Ponce de Leon (train)

Summary

The Ponce de Leon was a named train of the Southern Railway which ran from Cincinnati, Ohio, to Jacksonville, Florida, from 1924 to the mid-1960s.

Ponce de Leon
Overview
Service typeInter-city rail
StatusDiscontinued
LocaleMidwestern United States/Southeastern United States
First service1924
Last servicemid-1960s
Former operator(s)Southern Railway
Route
TerminiCincinnati, Ohio
Jacksonville, Florida
Distance travelled840.2 mi (1,352.2 km)
Service frequencyDaily
Train number(s)Southbound: 1; northbound: 2
On-board services
Seating arrangementsReclining seat coaches
Sleeping arrangementsSections, drawing room, compartments
Catering facilitiesRestaurant-lounge

Operations edit

The Ponce de Leon (Train #4) departed Jacksonville at midday going north via subsidiary Georgia Southern and Florida Railroad to Macon and Atlanta, Georgia, then on Southern's former East Tennessee, Virginia and Georgia Railroad line to Chattanooga, Tennessee, traveling overnight to Cincinnati via Southern subsidiary Cincinnati, New Orleans and Texas Pacific Railway. The train provided connections with the New York Central Railroad at Cincinnati for passengers headed to Detroit, Chicago, Cleveland, and Buffalo.

The Royal Palm alternated with the Ponce de Leon on a reverse schedule between Cincinnati and Jacksonville, operating during daylight hours south from Cincinnati and then overnight between Atlanta and Jacksonville. In the latter city there were connections with Florida East Coast Railway for an east coast trip to Miami, and Seaboard Air Line Railroad trains to Miami on an interior route to Tampa.[1]

Sleepers were discontinued on the train in November 1959 and it ran as a coach-only consist until the end of operation.[2]

In 1964, Southern Railway dropped the Atlanta - Jacksonville leg of the Ponce's operation.[3]

By the time Southern Railway filed to discontinue the train on January 22, 1968 it was unnamed, operating as Numbers 1 and 2, but only between Cincinnati and Atlanta.[4] The train finally disappeared from the timetable in March 1968.[5]

Train accident edit

The Ponce de Leon and Royal Palm collided on December 23, 1926 in Rockmart, Georgia. The northbound Ponce de Leon struck the Royal Palm with the result that 19 people were killed and 113 were injured, most on the Ponce de Leon.[6]

The accident was also the subject of a song: "The Wreck of the Royal Palm" by Vernon Dalhart.[7]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ 1952 Southern Railway timetable http://streamlinermemories.info/South/SOU52TT.pdf
  2. ^ "Southern's "Ponce de Leon" (Train): Timetable, Schedule".
  3. ^ "Jacksonville's Royal Palms". Archived from the original on March 6, 2019.
  4. ^ "Southern Asks Trains Here Be Discontinued". The Times-News. Vol. 93, no. 19. Hendersonville, North Carolina. 23 January 1968. pp. 1, 11.
  5. ^ "Southern's "Ponce de Leon" (Train): Timetable, Schedule".
  6. ^ Mintz, Duane "Cowboy" (December 24, 1997). "Train Collision: Tragedy of Christmas 1926". Rockmart Journal.
  7. ^ Dalhart, Vernon. The Wreck of the Royal Palm (Song).