The Richmond and Petersburg was founded in 1836 and sold in 1898. It survived a war and several financial panics. It went from a railroad that only connected trains from Richmond to Petersburg, to a part of an entire east coast system. It went from a slave economy to having fully paid employees.
Founding " post office in 1851 after coal was discovered in other parts of the county to the south. The Virginia General Assembly granted a charter of a railroad between Richmond and Petersburg in 1836 which connected other railroad lines to make profits transporting cotton and coal to market.
Moncure Robinson, the engineer who designed the Reading Railroad owned by the
Reading Company, designed the Richmond and Petersburg Railroad. The rail line was completed to
Manchester, Virginia's industry on the south bank of the
James River across from
Richmond, Virginia. The steam engines would pass right under the terminus of the mule and gravity powered
Chesterfield Railroad, which brought coal from
Midlothian, Virginia to
Manchester. The
Richmond and Petersburg Railroad Bridge across the river, connecting to Richmond, would be built after the rail line was completed. The
Panic of 1837 lead to a reduction in the purchase of subscriptions to ship on the rails so it was difficult to pay for construction. The Virginia Board of Public Works advanced money for their subscription and England loaned money to keep the Richmond and Petersburg Railroad company solvent. The labor for the railroad was provided by slaves, but slave holders collected fees from leasing arrangements, and the railroad company provided clothes for the slaves. The Rail line was completed in 1838. A
branch line was created to
Port Walthall which connected to Norfolk, Washington, Baltimore and Philadelphia by
Steamboat in 1845. In 1846 passengers began to travel this way and freight could be shipped as well. The rail line also carried
mail under contract with the
U.S. Postal Service The
Clover Hill Railroad brought coal from the newly discovered
Clover Hill Pits beginning in 1848. This coal was taken to Richmond and Petersburg Railroad and shipped north from
Port Walthall. Although the Clover Hill made a large profit at first, the Chesterfield Railroad could not move coal from Midlothian to Manchester as efficiently as the steam powered
Richmond and Danville Railroad, which reached Midlothian in 1850. The Chesterfield Railroad was sold when the
Virginia General Assembly gave the Chesterfield Railroad permission to sell off its assets in the same year. The Richmond and Petersburg Railroad lost money as well. In 1948, the
Virginia General Assembly allowed the Richmond and Petersburg to cut by half the total shares of stock and give each creditor one half as many shares, paying the same dividends per share because of losses and debts incurred by the railroad company.
Fares Fares for the entire line in 1853 were $1.10 for White adults and 60 cents for African Americans, and children paid the same as African Americans. Fares for stopping at Port Walthall Junction, the Half Way stop, and Temple or Falling Creek fares were 35, 60 or 85 cents for White adults and 35 or 60 for African Americans.
1857 legal precedent set by Richmond and Petersburg Railroad In the same year as the
Panic of 1857, the Richmond and Petersburg Railroad faced a lawsuit,
The Richmond and Petersburg Railroad v. Martha J. Jones, over hitting several cows in a railroad accident. The plaintiff had left her cows outside of her fence and they wandered onto the track. The railroad was found to be following their lawful practices. The railroad was found not to be liable and a precedent was set that a railway company has the same rights and protection, when doing lawful business as a person doing lawful business. To collect damages, the plaintiff must show a lack of skill or caution.
Civil War and Reconstruction Railroads in the
Southern United States were funded to boost local economies. The Richmond and Petersburg Railroad owned an Omnibus and coaches to take passengers from one line to another. Goods and passengers had inefficient connections when travelling through cities and passengers would have to stay at hotels.
Robert E. Lee, of the
Confederate States of America predicted that the south's non-connecting railroads would cause problems for the military. He was proven correct when two locomotives had to be hauled over land around
Alexandria during the
American Civil War. Towards the end of the war,
Lt. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant tried to cut off the Richmond and Petersburg Railroad, which was the supply line to
Richmond, in the
Siege of Petersburg. The Confederacy eventually destroyed the bridge across James River as they retreated. The U.S. Federal Government rebuilt the bridge over the James River, a , trestle bridge on the Richmond and Petersburg Railroad in the last year of the Civil War. After the War, railroads were held by owners outside of the southern cities during the
Reconstruction Era. These non-residents were happy to have rail lines that passed through cities efficiently.
Union stations were built to connect different rail lines. Investments in the railroad also paid for the rebuilding of the
Richmond and Petersburg Railroad Bridge over the James River. The train took about an hour end to end in 1884, with a fast route with no stops that took 45 minutes. Three passenger runs and a mail run went in each direction with connections to the
Brighthope Railway, the
Petersburg Railroad, the
Norfolk and Western Railroad and the
Richmond, Fredericksburg and Potomac Railroad. The Richmond and Petersburg Railroad had been built with a
gauge and the
Brighthope Railway, formerly the Clover Hill, had been changed to the
narrow gauge of . Railroad Officers of the South met in Atlanta in February 1886 to determine a day to standardize gauges on all railroads to enable trains to travel all over the south without loading or unloading or having passengers change trains. In May the gauge was quickly changed to . The
Brighthope Railway, a privately held spur, was not changed. The Richmond and Petersburg hired
firemen that shovel coal in 1893 and did not list any wood purchased in their account of fuel.
Belt Line By the late 1880s, passenger and freight traffic was heavy enough that it was causing significant congestion in downtown Richmond as much of the track connecting to the Richmond, Fredericksburg and Potomac Railroad ran down the middle of Belvedere and Broad Streets. To combat this, an additional line bypassing downtown Richmond was built jointly by the Richmond and Petersburg Railroad and the Richmond, Fredericksburg and Potomac Railroad. This line, known as the Belt Line, connected with the Richmond and Petersburg main line at Coffer Road near Clopton and ran northwest, crossed the James River, and headed north along the west side of Richmond to a junction with the RF&P main line (which would be known as AY Interlocking). The Belt Line opened in 1891 and had a single track and was used as a freight bypass while passenger trains continued to use the original route.
Merger into the Atlantic Coast Line and later years Already in 1882, passengers could travel seamlessly in
sleeper cars from
Boston, Massachusetts to
Washington, D.C. or from
New York, New York to
Jacksonville, Florida along the Atlantic Coast.
William T. Walters of
Baltimore, Maryland formed a holding company, in 1889, later called the Atlantic Coast Line of five consecutive railroads starting with the Richmond and Petersburg Railroad and connecting all the way to
Charleston, South Carolina. In 1898, the Richmond and Petersburg Railroad merged with the
Petersburg Railroad to form the Atlantic Coast Line of Virginia. In 1900, all five railroads were merged to form the
Atlantic Coast Line Railroad from Richmond all the way to
Augusta, Georgia. After merging with the Atlantic Coast Line, the Richmond and Petersburg line became the northernmost segment of the Atlantic Coast Line's main line (which would extend as far south as
Tampa, Florida). The Atlantic Coast Line and the Richmond, Fredericksburg and Potomac Railroad jointly built
Broad Street Station in 1916 and consolidated their passenger operations there. With passenger service relocated to Broad Street Station, passenger trains began using the Belt Line (which then became the main line) to access the station from the south. To accommodate the additional traffic, the Belt Line was double tracked and realigned at the south end to join the original main line at what is now FA Junction. The current double-tracked
arch bridge over the James River was complete in 1919. Though, some foundations of the Richmond and Petersburg Railroad's original bridge for the Belt Line remain beside the current bridge. ==Presidents==