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Our American Stories

Atlanta’s “Romulus and Remus”: The Texas, the General, and a City Built by Rail

Our American Stories

iHeartPodcasts

Documentary, Society & Culture

4.6817 Ratings

🗓️ 13 February 2026

⏱️ 18 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

On this episode of Our American Stories, The Texas is one of the last surviving locomotives of the Western & Atlantic Railroad, the line that helped create Atlanta, and played a starring role as the pursuit engine in the Great Locomotive Chase during the Civil War. Jackson McQuigg of the Atlanta History Museum explains how the Texas chased the stolen General at extreme speed, how it later served in wartime logistics, and how it narrowly avoided being scrapped again and again.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

This is an I-Heart podcast.

0:02.5

Guaranteed Human.

0:14.2

This is Lee Habib, and this is Our American Stories, and we tell stories about everything here

0:19.9

on this show, including your stories, send them to Our American Stories and we tell stories about everything here on this show, including your

0:21.3

stories, send them to our American Stories.com for some of our favorites. Up next, a story from

0:27.4

the Atlanta History Center, a great museum where you can see exhibits like the massive

0:32.1

cyclorama painting and a locomotive with a truly unique story, the Texas.

0:40.1

Built four years before Lincoln was elected,

0:44.4

the locomotive is best known today as the principal pursuit engine in the great locomotive chase,

0:47.0

which occurred after Union spies stole her running mate, the general.

0:52.0

But the story goes far deeper than that.

0:55.6

Here's Jackson McQuig,

0:59.7

vice president of properties at the Atlanta History Center with the story.

1:12.7

I want to say I was born into it, but I have been a fan of railroads and interested in railroads pretty much all my life. That's something that I shared with my dad. And growing up in Tampa,

1:18.5

Florida with deep roots in Atlanta, Atlanta's history was always of interest to me. And I think that,

1:25.0

you know, by the age of like 14, I was volunteering at the Florida Railroad Museum,

1:30.2

scraping paint, and doing all the things that older people didn't want to do, you know.

1:34.8

And I've just always been fascinated by trains.

1:38.9

I mean, it is just absolutely one of the most fascinating technologies.

1:42.5

And I think I'm interested in it because, you know,

1:46.0

travel is such a fun thing.

1:48.0

And there's no better way to go than traveling by train.

...

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