Among the early employees of the W&W RR was Assistant Engineer
William G. Lewis. The future Civil War general began his railroad career in 1858. From 1854 to 1871, S.L. Fremont was chief engineer and superintendent.
Fremont, North Carolina, is named in his honor. During the
American Civil War, the railroad was used heavily by the
Confederacy for transporting troops and supplies. The railroad also played a key role in the
Siege of Petersburg. The cities of Wilmington and Goldsboro fell in 1865 at the end of the war, and the railroad was badly damaged. The railroad managed to rebuild after the war. By 1866, the bridge over the
Cape Fear River was rebuilt, which reconnected the line to Wilmington. In 1872, the W&W was leased by the
Wilmington, Columbia and Augusta Railroad, but this lease ended in 1878 when the WC&A went bankrupt. The W&W was officially merged into the
Atlantic Coast Line Railroad (ACL) on April 21, 1900, which established its headquarters in Wilmington. In 1909, the ACL realigned the track in Goldsboro to bypass the center of town in conjunction with the opening of
Goldsboro Union Station. The line's original alignment along Center Street was removed in 1925. The Atlantic Coast Line moved their headquarters from Wilmington to
Jacksonville, Florida in 1960. Shortly after, the company removed the original W&W track entering in central Wilmington, which ran through a
cut in the Brooklyn neighborhood. The cut that the tracks through in Brooklyn still remains today. The Atlantic Coast Line became the
Seaboard Coast Line Railroad in 1967 after merging with their former rival, the
Seaboard Air Line Railroad. In 1980, the Seaboard Coast Line's parent company merged with the
Chessie System, creating the
CSX Corporation. The CSX Corporation initially operated the Chessie and Seaboard Systems separately until 1986, when they were merged into
CSX Transportation. The ex-ACL main line is still in service as CSX's A Line. In 1986, CSX abandoned remaining W&W track from Wilmington to Wallace. The former W&W from Contentnea south to Wallace is designated as CSX's
W&W Subdivision (named in reference to the Wilmington and Weldon Railroad). ==Branches==