The beginnings
Apparently, the Seaboard Air
Line Railway originally intended to extend its route from Henrietta
into Cliffside. In The Sun of May
19, 1904, was this item, buried in a Caroleen community chat
column: “Mr. Oats, a railroad contractor from
Asheville,
was
here
last
week looking over the route to Cliffside, where the S. A. L. is to
be extended. There will be about three miles of road to build.”
Raleigh Haynes was having none of that. Only
three months later, he—and his Charlotte backers—revealed
plans for his own railroad (and hinted at greater
things to come, namely a power generating plant). This article from The
Sun was a reprint of two
stories that had appeared the previous week in The
Charlotte Observer.

The Rutherford Railway and Power Company,
a newly organized corporation, is building a short railway line in
Rutherford county,
connecting Cliffside, the new mill town, with the Seaboard Air Line
Railway. The road, the grading for which has just begun, is being
built mostly by Charlotte capital, the stockholders of the company
being interested in the cotton mills at Cliffside. B. D. Heath, of
Charlotte, is president of the company; R. R. Haynes, of Cliffside,
secretary and treasurer; John M. Scott, of Charlotte, traffic manager;
Mr. W. C. Heath, of Monroe, is another (sic) stockholders.
The new road will be only six or seven miles long and, extending
from Cliffside, will tap the Seaboard at a point mid-way between
Caroleen and Henrietta. Mr. Scott yesterday stated to an Observer
reporter that the road would be equipped with its own engines and
passenger coaches, but would have no freight cars, these to be furnished
by the Seaboard or other roads over which the product of the Cliffside
Mills and other freight is to be hauled. The construction of the
road and the equipment will cost $50,000 to $75,000.
There are several water powers beyond Cliffside
that will probably be developed in the near future and when they
are, the road will
be extended to them. So it may be that within a few years this new
road will be a very important industrial factor in the section of
the State in which it is being built.—Charlotte Observer, 24th.
In the list of officers of the Rutherfordton
Railway & Power
Company, which has begun the construction of a railroad in Rutherford
county, connecting Cliffside and the Seaboard Air Line Railway, published
in yesterday's Observer, some of the officers were omitted. A complete
list of the officers follows:
President, B. D. Heath, Charlotte; Vice-President
and Treasurer, R. R. Haynes, Cliffside; General Manager and Passenger
Agent, W.
C. Heath, Monroe; Traffic Manager, John M. Scott, Charlotte; Auditor,
Charles Haynes, Cliffside.—Charlotte Observer, 25th.