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Cowan Railroad Museum

Cowan
Railroad Museum
This isn't one of the state's bigger tourist attractions. In fact, not a
lot of people even know there's a place called Cowan, let alone a museum
there. But you can learn a lot at the Cowan Railroad Museum. We're going
to show you the place, and tell you the story behind the railroad that changed
this part of Tennessee.
If you look at a map of Tennessee, you'll see that Cowan is in Franklin County,
east of Winchester. So why is there a railroad museum here? Because if it
weren't for the railroad there would be no Cowan.
Here's the story: Back in the 1840s, a group of investors organized what
would eventually become the first railroad in Tennessee. Its original idea
was to link Nashville with Chattanooga, which is why it was originally called
the Nashville and Chattanooga Railway.
If you draw a straight line from Nashville to Chattanooga, that line doesn't
come anywhere near Cowan. So why did the railroad pass through Cowan? Because
there is a very large mountain range called the Cumberland Mountains between
Nashville and Chattanooga. That mountain range is higher in some places than
it is in others, and narrower in some places than it is in others. And if
you are building a railroad, you want to avoid mountains as much as possible,
because it costs a lot more to lay track over or through mountains than it
does to lay track on flat land.

The
track of the NC&StL
In the 1850s engineers decided that the best way for a railroad to get from
Nashville to Chattanooga was to dig a tunnel through the Cumberland Mountains.
The small train station at the north side of that tunnel became known as
Cowan, and the small town that grew around it was entirely because of the
railroad.

The
photograph at the Cowan Railroad Museum shows the entrance to the Cumberland
Tunnel
Crews began laying the rail
line from Nashville to Chattanooga in 1847. The most difficult part of
it by far was the 2,200-foot tunnel. “Work was
carried on in three shifts,” Wilbur Creighton wrote in a book called
The Building of Nashville. “The drilling was done by hand, since
the steam drill had not been perfected at the time. One man would hold
and turn
a short length of steel bit, while two others struck it with eight-pound
hammers.” Most of the laborers who built the railroad were African-American slaves.
When the rail line connecting Nashville to Chattanooga opened in 1854, people
were pretty excited. But during the Civil War the railroad took on an unexpected
significance. When the Union Army moved through Tennessee, it basically
followed the Nashville and Chattanooga Railway line southeast from Nashville;
through Murfreesboro, through southern Tennessee into northeast Alabama;
and then east to Chattanooga. For a brief time, Cowan was a pretty strategic
place.

Inside The Railroad Museum
The railway flourished after the war and grew to become
known as the Nashville, Chattanooga and St. Louis Railway. And for nearly
a century after the war
it remained one of the most important companies in Tennessee. Several towns,
such as Tullahoma and Decherd, owe their existence to the NC&StL. Largely
because of the NC&StL line, Franklin County was chosen as the site
of the University of the South (also known as Sewanee). One of railway's
executives gave so much money to Vanderbilt that there is a dormitory there
named after him. Some of the largest employers Nashville and Chattanooga
have ever recruited were brought by the NC&StL.
Railroads eventually declined, however, and in 1955 the NC&StL was merged
with its main competitor, the Louisville & Nashville. Today the rail
line through Cowan is owned by CSX Railway. The tiny train station that houses
the museum, however, hasn't been used by the railway for decades.

The interior of the Cowan museum
Several years ago the people of Cowan decided to turn their old, abandoned
train station into a small museum. Today, just about everything that you
see in this museum consists of things donated by people who live there. There
is NC&StL memorabilia of all kinds; NC&StL history books; model trains;
antique maps; pictures; and an old locomotive and caboose that you can climb
on.
Here are tools that people used to use to work on the railroad. Ask about
what they were for.
And what train museum would be complete without
model trains? 
The Cowan Railroad Museum is run by volunteers. Before you head out there,
we suggest very strongly that you call them at 931-967-3078. If you call
first, you'll probably get the guided tour. If you don't call first, the
building may be locked when you get there.

For More Information About The Cowan Railroad Museum
Visit
www.developcowan.com/cowanrailroad

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