Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Railway aka NC&StL, NC&Stl.L, ncstl,  
     
 

 
 

 

 

Eva, Tennessee

On the west bank of the Tenn. River, directly across the river from Johnsonville, a community formed and thrived with the railroad.  First settled in 1868 and known as Bartlett's Switch, the name Eva was adopted in 1871, named for the first Postmaster's daughter's best friend.  The town ultimately boasted a tomato cannery, blacksmith shops, several stores, saloons, and two hotels, as well as a railway depot.  

As the railroads continued to expand, merge, and absorb, the Nashville and Northwestern and Nashville and Chattanooga themselves merged together under lease in 1870, and then formally became the Nashville, Chattanooga and St. Louis Railway in 1873. The L&N, a direct competitor with the ambitious NC&StL in this region, bought a controlling interest in NC&StL stock in 1880, thus becoming the majority owners of the line.  (To prevent the "&StL" part of the name; the NC&StL never directly reached St. Louis. Hickman and Paducah, Kentucky, were as far northwest as NC&StL trackage ever went.). The L&N allowed the NC&StL to operate as a separate autonomous entity for the next 77 years. In 1957, the L&N once and for all absorbed the profitable, revenue-generating NC&StL, arguably initiating the "merger mania" among railroads still with us today. 

Time once was in this country when the traveling populace and the goods they consumed moved by rail. And as the railroad flourished, so did the small community on the Tennessee River known as Eva.

 

Bottom land, especially on the west side of the river, was prone to significant spring flooding.  In the early 1930's, with the country in the throes of the Great Depression, the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) was created with the purpose of controlling this flooding, creating cheap electrical power, as well as creating work, via a chain of dams.  Gilbertsville Dam, near Gilbertsville, Kentucky, one of the last TVA dams in the project, would raise the overall level of the river and create a pool to be known as Kentucky Lake.  It was clear the NC&StL railroad bed on the west bank of the river would be flooded, and the bridge and associated trestle would have to be relocated.  This would be an expense that, in light of planned improvements to the railroad necessitated by years of overall decline during the depression and the subsequent demands of World War II, the line could ill afford to bear. 

 

 

Contract was entered into with the TVA in 1943, during World War II, and a draw bridge, previously utilized further north on the Tenn. River by the Illinois Central Railroad at Gilbertsville, was relocated to near Camden, Tenn., adjacent to U.S. highway 70, some six miles south (upstream) from Eva.  A total of 10.05 miles of railroad, road bed, trestles, and bridge were abandoned, the job being completed in 1945.  With the majority of what was Eva and the rich river bottom land submerged in the newly-created Kentucky Lake combined with the subsequent loss of the railroad, the once-thriving community all but disappeared, while Johnsonville (now New Johnsonville), across the river, was relocated to higher ground three miles south.  A look at NC&StL timetable and annual report route maps show Eva as late as 1944. Route maps from 1945 bear no trace. The entire cost of this project, $2.5 million, was borne by the TVA.

Above photo taken October 2002 from atop Pilot Knob on the Eva side of Kentucky Lake/Tennessee River looking down on an old concrete railroad trestle left in place when the NC&StL abandoned 10 miles of main-line trackage in 1945. The two connecting "islands" were once rail road bed (levees to avoid the annual spring flooding - much like the permanent lake in the photo). This has got to be a unique trestle, in terms of its construction. I don't believe there was ever any sort of superstructure, just open cross ties on concrete similar to the FEC Railway's Key West Extension viaducts. I'm no expert, but I've never seen anything quite like it, and it is still there - rare and tangible (by boat) evidence of the NC&StL or possibly even Nashville and Northwestern that was never merged into the L&N. -- Ken Ingram

1912 Statistics: Population 75 (as of 1910), Elevation 362, Benton County, Tennessee

 
 

NC&StL Preservation Society, Inc. is in no way affiliated with the NC&StL Railway or any of it's successors.
As a non-profit entity, NCPS presents these pages to the public purely for educational and historic interest.


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