Chesapeake & Indiana Railroad

Chesapeake & Indiana Railroad
Locomotive 813
Overview
HeadquartersLaCrosse, Indiana
Reporting markCKIN
LocaleIndiana
Dates of operation2004 (2004)
Technical
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge

The Chesapeake & Indiana Railroad (reporting mark CKIN) is a Class III short-line railroad operating 33 miles (53 km) of rail line in northwestern Indiana. From the headquarters town of La Crosse, lines run northwest to the Porter County town of Malden, southeast to the Starke County towns of English Lake and North Judson, and northeast through La Porte County past Thomaston and Hanna to Wellsboro.

The Chesapeake & Indiana is mostly used for transporting grain from rural elevators to the mainline railroad systems. The railroad interchanges with Norfolk Southern at Thomaston and CSX at Wellsboro. It moved only 700 cars on startup in 2004, having increased that to 3,000 cars by 2011, with growth expected in the coming years.

When the railroad first started, the only connection with a Class I was in Wellsboro, IN with the CSX. The C&I and NS will soon build a connection in Thomaston to allow more cars per year and competitive shipping rates between the two Class I's.

Rail tours are also operated on the C&I line by the Hoosier Valley Railroad Museum, starting in North Judson and running to English Lake.

CKIN had been owned by the Town of North Judson and was operated under lease by the Indiana Boxcar Corporation until 2019 and Midwest & Bluegrass Rail afterward.[1] M&BR acquired the railroad in 2021.[2]

On May 12, 2023, Gulf & Atlantic Railways announced that it had completed its purchase of CKIN.[3]

References

  1. ^ Stahl, Bruce (October 2022). "Short line: Chesapeake & Indiana Railroad". Trains. Kalmbach Media. pp. 34–41.
  2. ^ Gallenburger, Michael (May 4, 2021). "North Judson Celebrates Closing of Railroad Sale". WVKI. Retrieved January 27, 2023.
  3. ^ "Gulf & Atlantic completes acquisition of three short lines". Trains.Com. Retrieved 2023-07-30.

Media related to Chesapeake and Indiana Railroad at Wikimedia Commons