Everything about The Michigan Northern Railway totally explained
The
Michigan Northern Railway (AAR reporting symbol
MIGN) was a railroad operating in the northwestern
Lower Peninsula of
Michigan. The main line stretched from a southern hub at
Grand Rapids to a northern terminus at
Mackinaw City. It operated from
1976 until
1986.
Description of railroad
The Michigan Northern's trackage consisted of the northern half of the main line built between
1867 and
1882 by a predecessor railroad, the
Grand Rapids and Indiana Railroad. During the
1900s, the spread of paved roads and altrernate means of transportation reduced the profitability of this line. Although the GR & I main line was consolidated into the
Pennsylvania Railroad and then the
Penn Central, usage continued to decline. The bankrupt Penn Central won permission from the federal government to abandon lengthy sections of trackage in northern Michigan.
An intervention by the
Michigan Department of Transportation prolonged the working life of the old GR & I main line. The state acquired most of the trackage and contracted with the
Michigan Northern (MN) to operate it. The MN also offered service on branch lines to
Charlevoix and
Traverse City during their period of service. At the railroad's northern terminus, the MN turned freight cars over to the Detroit & Mackinac Ry., which switched them onto the
SS Chief Wawatam, a
railroad ferry that crossed the
Straits of Mackinac. This allowed the MN to offer through freight service to Michigan's
Upper Peninsula. A controversial rate "flag-out" starting in 1978 resulted in a rush of overhead traffic from the ferry onto the Michigan Northern. This soon went away after nationwide railroad deregulation in 1980.
Ceased operations
The severe economic recession of the early
1980s forced the state of Michigan to reduce its subsidies to northern Michigan railroads and their customers. Michigan Northern service ended in fall 1984 from Reed City to Grand Rapids (Comstock Park). A section of the former MN trackage stretching from
Cadillac to
Petoskey continued in service under another contractual operator, the
Tuscola and Saginaw Bay Railway, while most of the MN's former trackage from Grand Rapids north to Cadillac was redeveloped as the
White Pine Trail State Park. MN cut back to the 33-mile stretch from Bay View to Pellston, which hadn't been purchased by the State of Michigan. MN set up a purchase agreement with Penn Central (which still owned the track), and established a truck-to-rail transfer facility at Pellston. Canadian steel trucked to Pellston was put on the MN there, and MN hauled it south to the Tuscola and Saginaw Bay interchange near Petoskey. This ended circa Jan. 1986. In summer 1986, MN ran some excursion trains. However, MN ran short on track payments to Penn Central, and MN's last train (cleaning out remaining equipment) left Pellston in April 1987.
Further Information
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