by Susan Millar Williams, Ph. D.
Approaching
the Palmer Campus from East Bay Street, you can’t help but notice the railroad
line along the Cooper River. In fact, most of the time you can’t see the river
at all because the tracks are crowded with auto transport cars tagged with
graffiti.
Ruins of the Northeastern Railroad station. |
When the
Charleston Museum published a history of the East Side in 1987, they titled it Between the Tracks. The area grew up around railroads that carried
goods and people in and out of the city. There was one passenger depot on Line
Street, one on Mary, and another on East Bay. The Northeastern had a terminal
on Chapel Street, which burned during the evacuation of Charleston in 1865.
In the
early twentieth century Union Station was built at the foot of Columbus Street,
more or less where we now see all those outgoing BMWs.
There were
also lots of buildings on the East Side where railroad workers performed repair
and maintenance. Other businesses, like Eason Iron, which once stood at the
corner of Columbus and Nassau Streets, produced parts and engines for the
railroads. Boarding houses and rental properties in the area catered to the
hundreds of railroad workers who shoveled coal, greased engines, handled
baggage, loaded freight, and did whatever else it took to keep Charleston and
its port connected with the nation’s interior. A company called Wharton and
Petsch produced boxcars and platform cars, employing machinists, carpenters,
finishers, and blacksmiths who made good wages.
Robert Smalls |
In order
to ship those goods in and out, the railroads had to connect with the ships
docked at wharves further south. But then as now, people who lived and worked
downtown were wary of noise and pollution, including, in the early years,
sparks thrown off by the steam driven engines. They fought to keep the rail
lines north of what is now Calhoun Street. That meant that in order to transfer
freight from ships to trains, or from
trains to ships, the goods had to be unloaded, loaded onto drays (horse-drawn
wagons), driven several miles, unloaded, and reloaded.
Enterprise Railroad, as depicted on its letterhead.
|
In 1870, South
Carolina representative Robert Smalls joined with three other black
legislators, Joseph Rainey, Richard Cain, and Alonzo Ransier, and other
investors to form a company called the Enterprise Railroad, which would move
goods between the wharves and the railroad depots in horse-drawn cars that ran,
like trolleys, on tracks. The Enterprise is said to have been the only United
States railroad ever under black ownership.
The East
Side is still a major hub of rail and sea transport, though shipping containers
now dominate the landscape and the steam and horse power of earlier years have
given way to fossil fuels.
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