Cheatham’s Corps and probably other commands in the Army of Tennessee utilized the Confederate railroad system for much of their transport from Mississippi to North Carolina in 1865. This is an extract from internet sources describing the railroad through Selma.
This 104-mile road had been started before the war as a connection in the Montgomery to Vicksburg route. With the Memphis & Charleston RR very vulnerable to being broken at Memphis or on the Tennessee River, it was critical for the South to create a second rail route across the lower Confederacy. This line was part of the solution, but lacked two sections -- 5 miles on the Tombigbee River and the 45 miles from Selma to Montgomery, filled in by the steamboats on the Alabama River. Except for the Tombigbee bridge, the road was completed in December 1862.
The road was chartered in 1850 and was intended to connect Selma, Alabama with the Mississippi state line. The Selma to Uniontown portion was completed before the war, but resources to finish the work were unavailable to the state or railroad.
Because it was a link in providing a cross-Confederacy railroad, it was made a high-priority project by the Confederate government and rail was provided by stripping lesser lines. The road was completed to *******n in December 1862 -- except for the lack of a bridge over the Tombigbee River. The gap forced the unloading of cars at Demopolis for a steamboat ride to McDowell's Bluff and reloading of the cars.
The gap between Selma and Montgomery, not a part of the Alabama & Mississippi Rivers, but part of the urgently needed trans-Confederacy line, also remained and was handled with another steamboat ride.
The name was changed to the Selma & *******n Railroad in 1864.

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