Tybee Railroad
Appearance
Overview | |
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Locale | Georgia, U.S. |
Dates of operation | 1887 | –1933
Successor | Central of Georgia Railroad |
The Tybee Railroad, also known as the "Tybee Branchline" was a railroad in the United States which operated from 1887 to 1933. Originally chartered as the Savannah & Tybee railroad, it was purchased by the much larger Central of Georgia Railroad and operated as a branch line for most of its existence. At its peak the railroad carried a quarter million people a year, with many vacationers using the train to reach resorts on Tybee Island. The railroad was instrumental in the economic development of Tybee Island, Georgia, as a regional resort, and the train even earned the nickname "The Marsh Hen". The Coming of the Tybee Island Road signaled the end of train service, and the line was abandoned in 1933.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- Tuten, Allen (Winter 2012). Tuten, Allen (ed.). Oil Burners on the Tybee Branch. Right Way. pp. 8–10.
- Michaud, Terry (Fall 2012). Tuten, Allen (ed.). Savannah to Tybee Island... Eighteen Cents, Please. Right Way. pp. 4–8.