SILVER METEOR

Inside the Silver Meteor train

The '''Silver Meteor''' is a 1389-mile (2235 km) passenger train route operated by Amtrak in the ''Silver Service'' brand, running from New York City south to Miami, Florida via the Northeast Corridor to Washington, DC, then via Richmond, Virginia, Fayetteville, North Carolina, Charleston, South Carolina, Savannah, Georgia, Jacksonville, Florida and Orlando, Florida.
The ''Silver Meteor'' shares much of its track with the ''Silver Star'', which runs further west through North Carolina and South Carolina and detours to serve Tampa, Florida. The ''Palmetto'' uses the same tracks as the ''Silver Meteor'' for its whole length, terminating in Savannah, Georgia.

Contents
History
Route details
Station stops
External links
References

History


The ''Silver Meteor'' was originally a train of the Seaboard Air Line Railroad (SAL), placed in service on February 2, 1939. The train was operated between New York, NY, and Washington, DC, by the Pennsylvania Railroad under a haulage agreement. Between Washington and Richmond, it used the tracks of the Richmond, Fredericksburg and Potomac Railroad, jointly owned by the SAL and five other railroads for the use of all. From Richmond south the SAL's own trackage was used, running via Raleigh, North Carolina, Columbia, South Carolina, Savannah, Georgia, Jacksonville, Florida and Ocala, Florida. Until the late 1960's, the ''Silver Meteor'' split at Wildwood, Florida, with one section continuing to Miami, Florida and the other serving St. Petersburg and Sarasota-Venice on Florida's west coast.
The SAL merged with the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad to form the Seaboard Coast Line Railroad in 1967, and on May 28, 1968 the ''Silver Meteor'' began serving only Miami (the similarly-routed ''Silver Star'' then served only St. Petersburg). Amtrak continued to operate the ''Silver Meteor'' when it took over operations on May 1, 1971; on November 14 the numbers 83 (southbound) and 84 (northbound) were assigned.
From December 17, 1971 to April 15, 1972 and September 10, 1972 to April 27, 1973, the ''Silver Meteor'' bypassed Jacksonville, running over the track between the Georgia state line and Baldwin, Florida. Between June 11 and September 10, 1972, the ''Silver Meteor'' was extended to Boston and called the '''Meteor'''. From June 11 to December 15, 1972, a separate section to St. Petersburg was added.
On September 30, 1979 the ''Silver Meteor'' was rerouted between Savannah and Jacksonville over the former Atlantic Coast Line Railroad route, due to the abandonment of the old SAL route. On January 31, 1984, the ''Silver Meteor's'' Florida west coast terminus was cut back from St. Petersburg to Tampa , thus ending almost 100 years of rail passenger service to St. Petersburg. By October 26, 1986, the ''Silver Meteor'' had shifted to the old ACL route north of Savannah, as the abandonment of the SAL route north of Raleigh affected only the ''Silver Star''. On June 11, 1988 the tracks between Coleman and Auburndale, Florida were abandoned, shifting the Miami section west to Lakeland.
By the end of 1988, the numbers assigned were 87 and 88 (to Tampa) and 97 and 98 (to Miami). The Tampa trips were later dropped, and 97 and 98 are still used.

Route details


The ''Silver Meteor'' operates over Amtrak and CSX Transportation trackage:

★ Amtrak Northeast Corridor, New York to Washington

★ CSX Landover Subdivision, RF&P Subdivision, Richmond Terminal Subdivision, North End Subdivision, South End Subdivision, Charleston Subdivision, Savannah Subdivision, Nahunta Subdivision, Jacksonville Terminal Subdivision, Sanford Subdivision, Auburndale Subdivision, and Miami Subdivision, Washington to Miami

Station stops


The ''Silver Meteor'', trains 97 southbound and 98 northbound, makes the following station stops:
;New York

New York
;New Jersey

Newark

Trenton
;Pennsylvania

Philadelphia
;Delaware

Wilmington
;Maryland

Baltimore
;District of Columbia

Washington
;Virginia

Alexandria

Richmond Staples Mill Road

Petersburg
;North Carolina

Rocky Mount

Fayetteville
;South Carolina

Florence

Kingstree

Charleston

Yemassee
;Georgia

Savannah

Jesup
;Florida

Jacksonville

Palatka

DeLand

Winter Park

Orlando

Kissimmee

Winter Haven

Sebring

West Palm Beach

Delray Beach

Deerfield Beach

Fort Lauderdale

Hollywood

Miami

External links



Amtrak - ''Silver Service / Palmetto''

October 30, 1966 ''Silver Meteor'' schedule

References



★ Mike Schafer, Amtrak's atlas, ''Trains'' June 1991

PRR Chronology

Amtrak's First Trains and Routes

Amtrak timetable, November 14, 1971

Amtrak timetable, late 1988 (Northeast Corridor only)
# Pacific Northwest Chapter of the National Railway Historical Society, Stainless Steel Passenger Car, ex-Seaboard, Silver Meteor #6200

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