62    Business View - October 2015
        
        
          The American Short Line and
        
        
          Regional Railroad Association
        
        
          
            Small customers are not small customers to small railroads
          
        
        
          All railroads in America began as short lines. From the
        
        
          first commercial railroad, the Granite Railway, built in
        
        
          1826, to haul granite blocks from Quincy, Massachu-
        
        
          setts to the Neponset River for trans-shipment to Bos-
        
        
          ton, these independent, short line operations were fi-
        
        
          nanced and built by 19th century, entrepreneurial risk
        
        
          takers, within the communities they served, in order to
        
        
          move freight and people in local commerce.
        
        
          As the nation grew, and by the time the century had
        
        
          ended, more and more short lines were consolidated
        
        
          into regional systems that served ever widening areas
        
        
          of the country. These large railroads were owned by a
        
        
          coterie of wealthy industrialists (sometimes known as
        
        
          barons), and their shareholders. Those independent
        
        
          railway lines that either were not subsumed into these
        
        
          systems, or over time, became marginal and unprofit-
        
        
          able branches for the major lines that did own them,
        
        
          became the core of today’s short line railroad industry.
        
        
          The American Short Line and Regional Railroad As-
        
        
          sociation (ASLRRA) has been the voice of the short
        
        
          line industry since 1913, when 22 short line railroad
        
        
          managers met in Atlanta, GA, to form the Short Line
        
        
          Railroad Association (SLRA) of the Southeast. The new
        
        
          organization’s central purpose was to deal with legis-
        
        
          LOGISTICS