Muscogee is a ghost town located twenty miles northwest of Pensacola, Florida, United States, in Escambia County, along the Perdido River. Named after the Muscogee Lumber Company, formed by Georgia lumber men, the town was founded in 1857 by a group of lumbermen to harvest timber from the surrounding pine forests. They and the following company clearcut the timber, and once the forests were gone, lumbering ended in this area.

In 1889, the Southern States Land and Lumber Company bought the founding company; harvested pine trees were brought to the mills from Florida and Alabama by river, oxcart and rail. The company had five locomotives and seventy cars, and built approximately 50 miles of logging railroad and spur track. Its tugboat worked on the Perdido River, maneuvering log booms. At the peak of production, the logging camps and associated four lumber mills employed over 1,000 men from the area. The town had a Southern States commissary and other stores, and schools to serve the children of the families.

Notable person

  • Jackie Cochran, aviator, was born in Muscogee in 1906.

References

Two other railroads that served Muscogee, both of which by 1928 were subsumed into the Frisco Railway:

  • Gulf, Florida and Alabama Railway (Deep Water Route) - Took over the railroad lines of the Southern States Lumber Co. in 1911, extending them southward on its own trackage into Pensacola and northward to Kimbrough, Alabama.
  • Gulf Ports Terminal Railway - A 1917 renaming of the merger of two shortlines (the Pensacola and Perdido, and the Pensacola, Alabama and Tennessee) connecting Pensacola, Millview, and Muscogee, with unrealized plans to build a line westward to Mobile.