Published: March 27, 2026
By: Adam Burns
A significant piece of classic passenger railroading history has entered a new chapter as restoration work is set to begin on the former Norfolk & Western sleeping car Hollins College, the last surviving example of its type.
The car, a 12-roomette, 4-double-bedroom sleeper built by American Car & Foundry, arrived in March 2026 at the Hoosier Valley Railroad Museum, where it will serve as the centerpiece of a multi-year preservation effort.
The project is being led by the Norfolk & Western Business Car 300 Preservation Society, the same organization responsible for restoring Norfolk & Western business car No. 300. The group acquired the historic sleeper in early 2026 following a successful fundraising campaign and has already begun organizing volunteer work sessions to commence restoration this spring.
A file photo of Norfolk & Western sleeper "Hollins College."The Hollins College is particularly significant as the last intact Norfolk & Western ACF-built 12-4 sleeper in existence, making it an irreplaceable artifact of mid-20th century passenger rail travel.
Built in January 1950 for the Wabash Railroad, the car originally carried the name Western Sunset. At the time, streamlined sleeping cars like this were the backbone of overnight passenger service, offering a mix of private roomettes and larger bedrooms for long-distance travelers.
Following the Norfolk and Western Railway’s 1964 acquisition of the Wabash, the car entered N&W service, where it operated in revenue passenger service until 1969.
In the early 1970s, as traditional passenger service declined nationwide, the car found a new role. In 1972 it was reassigned to the railroad’s executive business train and renamed Hollins College, becoming part of a fleet used to host corporate guests and dignitaries.
This assignment added a unique layer of historical importance. The car operated alongside business car No. 300—now preserved—making the current restoration effort especially meaningful as it aims to reunite the two pieces of equipment in operation once again.
Under Norfolk Southern Railway ownership after the 1982 merger, the car continued in business train service into the 1980s, later being renumbered and retained for executive use.
The car was sold in 1987 to a private operator, Royal Rail, and eventually passed to the Morristown & Erie Railway in the early 2000s.
While stored in New Jersey, the car suffered from years of inactivity and, according to preservationists, experienced vandalism and general deterioration. By the mid-2020s, its future was uncertain, prompting the launch of the “Save the Hollins College” campaign.
The restoration effort is ambitious, with organizers estimating a three- to five-year timeline and a total cost of approximately $250,000 to return the car to operational condition.
Work will be carried out in multiple phases, including:
The car was transported nearly 1,000 miles from New Jersey to Indiana with the cooperation of several railroads, including Norfolk Southern Railway and regional partners, underscoring the broad industry support behind the project.
Once completed, the Hollins College is expected to operate in excursion and educational service, paired with restored business car No. 300. The goal is not only preservation, but active interpretation of the Norfolk & Western’s passenger-era legacy.
For preservationists, the project represents far more than saving a single railcar. It is an effort to bring back a tangible piece of the golden age of rail travel—one that once carried passengers across the Midwest and later hosted executives on one of America’s most respected railroads.
With restoration now underway, the Hollins College is poised to move from a long period of obscurity toward a future once again on the rails—this time as a living museum of classic American passenger service.
If you would like to donate towards the Norfolk & Western Business Car 300 Preservation Society's efforts to restore this car please click here.
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