Ohio until it was taken over by the Detroit, Toledo & Ironton (DTI), serving the automobile industry in Detroit, Michigan.[3] Originating as the Springfield, Jackson & Pomeroy Railroad on December 17, 1874, as a means to link the three towns incorporated in its name.[3] The Dayton & South Eastern (D&SE) had been incorporated earlier to provide the same linkages, by a circuitous route, avoiding the large hills on a more direct alignment. The townspeople of Springfield did not wish to be a branch line, so joining with the other towns missed by the D&SE the SJ&P was born.[3]
Both lines were intended to be an outlet for the coal deposits of Jackson and Wellston. Construction began on the SJ&P from Jackson on December 7, 1876. The necessary $800,000 in capital had taken two years to raise. A second construction effort began on March 26, 1877, from Springfield.[3]
Cincinnati, Columbus & Hocking Valley Railroad.
From November 28, 1883, until May 31, 1884, the Ohio Southern operated a small railroad, the Cincinnati, Columbus & Hocking Valley. The CC&HV extended from Jeffersonville with the Ohio Southern west to Claysville Junction on the Little Miami Railroad's Cincinnati-Xenia main line. Organized on December 9, 1875, as the Waynesville, Port William & Jeffersonville Railroad Co. The owners were among group of ten involved with the Springfield, Jackson & Pomoroy.[3] The CC&HV completed 15 miles from Jeffersonville to Port William by October 1877, and the following month was reorganized as the Columbus, Washington & Cincinnati Railroad Co. By 1887, the W&C was abandoned and tracks removed. In March 1884, the Ohio Southern purchased a portion of the roadbed for a Cincinnati-Columbus line. Built from Sedalia through Jeffersonville and on to Kingman, the line was never finished and it was abandoned in several stages from 1931 and 1941.[3]
The Detroit & Lima Northern (D&LN) was planning a line from Columbus to Fort Wayne, Indiana, the Columbus Northwestern Railway, (CNW) incorporated in August 1897. The CNW constructed a small portion of a line Columbus Junction (later named Salter's) to Peoria in August 1898.[3] The Detroit & Lima Northern finished a link from Columbus Junction to St. Mary's by November 1 of that year.
Merger
In 1901, the Ohio Southern Railway merged with the Detroit and Lima Northern Railway and formed the Detroit Southern Railroad. This company was purchased at foreclosure on May 1, 1905, by Harry B. Hollins & Company of New York, which reincorporated it in the state of Michigan under the name of the Detroit, Toledo and Ironton Railway.[4]
Stations
The Ohio Southern operated a single mainline in Ohio from Lima to Ironton. Stations included (from north to south):[5]
Lima to Springfield
- Lima
- Uniopolis
- St. Johns
- Geyer
- Jackson Center
- Maplewood
- Quincy
- Rosewood
- St. Paris
- Tremont City
References
- Mark J. Camp. Images of America, Railroad Depots of Central Ohio Arcadia Publishing, 2008^
- Mark J. Camp. Images of America, Railroad Depots of West Central Ohio Arcadia Publishing, 2006^
- William C. Pletz. The History of the Detroit, Toledo & Ironton Railroad Ann Arbor Train and Trolley Watchers, 1979^