Jeffersonville, Madison and Indianapolis Railroad

Jeffersonville, Madison and Indianapolis Railroad
Locale Indiana
Dates of operation 18661890
Predecessor Indianapolis and Madison Railroad
Jeffersonvile Railroad
Successor Pittsburg, Cincinnati and St. Louis Railway
Track gauge 4 ft 8 12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Headquarters Indianapolis, Indiana

The Jeffersonville, Madison and Indianapolis Railroad (JM&I) was formed in 1866 as a merger between the Indianapolis and Madison Railroad and the Jeffersonville Railroad.

Genealogy

The JM&I predecessors were as follows:[1]

History

The Ohio and Indianapolis Railroad was chartered February 3, 1832, to build a line from Indianapolis south to the Ohio River at Jeffersonville, Indiana. The company was not organized until March 17, 1848, and on February 3, 1849, it was renamed the Jeffersonville Railroad.

The first section, from Jeffersonville to just north of Memphis, Indiana opened in 1850. The next year it leased the Knightstown and Shelbyville Railroad, starting to operate it in 1852. The line opened north to Columbus in August 1852, and on September 1, 1852, it began operating the Rushville and Shelbyville Railroad under lease.

Indiana's first railroad to actually be built was created on June 20, 1836, by act of the Indiana General Assembly as the state-owned Madison and Indianapolis Railroad. Construction began on September 16, 1836. After building only 27.80 miles (44.74 km) from Madison to Queensville (just northwest of North Vernon in Jennings County) by 1841, the railroad was transferred to private ownership on February 26, 1843, as the Madison & Indianapolis Railroad Company. This entity completed the remainder of the line from Queensville to Indianapolis, a distance of 57.99 miles (93.33 km), by 1847.[2] Successful for more than a decade, the railroad went into decline and was sold at foreclosure in 1862, and renamed the Indianapolis and Madison Railroad (I&M). That company abandoned the M&I's 10.08 miles (16.22 km) of trackage between Columbus and Edinburgh in 1864 and began running over the Jeffersonville Railroad's nearby tracks.

Organized on April 30, 1866, for the purpose of uniting the two lines, the Jeffersonville, Madison and Indianapolis Railroad Company (JM&I) absorbed the Indianapolis & Madison the next day, with the Jeffersonville Railroad being officially merged in on June 1 of that same year, upon the filing of the Articles of Consolidation.

On May 22, 1868, the Reno Gang held up the JM&I Railroad train at Marshfield, Scott County, Indiana, and escaped with $90,000 in cash described as being in "new notes." The money was never officially recovered and in today's value, represented more than $2 million.

The Scottsburg Depot opened in 1872.[3] It was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1991.[4]

References

  1. Hallberg, M. C. (April 24, 2006). "Railroads in North America: Some Historical Facts and An Introduction to an Electronic Database of North American Railroads and Their Evolution".
  2. Netzlof, Robert T. (January 20, 2008). "Corporate Genealogy, Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, Chicago and St. Louis Railway, The Panhandle".
  3. "Indiana State Historic Architectural and Archaeological Research Database (SHAARD)" (Searchable database). Department of Natural Resources, Division of Historic Preservation and Archaeology. Retrieved 2016-07-01. Note: This includes Devon K. Cunningham, II (September 1990). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form: Scottsburg Depot" (PDF). Retrieved 2016-07-01. and Accompanying photographs
  4. National Park Service (2010-07-09). "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service.

External links

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