Train accident The
Ponce de Leon and
Royal Palm collided on December 23, 1926, in
Rockmart, Georgia. The northbound
Ponce de Leon struck the
Royal Palm, killing 19 people and injuring 133 others, most on the Ponce de Leon. The collision was the subject of the song "The Wreck of the Royal Palm", which was written by
Andrew Jenkins and recorded by
Vernon Dalhart in 1927.
Post-war winter schedule station on April 11, 1963. In 1949, an order for twelve
EMD E7s was delivered to Southern Railway for use on its passenger trains. On December 15, 1949, the New York Central, Southern and Florida East Coast began operation of the streamlined
New Royal Palm winter-only train that replaced the
Florida Sunbeam, which had run down Southern's (GS&F) Palatka branch to Hampton, where it connected to the Seaboard to Miami. The
New Royal Palm was a Detroit-Miami
streamliner which carried through-sleepers for Chicago, Cleveland and Buffalo. Each train carried up to 20 cars, including a
dining car and tavern-
lounge car. In the off-season, the equipment was used on the
Royal Palm, where it was permanently assigned after the
New Royal Palm ceased to operate in April 1955. Stylish coaches provided by Southern and Florida East Coast featured spacious men's and women's smoking lounges and large color photo murals of Florida scenery on both bulkheads. Both trains carried an elegant Pullman-built split-level
observation lounge car (with tall rear windows) for sleeping car passengers until 1957. (Click on Royal Street link below). Coach passengers could socialize and relax in an intimate little bar-lounge next to the diner. Until 1957 African-Americans were carried in the "colored" coach (RP-1), a combination
baggage-coach behind the diesels. The dining car was
segregated, and the
coach-lounge was strictly off-limits to black passengers. The train ceased operating south of Jacksonville in 1958, as reflected in the FEC and Southern timetables that year. The amenities provided on the
Royal Palm were gradually curtailed as Southern Railway attempted to reduce operating losses. The train was discontinued in segments - first between Jacksonville and
Valdosta, Georgia, in 1966 when the diner and sleeper were dropped - but the
Palm carried its coach-lounge right up to the end of its long career. However, passengers wishing to travel south of Valdosta could switch at Atlanta to take the
Atlantic Coast Line Railroad's (and from 1967 to 1969, the
Seaboard Coast Line Railroad's)
Dixie Flyer to continue the trip to Jacksonville, as the SCL advertised on its timetable connections to the Southern's #3/#4 (The
Royal Palm). Ironically, the
Royal Palm name was kept even though the train no longer served Florida, where
royal palms thrived on the lower East Coast. In the summer of 1967, the two-car remnant of the once-proud sunliner was discontinued south of Atlanta, then the section between Somerset, Kentucky, and Dalton, Georgia, was cut, leaving two disconnected trains, which were finally discontinued in 1970. The Southern Railway did not join Amtrak in 1971, at which time it had only four remaining passenger trains. These were the
Southern Crescent, the
Piedmont Limited, and two unnamed runs, one each in North Carolina and Virginia; the latter three were dropped in 1975. The Southern Railway finally ended passenger operations on January 31, 1979, and joined Amtrak, with its only remaining train being the
Crescent. ==External links==