Chicago, St. Paul and Minneapolis Railway

The Chicago, St. Paul and Minneapolis Railway was authorized in 1879 to build a railroad from the Eastern border of Minnesota to Minneapolis.[1] It obtained the re-organized West Wisconsin Railway, which had built from Hudson, Wisconsin to Elroy, Wisconsin.[2] In 1881, its rights were granted to a new railroad organization, in a merger with the North Wisconsin Railway, to the Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis and Omaha Railway.[3][4][5] This route is currently part of the Union Pacific, and is the track from the crossing of the St. Croix River at Hudson, Wisconsin to East Minneapolis.

See also

References

  1. Minnesota. Office of Railroad Commissioner (1879). Annual Report. pp. 1–.
  2. Frank Pierce Donovan (May 2000). Iowa Railroads: The Essays of Frank P. Donovan, Jr. University of Iowa Press. pp. 138–. ISBN 978-0-87745-723-7.
  3. Robert Joseph Casey (1948). Pioneer railroad the story of the Chicago and North Western System. Robert Joseph Casey. pp. 151–. GGKEY:WK1RLEKNSCN.
  4. Grant, Roger - Minnesota's Good Railroad - The Omaha Road. Minnesota Historical Society. www.mnhs.org/mnhistory
  5. Minnesota (1881). General Laws of the State of Minnesota. Pioneer Company. pp. 916–.
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