The Evansville and Crawfordsville Railroad Company (E&CR) was Evansville, Indiana's first railroad company. It had a long railway that connected those two places. It was renamed Evansville and Terre Haute Railroad in 1877. It went on to be consolidated with other railroads of the region into the Chicago & Eastern Illinois Railroad.
The railroad was originally chartered by an Act of the Indiana legislature on 1849-01-02 as the Evansville and Illinois Railroad Company (E&IR) to connect Evansville with the Ohio & Mississippi Railroad at Olney, Illinois via Princeton. This was amended on 1850-01-21 to extend the railway from Princeton to Vincennes instead, and to remove the authorisation to build to Mt Carmel, Illinois. A separate Wabash Railroad Company had been chartered to build a railroad from Vincennes to Crawfordsville, but it was merged into the E&IR on 1852-11-08, and the company name was changed by Act of the state legislature, authorising the merger, to finally become just the E&CR on 1853-03-04.
Section 1 of the railroad was the route from Evansville to Vincennes, built at an accumulated cost of as reported in 1854 by its president Samuel Hall. Section 2 of the railroad then went from Vincennes to Terre Haute, a route of . Section 3 of the railroad then extended from Terre Haute to Rockville, and Crawfordsville, for a further .
Section 2, from Vincennes to Terre Haute, was built under William D. Griswold and Chauncey Rose, was opened to through traffic on November 23, 1853, and completed in 1854. Rose donated his stock in the Terre Haute & Indianapolis Railroad to the Evansville and Crawfordsville to finance its construction.
Section 3 was built under the presidency of John Ingle Jr (for more on whom see Inglefield, Indiana). In 1854 there was a plan to proceed onwards past Crawfordsville to Fort Wayne. The Rockville to Crawfordsville section was extended under a 1869-06-02 charter as the Evansville, Terre Haute, and Chicago Railroad Company, to extend to a total distance from Rockville of to Danville, Illinois, under the presidency of Josephus Collett. This was completed by 1872.
Former 19th-century stops on the railroad were: