
In the late 1800’s, an increase in phosphate mining activity in the area convinced railroad
entrepreneur Henry Plant to extend his existing line from Tampa to Croom northward to Inverness
to join the Silver Springs, Ocala, and Gulf Railroad, thus completing the Plant System’s west
coast route. The Plant System eventually became Atlantic Coast Line in 1902, Seaboard Coast
Line in 1967, and finally CSX Transportation in 1980.
Due to a decline in railroad use beginning in the 1960s, service was abandoned and tracks removed
on many thousands of miles of rail corridor nationwide. In December of 1989, CSX transportation
sold their 46 mile right of way between Gulf Juction (Citrus Springs) and Owensboro Junction,
six miles north of Dade City, to the State of Florida. The corridor, one of the first purchased
under the Florida Rails-to-Trails Program, is now managed by the Office of Greenways and Trails.
The route where rail passengers on the Southland and the West Coast Champion once traveled is now
used by hikers, bikers, and horseback riders. Reminders of past railroad activity include cement
mileage and whistle markers, the Lake Henderson trestle, and the privately owned Inverness Depot,
built in 1892. Other points in interest along the trail traverses upland mixed forest, sandhill,
and wetland communities and serves as a habitat for gopher tortoises. Transient species include
bobcats, feral hogs, river otters, turkeys, deer, squirrels, and a wide variety of snakes, birds,
and insects.
Withlacoochee State Trail
3100 South Old Floral City Road
Inverness, Florida 34450
Phone: 352-726-0315
Tallahassee Headquarters: 850-245-2052
Citizen Support Organization
Rails to Trails of the Withlacoochee, Inc.
315 North Apopka Avenue, Inverness, Florida 33451
www.railstotrailsonline.com