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Tennessean (train)

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(Redirected from Tennessean (passenger train)) American intercity passenger train

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Tennessean
Overview
Service typeInter-city rail
StatusDiscontinued
LocaleSoutheastern United States
First serviceMay 17, 1941
Last serviceMarch 30, 1968
Former operator(s)Southern Railway via Norfolk and Western Railway
Route
TerminiWashington, DC
Memphis, Tennessee
Distance travelled1,155.1 miles (1,859.0 km)
Average journey time23 hours, 50 minutes
Service frequencyDaily
Train number(s)45 (southbound), 46 (northbound)
On-board services
Class(es)Deluxe Coach Train, Through Sleeper service available
Seating arrangementsReclining seat coach, Tavern-lounge coach
Sleeping arrangementsOpen sections, roomettes, double bedrooms and compartments
Catering facilitiesOnboard dining car
Entertainment facilitiesRadio
Technical
Rolling stockAir conditioned cars built by the Pullman Company
Track owner(s)Southern Railway
Route map
Legend
0 mi
0 km
Washington, D.C.
DC
VA
border
8 mi
13 km
Alexandria
112 mi
180 km
Charlottesville
173 mi
278 km
Lynchburg
225 mi
362 km
Roanoke
258 mi
415 km
Christiansburg
376 mi
605 km
Bristol
VA
TN
border
401 mi
645 km
Johnson City
433 mi
697 km
Greeneville
465 mi
748 km
Morristown
507 mi
816 km
Knoxville
589 mi
948 km
Cleveland
618 mi
995 km
Chattanooga
TN
AL
border
715 mi
1151 km
Huntsville
740 mi
1191 km
Decatur
784 mi
1262 km
Sheffield-Tuscumbia
AL
MS
border
835 mi
1344 km
Corinth
MS
TN
border
876 mi
1410 km
Grand Junction
923 mi
1485 km
Buntyn
929 mi
1495 km
Memphis
This diagram:

The Tennessean was a named passenger train jointly operated by the Norfolk and Western Railway (N&W) and the Southern Railway (SOU). Inaugurated on May 17, 1941, its route ran from Washington, DC, to Lynchburg, Virginia, on the SOU, then on to Bristol, Tennessee, on the N&W, terminating at Memphis Union Station via the SOU. The St. Louis Southwestern Railway inaugurated a new passenger train, the Morning Star from Memphis to Dallas, specifically to provide close connections with the Tennessean at Memphis.

Intended to replace the Memphis Special as the preeminent carrier on the Washington–Memphis run, one of its critical duties was the transportation of mail for the Railway Mail Service division of the Post Office Department. The train's almost immediate success was further bolstered by a sharp rise in passenger traffic during World War II. The Tennessean carried a Bristol-Nashville sleeping car, a Chattanooga-Memphis sleeper, and a New York-Memphis sleeper. The heavyweight Pullman sleeping cars were painted silver to help them blend in with the train's stainless-steel, streamlined baggage cars, dining cars, coaches, and observation cars. Following World War II, streamlined sleeping cars replaced the heavyweight sleepers on the Tennessean.

The amenities provided on the Tennessean were gradually curtailed as Southern Railway attempted to reduce operating losses. By the early 1960s, the train carried only coaches and a single Pullman sleeper, in addition to the railway post office car and express and mail cars. Due to a decline in overall ridership, and Southern Railway's determination to escape the expensive burden of operating Memphis Union Station, the Tennessean was discontinued on March 30, 1968. This discontinuance ended all Southern Railway passenger train service to Memphis, allowing abandonment of Memphis Union Station.

References

  1. Schafer, Mike; Welsh, Joe (1997). Classic American Streamliners. Osceola, Wisconsin: MotorBooks International. p. 106. ISBN 978-0-7603-0377-1.

Further reading

  • Stout, Greg (2005). Southern Railway Through Passenger Service in Color (1st ed.). Morning Sun Books. ISBN 1-58248-166-0.

External links

Named trains of the Norfolk and Western Railway
Named trains of the Southern Railway
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