Chesapeake & Ohio Railway · 1881 – 1985

The Lexington
Subdivision

From Ashland on the Ohio River, through the cliff country of eastern Kentucky, to the horse farms and bourbon warehouses of the Bluegrass — the story of the C&O's road to Louisville.

C&O J-2 №547 with the F.F.V. near Winchester, Ky., February 1952 · COHS 1791
124
Route Miles
33
Stations
7
Kentucky Counties
282
Photographs
765
Archive Documents
Introduction

A Modest but Vital Thread


The Lexington Subdivision of the Chesapeake & Ohio Railway was, for most of a century, a modest but vital thread in the fabric of eastern and central Kentucky. Running some 124 miles from Ashland, on the Ohio River, west through the rugged Appalachian Plateau to Lexington — and beyond, over trackage rights, to Louisville — it never carried the tonnage or prestige of the C&O's James River or New River main lines. Yet it carried the C&O's finest varnish — the George Washington and the F.F.V. — through some of the most scenic and least accessible country in Kentucky, and it linked the Bluegrass region's horse farms and bourbon warehouses to the coalfields, iron furnaces, and river trade of the Ohio Valley.

This site draws together material gathered by the Chesapeake & Ohio Historical Society over several decades — newsletter and magazine articles, employee timetables, track charts, valuation maps, engineering drawings, and hundreds of photographs — following the line from its improbable 1852 charter, through Collis P. Huntington's transcontinental ambitions and the golden age of steam, to its slow decline and 1985 abandonment west of Coalton.

“One can travel anywhere in America and in any country in Europe and not find a place like the East Kentucky hill country… This was my country, where the hills were not high enough to be called mountains and too high to be called hills.”
— Jesse Stuart, riding Train 21 through the Lexington Subdivision, TRACKS, August 1955
From the Collection

Eight Glimpses of the Line