Tampa and Gulf Coast Railroad

The Tampa and Gulf Coast Railroad was a railroad company in the Tampa Bay Area of Florida in the United States. It initially built and operated a line that ran from the Tampa Northern Railroad main line in Lutz (just north of Tampa) west to Tarpon Springs and into Pasco County. Additional track starting from Sulphur Springs running west towards Clearwater and south to St. Petersburg was built shortly after. The railroad was informally known as the "Tug n' Grunt".[1] It was the second railroad to serve St. Petersburg and Clearwater after the Orange Belt Railway, but was the first to connect the area directly with Tampa.

Tampa and Gulf Coast Railroad
CSX train operating on the former Tampa and Gulf Coast Railroad though Safety Harbor in 1992.
Overview
Reporting markT&G
Dates of operation19091927
SuccessorSeaboard Air Line Railroad
Technical
Track gauge4 ft 8 12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge

History

Depot built in 1924 by the Tampa and Gulf Coast Railroad in Sulphur Springs, Florida. It is currently located at Heritage Village in Largo, Florida.[2]

The Tampa and Gulf Coast Railroad was incorporated in 1909. In 1910, it acquired a logging railroad operated by the Gulf Pine Company that ran from Lutz, where it connected to the main line of the Tampa Northern Railroad, west to Gulf Pine via Lake Fern. The T&G then extended this line west to Tarpon Springs. The extension connected with another line from Lake Villa north to Port Richey, which the T&G bought from J.M. Weeks and Company in 1912.[3]

In 1914, a second line was built south of the first line from Sulphur Springs, also on the Tampa Northern Railroad main line, west through what is now Oldsmar, across Tampa Bay, and through Safety Harbor to Clearwater. In Clearwater, it crossed an Atlantic Coast Line Railroad track that was once the Orange Belt Railway and headed south. A branch to Indian Rocks Beach also existed at one point. From Clearwater, the line ran south to the southeast part of the Pinellas Peninsula near Seminole. It then crossed Long Bayou and south to South Pasadena before turning east to St. Petersburg. A passenger depot existed in St. Petersburg at Ninth Street and Second Avenue.[1] During this time, a branch line was also built to connect the two T&G lines from Tarpon Junction in Rocky Creek on the line leading to Clearwater to Lake Fern on the line leading to Tarpon Springs, which allowed the T&G to abandon the segment of line between Lake Fern and Lutz.[4]

The Tampa and Gulf Coast Railroad only briefly operated as an independent company. In 1915, it was bought out by the Seaboard Air Line Railroad (Seaboard bought the Tampa Northern Railroad two years prior) and continued to operate as a separate rail line until it was fully integrated with the SAL network in 1927.[5] The Seaboard Air Line would operate the line as their Tampa Subdivision, with the Tarpon Springs Branch being designated as the Tarpon Springs Subdivision.[6]

Seaboard would go on to merge with the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad, who operated a competing route through Pinellas County, in 1967. The resulting company after the merger was the Seaboard Coast Line Railroad, who connected the two Pinellas County routes where they crossed south of downtown Clearwater. Seaboard Coast Line would become the CSX Corporation in 1980.[1]

In 1986, CSX consolidated the two lines and abandoned the original Tampa and Gulf Coast Railroad from Clearwater to just west of St. Petersburg. This segment is now part of the Pinellas Trail (which also continues north from Clearwater along the former Orange Belt/Atlantic Coast Line route). Some track east of 34th Street South remained as the South Side Spur until 2008, when it was also removed and became part of the Pinellas Trail.[7]

CSX continues to operate the remaining tracks of the Tampa and Gulf Coast Railroad, which is now part of their Clearwater Subdivision.[1] The Upper Tampa Bay Trail runs along some of the former right of way of the Tarpon Springs Branch.

Station listing

Milepost[6] City/Location Station[3] Opening date Connections and notes

Gulf Coast Junction to St. Petersburg

SY 848.6 Sulphur Springs Gulf Coast Junction 1914 junction with Tampa Northern Railroad (SAL)
Lakeview
SY 856.4 Rocky Creek Tarpon Junction junction with Tarpon Springs Branch
Bridgeport
SY 867.1 Safety Harbor Safety Harbor
SY 870.2 Coachman
SY 874.9 Clearwater Clearwater 1914 junction with Atlantic Coast Line Railroad St. Petersburg Line
SY 876.1 Bellaire Bellaire
SY 878.1 Largo Largo
SY 879.7 Indian Beach Junction 1915 junction with Indian Rocks Beach Branch
Oakhurst
SY 884.6 Seminole Seminole
SY 885.2 Bay Pines
SY 889.4 Davista later known as Pasadena[8]
SY 892.5 Gulfport Gulfport
SY 896.0 St. Petersburg St. Petersburg

Tarpon Springs Branch

SYA 856.3 Tarpon Junction junction with Main line
SYA 859.1 Citrus Park 1911
SYA 861.4 Cosme
Lake Fern 1910 junction with original line to Lutz
SYA 866.6 Gulf Pine
Keystone
Kimbrough
SYA 874.4 Lake Villa junction with Port Richey Branch
SYA 877.8 Tarpon Springs Tarpon Springs 1910

Port Richey Branch

SYB 874.7 Lake Villa junction with Tarpon Springs Branch
Sans Souci
SYB 879.4 Elfers
YB 881.7 Port Richey Port Richey

See also

References

  1. Luisi, Vincent (2010). Railroading in Pinellas County. Arcadia Publishing.
  2. "Sulphur Springs Train Depot and Caboose" (PDF). University of South Florida Digital Archive. Retrieved December 25, 2016.
  3. Prince, Richard (2000). Seaboard Air Line Railway: Steam Boats, Locomotives and History. Salt Lake City, UT: Wheelwright Lithographing Company. Retrieved 24 October 2016.
  4. "History of Pasco County – Railroads". Retrieved December 27, 2016.
  5. "Tampa Gulf Coast Railroad Co. v. Commissioner". Casetext, Inc. 1971. Retrieved December 25, 2016.
  6. Seaboard Air Line Railroad South Florida Division Timetable (1940)
  7. "Trail enters downtown – A Pinellas Trail extension will reach the waterfront". St. Petersburg Times. March 9, 2008. Retrieved December 26, 2016.
  8. Ayers, R. Wayne (2001). St. Petersburg: The Sunshine City. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 0-7385-0691-5.
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