Most people to whom the question occurs about where the
State of Georgia might like to anchor the far end of its Western & Atlantic
Railroad coming from south of the Chattahoochee River at Terminus (later
Thrasherville, later Marthasville, now Atlanta), would think the answer
obvious, but as I found out recently, that was not the case.
One of the reasons Americans in Georgia and Tennessee wanted
the Cherokee removed was because the Cherokee Nation stood in the way of
connecting the Chattahoochee and Tennessee Rivers by rail.
In 1837, the State of Georgia hired Col. Stephen H. Long of
the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to survey the best route for the Western and
Atlantic Railroad from Zero Mile Post (now in Underground Atlanta) to a
northern terminus. In January 1838, the
State of Tennessee authorized the State of Georgia to continue the survey from
the stateline to a point on the Tennessee River. The chosen entry point was the center of Lot
5, District 28, Section 3, of the Cherokee Land Lottery.
Four locations were considered for the northern terminus:
Vann’s Ferry (later Harrison); the mouth of the Chickamauga River (South
Chickamauga Creek); Gardenhire’s Landing (just below the mouth of the Citico
Creek); and Ross’ Landing.
The first option discarded was Vann’s Ferry, because one of
the checkpoints on the want list was accessibility to a possible future route
to Nashville, and this even though construction of the route to that
destination was by far the cheapest.
Once Long counted out Vann’s Ferry, he and his team came up
with a single point about nine-and-a-half miles past the stateline from which
to continue to the northern terminus, this point of divergence, as he called
it, being Kenan’s Mills, a few hundred feet from South Chickamauga Creek on its
left bank. Given the fact that Long puts
this at about 2.65 miles from the mouth of the South Chickamauga Creek, the
location must have been near where the later Chattanooga-Cleveland Pike crossed
it.
From Kenan’s Mills, routes directly to the mouth of the
South Chickamauga, directly to Gardenhire’s Landing, to Ross’ Landing via
Gardenhire’s Landing, to Ross’ via a tunnel through Missionary Ridge, and to
Ross’ via a deep cut through Missionary Ridge.
For railroads, a deep cut is a way through an obstacle that
involves digging a passageway through the hill, ridge, or mountain (not always ground
level) that creates a gully or ravine, like that which the Chattanooga
Extension of the East Tennessee and Georgia Railroad built through Brabson Hill
from where Erlanger now is through UTC (Univ. of Tenn. @ Chatt.) campus to the
switchyards past East 11th Street. Usually
the idea is to avoid a tunnel, but ET&G did both.
In the end, due to shortness of distance, height above the
level of freshets (normal spring floods), cost, and directness, Col. Long
recommended the northern terminus be placed at the mouth of South Chickamauga
Creek.
News of Georgia’s intentions to build the railroad to the
Tennessee River, however, spurred residents of the area around Ross’ Landing
into action, and provided much of the impetus for the speed with which its
commissioners laid out streets, built bridges, cleared swamps. Nor did it hurt that the landowner of the
target area at the mouth of the South Chickamauga, Tom Crutchfield, Sr., also
favored the Ross’ Landing location (where he also owned property). So proficient were they at lobbying that Georgia
bought land on which to build the terminal and yards before the Town of
Chattanooga was even incorporated.
Had it been otherwise, perhaps we would now be living in the
City of Toqua, or maybe the City of Amnicola, or even in the City of Citico.
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