Overview | |
---|---|
Headquarters | Oakland City, Indiana |
Reporting mark | AWW |
Locale | Southern Indiana |
Dates of operation | 1926–present |
Successor | Norfolk Southern |
Technical | |
Track gauge | 4 ft 8+1⁄2 in (1,435 mm) |
Length | 19 miles (31 km) |
The Algiers, Winslow and Western Railway sometimes referred to as Algers
[N 1], Winslow and Western Railway (
reporting mark AWW) was a
Class III
short-line
railroad that served the
surface mining operations in
Pike County,
Indiana. It operated approximately 19 miles of track which reached from the coal mines west of
Cato south to those at
Enos Corner, and ran close to the
Norfolk Southern Railway and
Indiana Southern Railroad. It was acquired in March 2007 by Norfolk Southern, but still operating under the original company's name.
The railroad's name comes from the Pike County towns of Algiers (now virtually extinct) and Winslow.
Southern Railway, the predecessor of Norfolk Southern, sought to purchase AWW in 1974, but the move was denied by the Interstate Commerce Commission which limited Southern to acquiring only 50% of the railroad. Ownership of the remaining 50% passed among various coal interests over the next 30 years, finally falling to Horizon Natural Resources.
In October 2004, Horizon went through bankruptcy and sold its interest in the railroad (along with two mines along the AWW) to Lexington Coal Company; Lexington sold it to Indiana Land and Mineral Company in September 2005, who in turn transferred it to American Metals and Coal International (AMCI) in January 2006. Norfolk Southern won approval from the Surface Transportation Board to acquire AMCI's share in AWW in March 2007, completing its takeover of the railroad.
Since late 2004, the AWW has carried no coal and only a little other traffic, mainly from a nearby industrial tie plant. Railroad workers have been laid off and are called in only as needed, but plans to reopen two of the local mines may increase traffic on the line.