Transportation - Railroads - North Bank Park Marker

Title

Transportation - Railroads - North Bank Park Marker

Subject

Transportation

Description

Marker Text:
Columbus entered the railroad era on February 20, 1850 when owners William Neil and Alfred Kelley brought the first trains on the Columbus and Xenia Railroad, spanning the Scioto River with a wooden trestle. The line provided service from Columbus to Xenia with connections to Cincinnati.

That year, with great pride, the owners invited the legislature to take a trip between Columbus and Cincinnati. The Ohio State Journal reported that it would be “...a novel sight to see the government of the great State of Ohio going off at the rate of 25 miles per hour.”

Within a year, rail lines were being bought, sold, and merged. Soon travelers could get from the Ohio River to Lake Erie without changing trains. Coal, iron, and natural resources moved from southern Ohio to river and lake ports, causing Columbus['s] and Ohio's economies to boom. Ohio's farms began providing food across the nation. Rail provided the foundation for a growth in population and the economy, and set the stage for the city to play a significant role in the Civil War.

By the late 1860s, railroad builders began to connect the city to major east/west rail systems, and by the 1870s Columbus had links to Baltimore, Philadelphia, Washington, Chicago and St. Louis, enabling Ohio to become a major industrial power. Ultimately, more than 15 rail lines crisscrossed the city.

The current day intersection of High Street and Nationwide Boulevard became the hub of rail activity, stockyards, and slaughterhouses, all joined together at the Union Station depot. Three separate depots bore the name Union Station at that location. All that remains today is a single arch from the Arcade that fronted High Street, permanently located in McFerson Common across from Nationwide Arena.

An iron bridge eventually replaced the original wooden bridge, and its steel successor exists today on the original rail bed. Used daily, the bridge demarks the eastern edge of North Bank Park.

Erected by City of Columbus.

Location: Long Street and Neil Ave.

Files

railroads1.jpg
railroads2.jpg
railroads-highstlookingnorth.jpg
railroads-doubledecker.jpg

Citation

“Transportation - Railroads - North Bank Park Marker,” Teaching Columbus Historic Places, accessed April 26, 2024, https://teachingcolumbus.omeka.net/items/show/124.