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{{short description|American railroad}}
{{Infobox SG rail
| railroad_name=Grand Trunk Western Railroad
{{Distinguish|Grand Trunk Railway}}
{{More citations needed|date=January 2023}}
| logo_filename = Grand Trunk Herald.png
{{Infobox rail
| logo_size= 150
|railroad_name = Grand Trunk Western Railroad
| map_size = 250
|logo_filename = Grand Trunk Western logo.svg
| locale=[[Michigan]], [[Illinois]], [[Indiana]], [[Ohio]]
|logo_size = 200
| start_year=1928
|locale = [[Michigan]], [[Illinois]], [[Indiana]], [[Ohio]]
| hq_city=[[Detroit, Michigan]]
|start_year = 1859
| marks=GTW
|end_year = 1991
}}
|hq_city = [[Troy, Michigan]]
|marks = GTW
|gauge = {{track gauge|ussg|allk=on}}
|map_caption = 1887 system map
|successor=[[Canadian National Railway]]}}
The '''Grand Trunk Western Railroad Company''' {{reporting mark|GTW}} was an American [[subsidiary]] of the [[Grand Trunk Railway]], later of the [[Canadian National Railway]] {{reporting mark|CN}} operating in [[Michigan]], [[Illinois]], [[Indiana]], and [[Ohio]]. Since a corporate restructuring in 1971, the railroad has been under CN's subsidiary [[holding company]], the [[Grand Trunk Corporation]]. Grand Trunk Western's routes are part of CN's Michigan Division.<ref name="CNA">[http://www.cn.ca/en/media-news-20070116.htm Canadian National CN-News]</ref> Its primary [[Main line (railway)|mainline]] between [[Chicago]] and [[Port Huron, Michigan]] serves as a connection between railroad [[interchange (freight rail)|interchanges]] in Chicago and rail lines in eastern [[Canada]] and the [[Northeastern United States]]. The railroad's extensive trackage in [[Detroit]] and across southern Michigan has made it an essential link for the [[automotive industry]] as a hauler of parts and [[Car|automobiles]] from manufacturing plants.


==Early history==
The '''Grand Trunk Western Railroad''' {{reporting mark|GTW}} is an important subsidiary of the [[Canadian National Railway]] (CN) and part of CN's Chicago Division (itself part of CN's Southern Region).
[[File:Grand Trunk Depot, Charlotte, Michigan.jpg|thumb|A 1912 postcard of the Grand Trunk Depot at [[Charlotte, Michigan]] built in 1885 by GTW predecessor Chicago and Grand Trunk Railroad]]


Grand Trunk Western grew out of a collection of 19th century Michigan rail lines<ref>[https://www.loc.gov/item/98688500/ Galbraith's railway mail service maps, Michigan.] Publ. Chicago 1897, c1898. Library of Congress. Accessed April 2020.</ref> which included:
It currently operates in [[Michigan]], [[Ohio]], [[Indiana]] and [[Illinois]], forming the CN mainline from [[Port Huron, Michigan]] to [[Chicago, Illinois]], as well as serving [[Detroit, Michigan]] and [[Toledo, Ohio]].
*Bay City Terminal Railway
*Chicago, Detroit and Canada Grand Trunk Junction Railroad
*Chicago and Grand Trunk Railway
*[[Chicago, Kalamazoo and Saginaw Railway]]
*Chicago and Kalamazoo Terminal Railroad
*Chicago and Lake Huron
*Chicago and Northeastern
*[[Detroit, Grand Haven and Milwaukee Railway]]
*Detroit and Huron Railway
*[[Grand Rapids Terminal Railroad]]
*[[Michigan Air Line Railway]]
*Muskegon Railway and Navigation Company
*Peninsular Railway of Michigan and Indiana
*Pontiac, Oxford and Northern Railroad
*[[Toledo, Saginaw and Muskegon Railway]]


===Mainline===
Since a corporate restructuring by CN in 1971 the railroad has been placed under a subsidiary holding company known as the [[Grand Trunk Corporation]].
Grand Trunk Western began as a route for the [[Grand Trunk Railway]] (GTR) to link its line to Chicago through lower Michigan. GTR's objective was to have a mainline from shipping ports in [[Portland, Maine]], to rail connections in Chicago through the southern part of the [[Province of Canada]] that would serve [[Toronto]] and [[Montreal]].<ref name="Railways">Mika, Nick and Helma. Railways of Canada, A Pictorial History. 1972. McGraw Hill Ryerson Ltd. {{ISBN|0-07-082815-6}}</ref><ref name="Mainline">{{cite web |url=http://www.michiganrailroads.com/RRHX/Stories/HistoryoftheGTWmainline.htm |title=reprinting of The History of the GTW Mainline from Port Huron to Chicago, Cleland B. Wyllie, The Inside Track, Sept. 1972 |publisher=Michiganrailroads.com |date=1961-05-18 |access-date=2014-07-22 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140216144728/http://www.michiganrailroads.com/RRHX/Stories/HistoryOfTheGTWMainLine.htm |archive-date=2014-02-16 |url-status=dead }}</ref>


In 1859 the Grand Trunk completed its route to [[Sarnia]], Canada West, and began a [[ferry]] service across the [[St. Clair River]] to Port Huron. GTR leased the Chicago, Detroit and Canada Grand Trunk Junction Railroad to reach Detroit and from there then ran over the [[Michigan Central Railroad|Michigan Central Railroad's]] line from Detroit into Chicago.<ref name="Mainline"/> It was on the line from Port Huron to Detroit that a 12-year-old [[Thomas Edison]] held his first job as a [[Newspaper hawker|newsboy]] and candy butcher onboard passenger trains.{{sfnp|Dorin|1977}} Grand Trunk established its own route to Chicago across Michigan when the [[New York Central Railroad]]'s [[William Henry Vanderbilt]] took over control of the Michigan Central in 1878.{{sfnp|Dorin|1977}} GTR sought to put together a route by acquiring three railroads it had already been sending some of its Chicago-bound trains on since 1877.<ref name="Mainline"/> The Chicago and Lake Huron Railroad, the Chicago and Northeastern Railroad (C&NE) and the Peninsular Railway of Michigan and Indiana together formed a direct route from Port Huron through [[Flint, Michigan|Flint]] and [[Lansing, Michigan]], to [[Valparaiso, Indiana]], where it connected into Chicago on the Pittsburgh, Fort Wayne & Chicago Railroad. However, Vanderbilt owned the Chicago and Northeastern section of the route from Flint to Lansing and charged Grand Trunk higher rates to move its freight over the line. Vanderbilt soon sold the C&NE to Grand Trunk when GTR bought the other two lines in 1879 and proposed building its own route between Flint and Lansing just north of Vanderbilt's line.<ref name="Mainline"/> Grand Trunk completed its own route into Chicago from Valparaiso in 1880 and incorporated the entire line from Port Huron to Chicago as the [[Chicago and Grand Trunk Railway]].<ref name="GTC">Hofsomer, Don. Grand Trunk Corporation, The Canadian National Railways in the United States 1971–1992. 1995. Michigan State University Press. {{ISBN|18790-94703}}</ref>
Grand Trunk Western's mainline runs between [[Chicago, Illinois]] and [[Port Huron, Michigan]]. It serves as a connection between the railroad interchanges in Chicago and the rail lines in eastern [[Canada]] and the [[Northeastern United States]]. The railroad also has lines from [[Detroit, Michigan]] to [[Durand, Michigan]], and from Detroit to Port Huron. Both lines connect with the Chicago-Port Huron main line. A route also connects Detroit with Toledo, Ohio, and a short branch connects the Chicago-Port Huron line with Kalamazoo. GTW's presence in Detroit and the Michigan cities of Flint, Pontiac and Lansing has made it an essential link for the [[automotive industry]]. For decades GTW has been a major hauler of automobiles and auto parts.


==History==
===More routes===
Over the next two decades through either leases or purchases Grand Trunk acquired several other branch lines in Michigan. It took control of the [[Michigan Air Line Railway]] through a lease in 1881. The line connected with the Chicago, Detroit and Canada Grand Trunk Junction at [[Richmond, Michigan]], and ran to [[Jackson, Michigan]], through [[Romeo, Michigan|Romeo]] and Pontiac.<ref name="Macomb">{{cite web |url=http://www.orchardtrail.org |title=orchard-trail-news-2008-Smr-1.pdf Platz, Richard. Rail Trails. Macomb Orchard Trail News, July 2008 |publisher=Orchardtrail.org |access-date=2014-07-22 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090706191653/http://www.orchardtrail.org/ |archive-date=2009-07-06 |url-status=dead }}</ref> When Grand Trunk purchased the [[Great Western Railway (Ontario)|Great Western Railway]] in 1882 it also acquired the Detroit Grand Haven and Milwaukee Railway (DGH&M), which Great Western had owned since 1877.<ref name="Quebec">{{cite web|url=http://faculty.marianopolis.edu/c.belanger/quebechistory/encyclopedia/GrandTrunkRailway.htm |title=The Quebec History Encyclopedia, Grand Trunk Railway |publisher=Faculty.marianopolis.edu |date=1923-01-30 |access-date=2014-07-22}}</ref> The DGH&M gave Grand trunk a route from Detroit through [[Pontiac, Michigan|Pontiac]], [[Durand, Michigan|Durand]] and [[Grand Rapids, Michigan|Grand Rapids]] to [[Grand Haven, Michigan]], where it began its [[Lake Michigan]] railcar ferry operations in 1902.<ref name="GTC"/> The DGH&M connected with the Chicago and Grand Trunk at Durand and with the Chicago, Detroit and Canada Grand Trunk Junction in Detroit. Durand became a major junction point for Grand Trunk when it continued to increase its mileage. It acquired the {{convert|96|mi|adj=on}} Toledo, Saginaw and Muskegon Railway from [[Ashley, Michigan]], to [[Muskegon, Michigan]], in 1888. GTR obtained trackage rights to reach the line at Ashley from [[Owosso, Michigan]], with the Toledo, Ann Arbor and North Michigan Railway, the predecessor of the [[Ann Arbor Railroad (1895–1976)|Ann Arbor Railroad]].<ref name="Mainline"/> Grand Trunk acquired a route into [[Saginaw, Michigan]], in 1890 with the lease of the Cincinnati, Saginaw & Mackinaw Railroad from Durand to [[Bay City, Michigan]]. The line was the last to be held as a leased property until January 1943, when it was fully merged into Grand Trunk Western.<ref name="Mainline"/>
[[Image:Grand Trunk Depot, Charlotte, Michigan.jpg|thumb|right|A 1912 postcard of the Grand Trunk Depot at [[Charlotte, Michigan]] built in 1885 by GTW predecessor Chicago and Grand Trunk Railway]]
In 1880 the Chicago and Grand Trunk Railway was created by Canada's [[Grand Trunk Railway]] (GTR) to build a line linking Canada to Chicago across lower Michigan. Grand Trunk, predecessor to the [[Canadian National Railway]] (CNR), wanted to avoid the expensive cost of using [[Cornelius Vanderbilt]]'s [[Michigan Central Railroad]] as a way into Chicago. The route eventually became the Grand Trunk Western ''Railway'' which was amalgamated into the Canadian National Railway in 1923.
[[Image: 1887 C&GT map only.jpg|thumb|right| An 1887 map of GTW predecessor rail lines]]
On November 1, 1928 CN created the Grand Trunk Western Railroad Company by consolidating most of its [[operating subsidiaries]] in Michigan, Illinois and Indiana, which had been operated under the umbrella name Grand Trunk Railway System:<ref name=Moodys>[[Moody's Transportation Manual]], 1992, p. 233, 237</ref>
* Grand Trunk Western Railway
* [[Bay City Terminal Railway]]
* [[Chicago and Grand Trunk Railway]]
* [[Chicago, Detroit and Canada Grand Trunk Junction Railroad]]
* [[Chicago and Kalamazoo Terminal Railroad]]
* [[Detroit, Grand Haven and Milwaukee Railway]]
* [[Detroit and Huron Railway]]
* [[Grand Rapids Terminal Railroad]]
* [[Michigan Air Line Railway]]
* [[Pontiac, Oxford and Northern Railroad]]
* [[Toledo, Saginaw and Muskegon Railway]]
* Chicago and Lake Huron
* Chicago and Northeastern


===Western Division===
The [[Cincinnati, Saginaw and Mackinaw Railroad]] was also part of the system, but only leased, not consolidated until January 1, 1943. The GTW absorbed the [[Muskegon Railway and Navigation Company]] on August 23, 1955.<ref name=Moodys/>
By 1900 Grand Trunk united the operations of the Chicago and Grand Trunk Railway and all of its lines in Michigan, Illinois and Indiana under a subsidiary company called the Grand Trunk Western ''Railway'' Company. The name derived from the fact that GTR's rail lines west of the St. Clair and Detroit rivers were referred to as its ''Western Division''. The lines had also operated under the name Grand Trunk Railway System.{{sfnp|Dorin|1977}}
Pontiac also continued to become another important junction point when the Pontiac Oxford and Northern Railroad was acquired in 1909. It ran north from Pontiac to [[Caseville, Michigan|Caseville]] in Michigan's thumb region.<ref name="Oakland">{{cite web |url=http://www.avonhistory2008.com/history_books/History_oakland_co_seeley/chapter15.htm |title=Oakland History, Means of Transportation |publisher=Avonhistory2008.com |access-date=2014-07-22 }}{{dead link|date=September 2017 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref> By 1910, GTW had a network of trackage connecting all of lower Michigan's major manufacturing cities when it acquired a lease on a short branch of the [[Chicago, Kalamazoo and Saginaw Railroad]] giving it access to [[Kalamazoo, Michigan]]. A few years before, in 1902, GTW had gained access into [[Ohio]] with its shared ownership of the [[Detroit and Toledo Shore Line Railroad]]. The line was a small carrier that had a multi-track mainline bridging Detroit and [[Toledo, Ohio]], and was purchased equally by GTW and the Toledo, St. Louis and Western Railroad, a predecessor of the [[Nickel Plate Road]].{{sfnp|Dorin|1977}} GTW eventually took complete control of the line when it bought Nickel Plate's half interest from its successor [[Norfolk and Western Railway]] in 1981.<ref name="Moodys">[[Moody's Transportation Manual]], 1992, p. 233, 237</ref>


===Terminal railroads===
Grand Trunk Western was the last U.S. railroad to have steam locomotives operating in regularly scheduled service. Its last steam engines operated until March 1961.
Grand Trunk Western also owned or co-owned [[switching and terminal railroad|terminal switching railroad]] companies in some of the cities it operated in. Beginning in 1905, it co-owned equal shares of the Detroit Terminal Railroad with New York Central (NYC). By the 1970s Detroit Terminal was suffering financial losses, and GTW negotiated to sell its share to NYC's successors [[Penn Central Transportation Company|Penn Central]] and [[Conrail]] until it dropped its ownership in 1981.<ref name="GTC"/> In Grand Rapids, Michigan, it acquired the [[Grand Rapids Terminal Railroad]] in 1906. In Bay City, Michigan, it owned the Bay City Terminal Railway and in Kalamazoo it took over the nearly {{convert|3|mi||adj=mid|-long}} Chicago and Kalamazoo Terminal Railroad by 1910. Prior to moving its ferry operations to Muskegon, GTW also acquired the railway [[Beltway|belt-line]] Muskegon Railway and Navigation Company in 1924. The company existed as a GTW subsidiary until 1955.<ref name="Navigate">[http://www.labellemodels.com/muskegon-railway-navigation-p-840.html Labelle Models Muskegon Railway and Navigation]{{dead link|date=July 2014}}</ref> For its entry into Chicago GTW, along with the [[Erie Railroad|Erie]], [[Wabash Railroad|Wabash]], [[Chicago and Eastern Illinois Railroad|Chicago and Eastern Illinois]] and [[Monon Railroad|Monon]] railroads, was a co-owner of the [[Chicago and Western Indiana Railroad]] (C&WI), beginning in 1883. It performed passenger and express car-switching duties at Chicago's [[Dearborn Station]]. GTW was also part of a group that created and shared ownership in the [[Belt Railway Company of Chicago]], which connects every rail line in the Chicago area.{{sfnp|Dorin|1977}}


===Canadian National===
The Grand Trunk Western and the [[New York, Chicago and St. Louis Railroad]] (Nickel Plate) co-owned the [[Detroit and Toledo Shore Line Railroad]]. It was a small carrier that had a multi-track mainline bridging Detroit and Toledo and served major industries. GTW eventually took complete control of the line from the [[Norfolk and Western Railway]], successor to the Nickel Plate, in April 1981, and consolidated it on October 1, 1981.<ref name=Moodys/>
By 1919, GTW's parent, Grand Trunk Railway of Canada, was suffering financial problems related to its ownership of the [[Grand Trunk Pacific Railway]]. The [[Canadian government]] [[nationalize]]d Grand Trunk and other financially troubled Canadian rail companies by 1923 and [[Consolidation (business)|amalgamate]]d them into a new government-owned entity, the Canadian National Railway.<ref name="Railways"/> GTW became a subsidiary of the new entity and was [[Corporation|reincorporated]] as the Grand Trunk Western ''Railroad'' Company on November 1, 1928, when nearly all of its lines were formally merged under the company.<ref name="Railways"/><ref name="GTC"/>


===River tunnel===
In June 1980 GTW purchased the [[Detroit, Toledo and Ironton Railroad]] from the [[Penn Central Corporation]], which increased its trackage around Detroit's industries and gave it routes into Ohio. The DT&I was fully merged into GTW in December 1983.<ref name=Moodys/>
{{Main|St. Clair Tunnel}}
GTW's predecessor Grand Trunk Railway also sought to expedite its rail service between Port Huron and Sarnia by constructing the world's first international submarine rail tunnel under the [[St. Clair River]]. The [[St. Clair Tunnel]], completed in 1891, approximately {{convert|6000|ft}} long and hand-dug, allowed Grand Trunk to discontinue its ferry service across the river. The tunnel was the last link in GTR's complete mainline from Chicago through southern Canada.<ref name="GTC"/> In 1992, Canadian National began construction of a new, larger tunnel next to the original tunnel to accommodate double-stacked [[intermodal freight transport|intermodal]] containers and tri-level auto carriers used in freight train service. The new tunnel was completed in 1994 and dedicated on May 5, 1995. GTW also gained trackage rights in 1975 to use [[Penn Central|Penn Central's]] [[Detroit River Tunnel]] between Detroit and [[Windsor, Ontario]]. Penn Central's successor [[Conrail]] sold the tunnel to CN and [[Canadian Pacific Railway]] in 1985. Eventually, CN sold its share of the Detroit tunnel in 2000 after the new St. Clair tunnel was completed.<ref name="GTC"/>


The railroad's first major line abandonment came in 1951 when it abandoned about half of the former Toledo, Saginaw and Muskegon Railway line from Muskegon to [[Greenville, Michigan]]. That same year, Grand Trunk Western bought its headquarters building at 131 West Lafayette Avenue in downtown Detroit.<ref name="GTC"/> At the end of 1970, GTW operated {{convert|2154|mi}} of track on {{convert|946|mi}} of road, and that year it reported 2,732 million net revenue ton-miles of freight and 49 million passenger-miles.
It also attempted to buy the [[Milwaukee Road]] to create a connection with its corporate cousin the [[Duluth, Winnipeg and Pacific Railway]]. It would have given GTW trackage from Chicago to northern [[Minnesota]] but its bid was rejected.


==Grand Trunk Corporation==
GTW major terminals and rail yards are located in Detroit, [[Battle Creek, Michigan|Battle Creek]], [[Durand, Michigan|Durand]], [[Flint, Michigan|Flint]], [[Port Huron, Michigan|Port Huron]], [[Flat Rock, Michigan|Flat Rock]] and [[Pontiac, Michigan|Pontiac]], as well as Elsdon Yard on Chicago's southwest side. In 1975 GTW opened an [[intermodal]] frieght terminal yard in Chicago known as ''Railport.'' The facility is in Chicago's [[Back of the Yards]] neighborhood and was formerly the [[Pennsylvania Railroad|Pennsylvania Railroad's]] Levitt Street Yard. GTW also increased intermodal operations in Detroit In 1976 when it expanded its [[Ferndale, Michigan]] railyard into an intermodal facility it called ''GT MoTerm''. The Elsdon Yard was closed and abandoned by 1990 and has been redeveloped.
After several years of Canadian National subsidizing the financial losses of Grand Trunk Western, a new holding company would be established by CN in 1971 to manage GTW. The [[Grand Trunk Corporation]] was created to shift full control of GTW operations to Detroit and begin a strategy to make the railroad profitable. CN's other American properties, the [[Central Vermont Railway]] and the [[Duluth, Winnipeg and Pacific Railway]] (DW&P), would also be placed under the new corporation initially for [[income tax|tax]] purposes.<ref name="GTC"/>


[[File:GTW 4623 GP9R.jpg|thumb|GTW GP9R #4623 sits in CN's Green Bay yard.]]
The St. Clair River Tunnel, completed in 1891 between Port Huron, Michigan and [[Sarnia, Ontario]], connected Grand Trunk with its parent CNR. On April 5, 1995, Canadian National opened a new, larger tunnel next to the original 1891 tunnel. The new tunnel can accommodate double stacked [[intermodal freight transport|intermodal]] containers and tri-level auto carriers used in freight service.
With the new corporation came a new autonomy for GTW from its parent CN. Grand Trunk Western had always shared equipment, color schemes and corporate logos with Canadian National. It shared CN's [[heraldry|herald]] styles with its own name on the previous "tilted herald" and "Maple Leaf" logos. In 1960, when CN launched its new image, GTW had its own initials incorporated into the "wet noodle" logo and followed with CN's black red/orange and gray locomotive color scheme. However, to show its new autonomy from CN, in 1971 GTW began receiving its new [[locomotive]]s in its famous bright-blue, red/orange and white scheme.<ref name="GTC"/> Most of GTW's freight cars also received the blue and white color scheme. With new management, the railroad implemented a new strategy to market to shippers and improve its performance. In 1975, the railroad adopted its company slogan: ''The Good Track Road.'' This slogan promoted GTW's track maintenance efforts at a time when many Eastern and Midwest railroads suffered from deferred maintenance. The company also encouraged better safety practices, which earned it the [[E.H. Harriman Award]] for safety five times in the 1980s.{{sfnp|Dorin|1977}}<ref name="GTC"/>


===Detroit, Toledo and Ironton merger===
At the end of 1970 GTW operated 946 miles of road on 2154 miles of track, that year it reported 2732 million net revenue ton-miles of freight and 49 million passenger-miles.
Part of the railroad's new strategy in the 1970s and 1980s was to seek new routes to expand and compete in the long-haul railroad market. After Conrail took over the railroad operations of Penn Central in 1976, the Penn Central Corporation sought to divest itself of its subsidiary, the [[Detroit, Toledo and Ironton Railroad]] (DT&I). After petitioning the [[Interstate Commerce Commission]], GTW won approval over a joint bid by Norfolk and Western and [[Chessie System]] to acquire the DT&I in June, 1980. The acquisition increased GTW's trackage around Detroit's industries, including [[Ford Motor Company|Ford Motor Company's]] large [[Ford River Rouge Complex|River Rouge Complex]], DT&I's [[classification yard|classification hump yard]] in [[Flat Rock, Michigan]] and routes south into Ohio with access to rail interchanges in [[Cincinnati, Ohio]]. As part of the ICC's approval, GTW was obligated to divest its half or buy Norfolk and Western's share in the Detroit and Toledo Shore Line. It purchased N&W's share in April 1981 for $1.9 million and completely merged the line into GTW later that same year.<ref name="GTC"/>


===Milwaukee Road===
In the mid 2000's Canadian National Railway began retiring many of the Grand Trunk's locomotives, and only a handful of locomotives (mostly GP38-2's) are still in service. Canadian National has not said publically if it will purchase any new locomotives for the railroad, or if the Grand Trunk image will fade away entirely.<ref>http://www.rrpicturearchives.net/locoList.aspx?id=GTW&Page=1</ref>
Grand Trunk Western sought to further expand its trackage by seeking to purchase one of the bankrupt [[Midwestern United States|Midwest]] railroads, the [[Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad|Milwaukee Road]] or the [[Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad|Rock Island]], in the 1970s. After inspecting the Rock Island's property and finding its trackage in need of costly repairs, GTW turned its attention in 1981 to acquiring the Milwaukee Road. GTW saw the acquisition of the Milwaukee Road (shorn of its Pacific Coast Extension and many of its midwestern branchlines) as an opportunity to expand its route further south and west to rail interchanges in [[Kansas City, Missouri]], and [[Louisville, Kentucky]]. It would also afford GTW the opportunity to connect directly with its corporate cousin, the DW&P, at [[Duluth, Minnesota]]. Instead of initially placing a bid for the Milwaukee Road and seeking immediate ICC approval, GTW embarked on a strategy to improve the line's revenue and track maintenance. GTW and Milwaukee Road would enter into a ''voluntary coordination agreement'' where GTW would direct more of its shipments over the Milwaukee Road's route. It would also launch a marketing effort promoting the merger. However, as the Milwaukee Road became more successful, two other potential bidders, the [[Soo Line Railroad]] and the [[Chicago and North Western Transportation Company|Chicago and North Western Railway]], petitioned the ICC to purchase the railroad. Despite GTW's efforts, the ICC rejected its bid and, after a further bidding war between the Soo and the C&NW, approved the Soo Line's acquisition of the Milwaukee Road. The two roads were merged in January, 1986.<ref name="GTC"/>


===Improving efficiency and downsizing===
==Passenger trains==
During the 1970s and 1980s, Grand Trunk Western would continue to improve its efficiency and embark on efforts to improve its operating ratio. It had consolidated some of its operations, including dispatching in Pontiac, locomotive maintenance in [[Battle Creek, Michigan|Battle Creek]] and railcar maintenance in Port Huron. Its intercity passenger train operations would be handed over to [[Amtrak]] on May 1, 1971. Responsibility for GTW's [[commuter rail]] operation in Detroit was turned over in 1974 to the regional transportation authority [[SEMTA]].{{sfnp|Dorin|1977}} GTW moved into the [[intermodal freight transport|intermodal]] freight business by creating intermodal transfer yards in Chicago in 1975, and suburban Detroit in 1978.<ref name="GTC"/> The railroad's president at the time, John H. Burdakin, was also a proponent of the [[Automatic Car Identification]] (ACI) system. It was a means to identify the location of shipments and equipment with [[bar code]] labels on the sides of freight cars and locomotives. The labels were read by automatic scanners at various rail yards. When [[Conrail]] was formed in 1976, GTW sought to acquire some of its routes in Michigan. It gained 151 miles (243&nbsp;km) of trackage between Saginaw and Bay City as well as near Muskegon and [[Midland, Michigan]].<ref name="GTC"/> Several of GTW's cuts in its expenditures came from reductions in its workforce through changes it negotiated in union work rules.<ref name="GTC"/> In 1978, it discontinued its [[Lake Michigan]] railcar ferry operations after several years of annual financial losses of over $1 million. By 1987, the company sold its headquarters building on Lafayette Avenue in Detroit and moved to the new office-park complex Brewery Park. The complex was developed on the site of the former [[Stroh Brewery Company|Stroh's Brewery]] near downtown Detroit. Locomotive performance was also enhanced with a rebuilding program of its [[EMD GP9]]s.<ref name="GTC"/>
Grand Trunk Western's primary passenger trains were ''The Maple Leaf'', the [[International Limited (passenger train)|''International Limited'']], the ''Inter-City Limited'' and ''The LaSalle'', which provided service between Chicago’s [[Dearborn Station]] and [[Toronto Union Station]]. In 1967, GTW introduced ''The Mohawk'' as a fast through train between Chicago and [[Brush Street Station]] in Detroit. Passenger operations were handed over to [[Amtrak]] in 1971. Amtrak's Chicago to Port Huron trains, known as its ''Blue Water Service'', operates over GTW's route between Battle Creek and Port Huron.
By the 1990s, several miles of routes and facilities were abandoned or sold to regional rail companies. GTW would eliminate all of the former Pontiac, Oxford and Northern line north of General Motors' [[Lake Orion]] manufacturing plant by 1985.<ref name="Polly">{{cite web |url=http://www.theoaklandpress.com/articles/2011/06/11/life/doc4df2c6663c674331147638.txt?mobRedir=false |title=Enjoy a Slice of the Polly Ann Trail from Oxford to Leonard, Jonathan Schechter, The Oakland Press, June 11, 2011 |publisher=Theoaklandpress.com |access-date=2014-07-22 }}{{Dead link|date=June 2024 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref> In 1987, the former [[Cincinnati, Saginaw, and Mackinaw]] and the former Detroit, Grand Haven and Milwaukee routes north of Durand were sold to the [[Huron and Eastern Railway|Central Michigan Railway]]. Elsdon Yard, GTW's primary terminal and rail yard in Chicago, had been downsized and closed by 1990. It had also sold almost the entire route of the Detroit, Toledo and Ironton in 1997 to the [[shortline railroad|shortline]] rail operator [[Railtex]]. By 1998, it had abandoned the entire former Michigan Air Line route except for a portion in [[Oakland County, Michigan]], which it sold to [[Coe Rail, Inc.|Coe Rail]]. With the end of SEMTA commuter rail service to downtown Detroit, in 1983, GTW abandoned and sold its trackage from the [[Milwaukee Junction]] area to downtown Detroit. That line was the former route to Brush Street Station and its railcar ferry dock on the Detroit River. It is known as the [[Dequindre Cut]], which has been transformed into an urban [[Greenway (landscape)|greenway]] [[rail trail]]. By the year 2000, engine terminals and maintenance facilities had also been eliminated or downsized in Chicago, Detroit, Durand, Pontiac, Port Huron and Battle Creek.


===CN North America===
GTW along with the [[Erie Railroad]], [[Wabash Railroad]], [[Chicago and Eastern Illinois Railroad]] and [[Monon Railroad]] was a co-owner of the [[Chicago and Western Indiana Railroad]], C&WI, which performed passenger and express car switching at [[Dearborn Station]] in Chicago. GTW was also part of a group that created and shared ownership in the [[Belt Railway Company of Chicago]] that connects every rail line in Chicago.
[[File:GTW Loco No.4900.jpg|thumb|Grand Trunk Western [[EMD GP38-2|GP38-2]] 4900 at [[Battle Creek, Michigan]] in the CN color scheme with GTW reporting marks|alt=]]
In December 1991, Canadian National announced a corporate image and restructuring program to consolidate all of its U.S. railroads under the '''CN North America''' brand. Grand Trunk Western,
along with other CN owned subsidiaries, would see their images replaced with the CN logo and name.<ref name="GTC"/> All GTW corporate identification and that of its new corporate cousins, the [[Illinois Central Railroad]] (acquired by CN in 1999) and [[Wisconsin Central Ltd.]] (acquired by CN in 2001), are referred-to with CN's name and corporate image. However, while each railroad's locomotives would eventually receive CN's logo and black, red-orange and white paint scheme, they would still retain their respective reporting marks. Despite the corporate re-branding, GTW's blue color scheme and its logo would persist on rolling stock and locomotives for several years while they were slowly either repainted or retired. CN also reintegrated managerial and some operational control of GTW, as it would gradually shift out of Detroit and into CN headquarters in Montreal.<ref name="GTC"/> GTW would continue to maintain some office and dispatching functions from offices in suburban [[Troy, Michigan]]. All the routes that make up GTW are part of CN's Midwest Division in its Michigan Zone. Grand Trunk Corporation, now formally headquartered at CN in Montreal, is the [[holding company]] for almost all of CN's U.S. properties, which include Grand Trunk Western, Illinois Central, Wisconsin Central, Duluth, Winnipeg & Pacific and [[Great Lakes Transportation]], which includes the [[Bessemer & Lake Erie Railroad]] and the [[Duluth, Missabe and Iron Range Railway]]. The [[Association of American Railroads]] has considered the Grand Trunk Corporation as a single, non-operating [[Class I Railroad]] since 2002. Grand Trunk Western still exists as a corporate entity, but can now be considered a [[paper railroad|company on paper]]. CN refers to GTW's routes and operations in its corporate communications as ''the former Grand Trunk Western territory.''<ref name="CNA"/>


==Locomotives==
{| {{Railway line header}}
===Steam===
{{BS-header|Former GTW Detroit Commuter Train Route||||280px}}
Grand Trunk Western was one of the last U.S. railroads to employ steam locomotives. It ran the last scheduled steam passenger train in the United States on March 27, 1960, on its train #21 from Detroit's Brush Street Station north to [[Durand Union Station]]. The run drew thousands of rail enthusiasts. With 3,600 passengers holding tickets, train #21 had to be run in two sections (as two separate trains) to accommodate the excess of passengers. GTW U-3-b class {{whyte|4-8-4}} Northern-type locomotive 6319 led the first section of train #21 with 15 passenger cars, and GTW {{whyte|4-8-4}} Northern 6322 pulled the second section with 22 passenger cars. Steam was used on some freight trains until 1961. {{sfnp|Dorin|1977}}<ref name="Ride">Wells, Charles Chauncey. Ride of a Lifetime, When Grand Trunk Western honored a cab-ride request for a 12-year-old. Classic Trains Magazine, Kalambach Publishing, Spring 2010</ref><ref name="Steam">{{cite web |url=http://www.steamlocomotive.com/northern/?page=cnr |title=Grand Trunk Western / Canadian National 4-8-4 Northern Type Locomotive |publisher=Steamlocomotive.com |date=1960-03-23 |access-date=2014-07-22 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140728133705/http://www.steamlocomotive.com/northern/?page=cnr |archive-date=2014-07-28 }}</ref>
{{BS-table}}
{{BS|BHF||[[Pontiac, Michigan|Pontiac]] GTW station}}
{{BS|HST||[[Bloomfield Township, Michigan|Bloomfield Township]] Long Lake Rd.}}
{{BS|HST||[[Bloomfield Hills, Michigan|Bloomfield Hills]] Charing Cross Rd.}}
{{BS|HST||[[Birmingham, Michigan|Birmingham]] GTW station}}
{{BS|HST||[[Royal Oak, Michigan|Royal Oak / Oakwood Blvd.]] 12 Mile Rd}}
{{BS|HST||[[Royal Oak, Michigan|Royal Oak / Downtown]] 11 Mile Rd}}
{{BS|HST||[[Pleasant Ridge, Michigan|Pleasant Ridge]] 10 Mile Rd}}
{{BS|HST||[[Ferndale, Michigan|Ferndale]] 9 Mile Rd}}
{{BS|mKRZo|||[[8 Mile Road]]|}}
{{BS|HST||[[Highland Park, Michigan|Highland Park]] (formerly [[Chrysler]])}}
{{BS|mKRZo|||[[M-8 (Michigan highway)|Davison Freeway]]|}}
{{BS|mKRZo|||[[Interstate 75|I-75 Chrysler Freeway]]|}}
{{BS|HST||[[Detroit, Michigan|Detroit / ]][[Milwaukee Junction]]}}
{{BS|KRZ4d|||[[Milwaukee Junction]] (GTW, N&W, NYC)|}}
{{BS|mKRZu|||[[Interstate 94|I-94 Ford Freeway]]|}}
{{BS|KBHFe||[[Detroit, Michigan|Downtown Detroit - ]][[Brush Street Station]]}}
|}
|}


[[File:Grand Trunk Western Roundhouse Durand Michigan 1909.JPG|thumb|A 1909 photograph of a Grand Trunk Western locomotive and crew at the [[Durand, Michigan]] roundhouse|alt=]]
The railroad also operated [[suburban]] [[Commuter rail|commuter trains]] between downtown Detroit and [[Pontiac, Michigan]] from August 1931 until January 1974 when the now defunct [[SEMTA]] (Southeast Michigan Transportation Authority) took over operating the commuter trains. Amtrak’s Detroit–Chicago trains now originate or terminate over this former commuter line making stops in the northern [[Detroit]] suburbs of Pontiac, [[Birmingham, Michigan|Birmingham]] and [[Royal Oak, Michigan]]. Part of GTW's former route in Detroit to Brush Street Station and its railcar ferry dock known as the [[Dequindre Cut]] has been transformed into an urban [[greenway]] [[rail trail]].
GTW's predecessor lines primarily used {{whyte|4-4-0}} American-type locomotives before the turn of the 20th century.{{sfnp|Dorin|1977}} Throughout its history, GTW has shared the same type and class designations of its locomotives with parents Grand Trunk Railway and Canadian National. Its locomotive road numbers would also be integrated into CN's roster sequence. By the first half of the 20th century, the railroad's largest steam power would be its Northern type {{whyte|4-8-4}} locomotives, called Confederations by CN. The locomotives, built by the [[American Locomotive Company]] in the 1930s and 1940s, had {{convert|73|in|m|3|adj=on}} driving wheels with 60,000 pounds of [[tractive effort]] and would be used in mainline freight and passenger service. Six GTW U-4-b class {{whyte|4-8-4}}s built by [[Lima Locomotive Works]] would have streamlined shrouding and {{convert|77|in|m|3|adj=on}} driving wheels, to be used only in passenger service.<ref name="Leonard">{{cite web|url=http://www.railarchive.net/rlsteam/gtw.htm |title=Richard Leonard's Steam Locomotive Archive, Grand Trunk Western |publisher=Railarchive.net |access-date=2014-07-22}}</ref>


Other steam locomotives in GTW's fleet at the time included the Mikado type [[2-8-2]]s built by [[Baldwin Locomotive Works]] and Alco, primarily used in mainline freight service. {{whyte|4-6-2}} [[Pacific]] type and {{whyte|4-8-2}} Mountain type locomotives, also built by Baldwin and Alco in the 1920s, and {{whyte|4-6-0}} Ten-Wheelers built around 1900 began in mainline service but later were eventually both found mostly on branch lines and [[mixed train]] service. GTW also had a variety of other models of steam engines, including several [[0-8-0]] and [[0-6-0]] switching locomotives used to move [[rolling stock]] around in rail yards.{{sfnp|Dorin|1977}}<ref name="Leonard"/>
==Car ferries==
GTW also operated [[train ferry|rail-barge]] service across the [[St. Clair River]] between Port Huron and Sarnia and a railcar ferry service across the [[Detroit River]] between [[Detroit, Michigan|Detroit]] and Windsor, Ontario. It also ran car ferries across [[Lake Michigan]] from [[Muskegon, Michigan]] to [[Milwaukee, Wisconsin]]. Originally the ferries originated in [[Grand Haven]], Michigan. The lake ferries were operated by GTW's subsidiary [[Grand Trunk Milwaukee Car Ferry Company]]. GTW's Lake Michigan car ferry fleet of steamers included the ''SS Grand Haven'', ''[[SS Milwaukee]]'' (which was lost in a storm in October 1929), ''Grand Rapids'', ''Madison'' and the ''City of Milwaukee''.


====Surviving steam locomotives====
The Detroit River ferries ceased running in 1975. They were replaced with trackage rights over the [[Penn Central]] through PC's [[Detroit River Tunnel]] between Detroit and [[Windsor, Ontario]]. Construction of Renaissance Center in Detroit in 1973 necessitated the demolition of GTW's Brush Street Station and carferry slip.
Some of GTW's steam engines survive today as static park displays or in operation. Three are park displays in Michigan; they include two {{whyte|4-6-2}} "Pacifics" at [[Durand, Michigan|Durand]] and [[Jackson, Michigan|Jackson]] and an {{whyte|0-6-0}} at Sidney [[Montcalm Community College Heritage Village]]. [[Steamtown National Historic Site]] has GTW No.&nbsp;[[Grand Trunk Western 6039|6039]], a U-1-c class {{whyte|4-8-2}} Mountain type. The [[Illinois Railway Museum]] in [[Union, Illinois]], has U-3-b class {{whyte|4-8-4}} No.&nbsp;[[Grand Trunk Western 6323|6323]], which was the last GTW steam locomotive to operate in regular service, and P-5-g class {{whyte|0-8-0}} No.&nbsp;8380 as part of its collection. [[Grand Trunk Western 4070|Locomotive No.&nbsp;4070]], an S-3-a class {{whyte|2-8-2}} [[USRA Light Mikado|Light Mikado]], has been used in excursion service by the Midwest Railway Preservation Society and {{as of|2021|lc=on}} was being restored back to service in [[Cleveland, Ohio]]. The [[Age of Steam Roundhouse]] in [[Sugarcreek, Ohio]], possesses U-3-b class No.&nbsp;[[Grand Trunk Western 6325|6325]], which was previously restored and operated on the [[Ohio Central System]] from 2001 until 2004. One of the two {{whyte|4-6-2}}s in Michigan, [[Grand Trunk Western Class K-4b|K-4b]] [[Grand Trunk Western 5632|5632]], is on display in Durand. J-3-b No.&nbsp;5030 was purchased in February 2021 by the [[Colebrookdale Railroad]], which has the intent of restoring it to operating condition after moving it to [[Boyertown, Pennsylvania]].<ref>{{Cite web|title=Our Equipment|url=https://www.colebrookdalerailroad.com/steam/our-equipment/|access-date=2021-04-04|website=Colebrookdale Railroad|language=en-US}}</ref> Although there was a third Pacific, [[Grand Trunk Western Class K-4a|K-4a]] [[Grand Trunk Western 5629|5629]], that was used on excursions from the 1960s to 1970s, it was scrapped in July 1987, in [[Blue Island, Illinois]].


===Diesel===
GTW discontinued the Lake Michigan carferries in October 1978. The St. Clair River ferries had initially been discontinued in 1891 when the first St. Clair Tunnel opened, but were reinstated in 1971 due to clearance problems for some cars at the tunnel. In 1995 when the larger St. Clair tunnel opened, the ferries ceased operation on the river. The CN/GTW ferries at Port Huron were the last railcar ferrying operation in Great Lakes waters.
[[File:GTW Loco No.4619.jpg|thumb|GTW 4619 heading south from [[Kalamazoo, Michigan|Kalamazoo]] near [[Battle Creek, Michigan|Battle Creek]] is one of the [[EMD GP9|GP9s]] the railroad rebuilt and designated a GP9R]]
The first [[diesel locomotive]] to operate in regular service in Michigan arrived in 1938. It was GTW 7800, an [[EMC SC]] switching locomotive to work in Detroit. Previously, in 1925, GTW acquired from EMC an early motorized gasoline-electric railcar known as a [[Doodlebug (rail car)|Doodlebug]]. The cars were self-propelled units resembling a passenger car, with a baggage compartment and a coach section for passengers that GTW used on its Detroit to Port Huron and Richmond to Jackson routes until 1953. GTW also had another gasoline-electric locomotive referred to as a box-cab, built by [[J. G. Brill Company|Brill]] in 1926. Originally built for the [[Long Island Rail Road]], GTW purchased it in 1934 and numbered it 7730. It was relegated to loading and unloading freight cars from GTW ferries in [[Milwaukee, Wisconsin]]. The unit was eventually converted to diesel power in 1939 and served in Milwaukee until 1960.<ref name="Milwaukee">{{cite web|url=http://www.donsdepot.donrossgroup.net/dr075.htm |title=Don's Depot, Grand Trunk Western at Milwaukee |publisher=Donsdepot.donrossgroup.net |date=2011-07-19 |access-date=2014-07-22}}</ref>


GTW continued to dieselize its locomotive fleet in the 1940s and 1950s, primarily with models from EMD, which was owned by one of GTW's largest freight customers, General Motors. The exceptions were approximately 40 Alco [[ALCO S-2|S-2]] and [[Alco S-4|S-4]] switching locomotives. Other diesel locomotives from EMD included several [[EMD NW2|NW2]]s, [[EMD SW900|SW900]]s and [[EMD SW1200|SW1200]]s, purchased for switching duties in rail yards and on [[branch line]]s. Grand Trunk Western's first mainline road diesel locomotives were almost two dozen EMD [[EMD F3|F3A]]s, acquired in 1948. They were followed in the 1950s by [[EMD GP9]]s and [[EMD GP18|GP18]]s for freight and passenger service. The GP9s were rebuilt by GTW's Battle Creek locomotive shops into GP9Rs, with improved internal components and modern low-nose cabs.
==Gallery==
<gallery>Image:Trainpicture300.jpg|Grand Trunk Western [[GP38-2]] Locomotive 4926 idels at siding in Pavilion, Michigan on April 14, 2008.
image:GTW Loco No.4619.jpg|GTW #4619 an [[EMD GP9|GP9]] heading south on the Kalamazoo spur track near Battle Creek, Michigan.
Image:GTW Loco No.4905.JPG|This [[GP38-2]] GTW Locomotive #4905 is sitting idle in Battle Creek, Michigan on July 7, 2008.
Image:grand trunk 6228.jpg|GTW 6228, a [[GP38-2]] seen here at [[Senatobia, Mississippi]] on December 4, 2006, is an example of GTW power.
Image:GT locomotive.PNG| GTW Locomotive 5801, an EMD GP38AC built in 1971.
Image:GTW.jpg|GTW boxcar at Marichal Joffre carload centre in [[Charny, Quebec|Charny]], [[Quebec]]. date taken January 26, 2011
Image:RDL - Wagon de queue.jpg|A GTW caboose, on permanent display at a tourist information center in [[Rivière-du-Loup]], [[Quebec]].
<!-- Deleted image removed: Image:GT_Blue_GP382_4906_WyandotteMI.jpg| [[GP38-2]] #4906 is seen here sitting idle at CN Ford Yard (ex-DT&I) in [[Wyandotte, Michigan]] on February 18, 2011. -->
</gallery>


====Second-generation diesel locomotives====
==Grand Trunk Corporation==
[[File:GTW 5812.jpg|thumb|GTW 5812, an [[EMD GP38-2]], in [[Waukesha, Wisconsin]], on May 16, 2020.]]
Grand Trunk Western has always shared equipment, color schemes and corporate logos with parent company Canadian National. It followed CN's [[heraldry|herald]] styles with its own name on the previous "tilted shield" and "Maple Leaf" logos. In 1960, GTW had its own initials incorporated into the "wet noodle" logo. However, in 1971 GTW broke tradition and began receiving its new [[locomotives]] in its now famous bright blue, red/orange and white scheme. In 1975 the railroad adopted its company slogan: ''The Good Track Road.'' This slogan promoted GTW's track maintenance efforts, at a time when many Eastern railroads suffered from deferred maintenance.
The next new motive power to be acquired was the [[EMD SD40]] in 1969. These were GTW's first six-axle locomotives, and most lasted on GTW for at least four decades.<ref name="roster" /> GTW's most-dominant diesel locomotive in its fleet was the {{convert|2,000|hp|MW|adj=on}} [[EMD GP38]]. The first GP38s were delivered in 1971, and were also the first locomotives to wear GTW's blue, red/orange and white scheme.{{sfnp|Dorin|1977}} It proved to be a versatile locomotive for GTW, used in switching and mainline service. The [[EMD GP38AC|GP38AC]] was the first version to be purchased by GTW which had an [[alternating current]] [[alternator]] instead of the typical [[direct current]] [[Electric generator|generator]]. This was followed by the acquisition of several [[EMD GP38-2|GP38-2]]s into the 1980s. GTW also purchased its new locomotives without [[dynamic braking (locomotive)|dynamic brakes]]?{{citation needed|date=October 2023}} since the company did not have any significant [[Grade (climbing)|grades]] on its routes. GTW also inherited several locomotives, including its first {{convert|3,000|hp|MW|adj=on}} [[EMD GP40-2|GP40-2]]s, from its acquisition of the [[Detroit, Toledo and Ironton Railroad]]. It also rostered its first [[EMD GP7]]s when it obtained full ownership of the [[Detroit and Toledo Shore Line Railroad]], in 1981.<ref name="roster">{{cite web|url=http://www.thedieselshop.us/GTW.HTML |title=The Diesel Shop, Grand Trunk Western, All Time Diesel Roster (prior to 1982) |publisher=Thedieselshop.us |access-date=2014-07-22}}</ref> GTW management found it cost-effective to lease or purchase second-hand diesel locomotives. It purchased several former Rock Island GP38-2s after that railroad closed in 1980. [[Union Pacific]] sold GTW several surplus former [[Missouri Pacific]] SD40-2s after it had acquired that railroad.<ref name="roster" /> It was also common for GTW and CN to share steam and diesel locomotives when either of them was in need of extra motive power.{{sfnp|Dorin|1977}} GTW also sent diesel locomotives for use to its fellow GTC subsidiary railways Central Vermont and Duluth, Winnipeg and Pacific. {{As of|2012}}, many GTW GP38s still wore their original blue, red/orange and white paint scheme and were found operating throughout CN's other US subsidiaries. However, since 1991, CN gradually retired, sold or applied its own paint scheme to GTW locomotives. {{As of|2020|12}}, the last GTW-painted SD40-2, 5936, was still operated by CN.


==Facilities==
In December 1991, Canadian National began a corporate image program to consolidate all of its U.S. railroads under the '''CN North America''' brand. Grand Trunk Western along with other CN owned subsidiaries would see their images replaced with the CN logo and name. All GTW corporate identification and that of its new corporate cousins the [[Illinois Central Railroad]], IC (acquired by CN in 1999) and [[Wisconsin Central Ltd.]], WC (acquired by CN in 2001) are referred to with CN’s corporate image. However, while each railroad’s locomotives would receive CN’s logo and black, red-orange and white paint scheme they would still retain their respective reporting marks, GTW, IC or WC, on each of their locomotives.
[[File:Grand Trunk Western Railroad Shop-Battle Creek.JPG|thumb|The first locomotive in Grand Trunk Western's Battle Creek locomotive shops. c. 1908]]
Over its history, Grand Trunk Western has had rail yards and engine terminals located in Detroit, [[Battle Creek, Michigan|Battle Creek]], Durand, Flat Rock, Flint, Grand Rapids, Pontiac, Port Huron, [[Blue Island, Illinois]] and Chicago. In each of these cities, GTW had engine terminals and facilities for locomotive maintenance, including roundhouses and turntables. Prior to 1900, the railroad constructed its major locomotive repair shops in Battle Creek, while railcar repair and maintenance was handled by GTW's Port Huron car shops.{{sfnp|Dorin|1977}}<ref name="GTC"/> The Battle Creek Shops were upgraded and modernized in 1907. The original Port Huron car shops were destroyed by fire in 1913 and rebuilt on a new 55-acre site at Griswold Road and 32nd Street. Its major freight yards were Durand Yard and Pontiac Yard, located in the two Michigan cities that were major GTW junction points. There is also Nichols Yard in Battle Creek,<ref name="Ride"/> Tunnel Yard in Port Huron, Torrey Yard near Flint and East Yard near the [[Milwaukee Junction]] area in the Detroit enclave of [[Hamtramck, Michigan|Hamtramck]]. City Yard was the railroad's rail yard on the Detroit riverfront adjacent to [[Brush Street Station]] and its ferry slip dock. The yard, dock and station were eventually all removed and redeveloped by 1975 for construction of the Renaissance Center. It also obtained the former Penn Central Winona Yard in Bay City when it acquired that trackage from Conrail, in 1976.<ref name="GTC"/>


On Chicago's southwest side, GTW's Elsdon Yard served as its primary yard and locomotive facility there since the railroad laid tracks into the city in the 1880s. GTW also had a smaller transfer yard south of Chicago near rail junction Blue Island, Illinois. In 1975, GTW opened an [[intermodal freight transport|intermodal]] freight terminal yard in Chicago known as ''Railport.'' The facility is in Chicago's [[Back of the Yards]] neighborhood and was formerly the [[Pennsylvania Railroad|Pennsylvania Railroad's]] Levitt Street Yard. GTW also increased intermodal operations in Detroit In 1976, when it expanded its [[Ferndale, Michigan]] railyard into an intermodal facility it called ''GT MoTerm''.<ref name="GTC"/> The Elsdon Yard was closed and abandoned by 1990 and has been redeveloped. Detroit, Toledo and Ironton's former hump classification yard in Flat Rock, which GTW acquired from its 1983 merger with DT&I. It still serves as an important freight hub for Canadian National. Several interlocking and crossing gate towers were also maintained by GTW through its history.
Despite the corporate re-branding, for many years GTW's blue colors and "GT" logo persisted on rolling stock and locomotives. The image has become more rare with each passing year, however.


==Passenger trains==
CN’s subsidiary [[Grand Trunk Corporation]] now controls almost all of CN's U.S. operations which include Grand Trunk Western, Illinois Central, Wisconsin Central, Duluth, Winnipeg & Pacific and [[Great Lakes Transportation]], GLT, which includes the [[Bessemer & Lake Erie Railroad]], B&LE and the [[Duluth, Missabe and Iron Range Railway]], DMIR. The [[Association of American Railroads]] has considered the Grand Trunk Corporation as a single [[Class I railroad]] since 2002.
[[File:Durand_Union_Station_2.jpg|thumb|[[Durand Union Station]] in [[Durand, Michigan]], a former major GTW hub.]]
Grand Trunk Western's primary passenger trains were the ''[[Maple Leaf (GTW train)|Maple Leaf]]'', the [[International Limited (passenger train)|''International Limited'']], the ''Inter-City Limited'' and ''The LaSalle'', which provided service between Chicago's [[Dearborn Station]] and [[Toronto Union Station]]. In 1967, GTW introduced ''The Mohawk'' as a fast through train between Chicago and [[Brush Street Station]] in Detroit. Passenger operations were handed-over to [[Amtrak]] (National Railroad Passenger Corporation) on May 1, 1971. Amtrak's Chicago to Port Huron trains, known as its ''[[Blue Water (train)|Blue Water Service]]'', operate over GTW's route between Battle Creek and Port Huron.


The railroad also operated [[suburban]] [[Commuter rail|commuter trains]] between downtown Detroit and [[Pontiac, Michigan]], from August, 1931 until January 1974, when the now-defunct [[Suburban Mobility Authority for Regional Transportation|Southeast Michigan Transportation Authority]] (SEMTA) took over [[SEMTA Commuter Rail|operating the commuter trains]]. Amtrak's Detroit–Chicago trains now originate or terminate over this former commuter line, making stops in the northern Detroit suburbs of Pontiac, [[Troy, Michigan|Troy]] and [[Royal Oak, Michigan]]. Part of GTW's former route in Detroit, to [[Brush Street Station]] and its railcar ferry dock known as the [[Dequindre Cut]], has been transformed into an urban [[Greenway (landscape)|greenway]] [[rail trail]].
==Note==

{{reflist}}
==Car ferries==
===Lake Michigan===
[[File:GT Grand Rapids 01.jpg|thumb|The carferry steamship ''Grand Rapids'' at Muskegon, Michigan in 1980]]
Grand Trunk Western was one of three Michigan railroads, along with the Ann Arbor Railroad and [[Pere Marquette Railway]], that operated separate [[train ferry|railcar ferry]] service across [[Lake Michigan]] between Michigan and [[Wisconsin]]. Loading rail cars onto ships that had rails mounted to their decks, and ferrying the cars east and west across Lake Michigan, allowed railroads to bypass the congested rail interchanges in Chicago and move time-sensitive freight more quickly.

GTW's ferry service was originally operated by the former [[Detroit, Grand Haven and Milwaukee Railway]] (DGH&M), which Grand Trunk Railway acquired in 1882. DGH&M initially had agreements with ferry companies operating on Lake Michigan to transfer its passengers and freight onto ships bound for Milwaukee from Grand Haven, Michigan.<ref name="Lake">Great Lakes Car Ferries–Grand Trunk, Suite101.com, September 18, 2010</ref> GTW's rail car ferry service began in 1902 with an operating agreement with the [[steamship]] company, Crosby Transportation Company. The railway constructed [[ferry slip|ferry slip docks]] at Grand Haven and Milwaukee and had two steamships built, the SS ''Grand Haven'' and {{ship|SS|Milwaukee}}, capable of carrying 26 freight railcars. In 1905, Grand Trunk assumed Crosby's interest and incorporated the [[Grand Trunk Milwaukee Car Ferry Company]] to operate the ships. In Milwaukee, GTW interchanged rail cars with the Milwaukee Road, Chicago and North Western and the Soo Line.<ref name="Milwaukee"/> The ownership of the ferry company was shared with the Pennsylvania Railroad (PRR) from 1927 until 1954, and sailed as the ''Grand Trunk-Pennsylvania Route''.<ref name="Lake"/> The SS ''Milwaukee'' sank, loaded with rail cars, in a storm after departing Milwaukee in October, 1929, with everyone aboard lost. Three new ships, the ''Grand Rapids'', ''Madison''and the ''City of Milwaukee'', constructed between 1926 and 1931, replaced the ''Grand Haven'' and ''Milwaukee''.{{sfnp|Dorin|1977}} The ships required a crew of 34 and, with strengthened ice-breaking hulls, operated year-round.<ref name="GTC"/> At PRR's request, GTW moved its Michigan docks to [[Muskegon, Michigan]], in 1937, where its subsidiary, the Muskegon Railway and Navigation Company, initially operated ferry loading and switching operations. GTW had also changed its route into Muskegon, with trackage rights over PRR's line from Grand Rapids.

By 1968, GTW was shipping over {{Convert|800,000|ST|LT t}} of freight a year across Lake Michigan. However, the ferry service began running deficits of over $1 million annually in the 1970s and, in 1975, GTW petitioned the ICC to end the service. Permission was eventually granted, and the last ferry sailed on October 31, 1978.<ref name="GTC"/>

===River ferries===
====St. Clair River====
The first river ferry service began in 1860, when the Grand Trunk Railway's tracks reached Sarnia, Ontario, and it had to transfer its passengers and freight across the St. Clair River to Port Huron, and onto the Chicago, Detroit and Canada Grand Trunk Junction Railroad to Detroit or its Chicago and Grand Trunk Railway route to Chicago. GTR started its St. Clair River ferry service with a type of [[swing ferry-barge]]. The barge was anchored by {{convert|1,000|ft}} of chain. When the barge was loaded, it was released into the current to dock on the opposite side of the river. When this proved unreliable, Grand Trunk replaced it with the wood-burning steamer ''International II'' in 1872.<ref name="River">Great Lakes Car Ferries – The River Ferries, Suite101.com, June 18, 2010</ref> It soon was joined in service by the steamer ''Huron''. The ferries continued until 1891, when Grand Trunk completed its rail tunnel connecting Sarnia and Port Huron under the river. However, GTW and CN reinstated the ferry service 80 years later, in 1971, with its ''[[Car float|Rail-Barge]]'' service to accommodate the larger freight railcars that were higher than the 1891 tunnel's [[Structure gauge|height clearance]]. The St. Clair river barges discontinued service again in 1995, after the new, larger St Clair Tunnel was completed.<ref name="River"/>

====Detroit River====
Grand Trunk's river ferry service on the Detroit River connecting Detroit and [[Windsor, Ontario]] was also inherited from its 1882 purchase of the Great Western Railway. Great Western's ferry service began after its rails reached Windsor in 1853. Because Great Western's [[track gauge]] of {{Track gauge|5ft6in|lk=on}} was different from the [[Standard gauge|standard American gauge]] of {{Track gauge|56.5in}}, it had to transfer its cargo off railcars and onto the ships. By the 1860s, Great Western made its railway [[dual gauge]] by adding a third rail to its tracks to accommodate rail cars of both gauges. Its first side-wheel steam ferry, the ''Great Western'', arrived in 1866, and when first launched was the largest steel vessel on the [[Great Lakes]].<ref name="River"/> The [[Wabash Railroad]] contracted with Grand Trunk in 1897 to use its ferry service to connect Wabash's own route from Detroit through [[Southwest Ontario]] to [[Buffalo, New York]]. Wabash started its own service after 1910, when it acquired Michigan Central's ferries after that railroad opened the Detroit River Tunnel.<ref name="River"/> Eventually, GTW's parent CN took over sole responsibility for ferry operations on the Detroit and St. Clair rivers.{{sfnp|Dorin|1977}} The Detroit River ferry operation ceased running in 1975, when GTW was granted trackage rights to use [[Penn Central]]'s [[Detroit River Tunnel]] to connect with CN in Windsor. The start of construction of the [[Renaissance Center]] in Detroit in 1973 necessitated the removal of GTW's Detroit ferry-slip docks.<ref name="GTC"/>
During the more than 130 years of rail car ferry operations on the Detroit and St. Clair rivers, all the major railroads, including Michigan Central, Pere Marquette, Wabash and Canadian Pacific, had ferry operations on the Detroit River. The GTW/CN rail car ferry service was the last to operate in the Great Lakes when it ended operations on the St Clair River in 1995.<ref name="River"/>

==Gallery==
<gallery>
File:Trainpicture300.jpg|Grand Trunk Western [[GP38-2]] Locomotive 4926 idles at a siding in Pavilion, Michigan on April 14, 2008.
File:GT 4934.JPG|GP38 #4934 in Iowa.
File:GTW Loco No.4905.JPG|This [[GP38-2]], GTW 4905 is sitting idle in Battle Creek, Michigan on July 7, 2008.
File:Grand trunk 6228.jpg|GTW 6228, a [[GP38-2]] at [[Senatobia, Mississippi]] on December 4, 2006, would just after this receive new paint in the CN colors.
File:Canadian National 4618.jpg|A GTW GP9R in the Canadian National color scheme.
File:GTW Caboose 5 12.jpg|GTW Caboose 75017 on display in [[Imlay City, Michigan]].
File:Grand Trunk Caboose.jpg|A restored GTW wood caboose on display at Lake Odessa, Michigan
File:Grand Trunk Western (GTW) boxcar.jpg|GTW boxcar at Maréchal Joffre carload centre in [[Charny, Quebec]]. date taken January 26, 2011
File:RDL - Wagon de queue.jpg|A GTW caboose, on permanent display at a tourist information center in [[Rivière-du-Loup]], Quebec.
File:Saline Michigan Train Depot & Grand Trunk Caboose.JPG|The former GTW depot at Saline, Michigan with a restored GTW wood caboose.
File:Double Whistle post.jpg|The whistle post sign style of GTW on a double whistle post at Battle Creek, Michigan
File:Conrail FSP short lines.jpg|A 1976 map of the proposed routes to be turned over by Conrail on the GTW, DT&I and P&LE.
</gallery>

==Notes==
{{reflist|2}}


==References==
==References==
* {{cite book| title=Grand Trunk Western| author=Dorin, Patrick C.| year=1976| isbn=0-87564-716-2 }}
* {{cite book |title=The Grand Trunk Western Railroad : A Canadian National Railway |url=https://archive.org/details/grandtrunkwester0000dori |url-access=registration |last=Dorin |first=Patrick C. |date=1977 |edition=1st |location=Seattle, WA. |publisher=Superior Publishing Co.|isbn=978-0-8756-4526-1 |oclc=2837267 }}
* {{cite book| title=Grand Trunk Corporation, Canadian National Railways in the United States, 1971-1992| author=Hofsommer, Don L. }}
* {{cite book| title=Grand Trunk Corporation, Canadian National Railways in the United States, 1971-1992| author=Hofsommer, Don L.| year=1995| isbn=0-87013-406-X}}
* {{cite book| title=Where the Rails Cross, A History of Durand| author=Quastler, I. E.| year=2005| isbn=0-9769858-0-2}}
* {{cite book| title=Remembering The Grand Trunk Western|author1=Quastler, I. E. |author2=Whipp, C.P.| year=2010| isbn=978-0-9769858-3-9}}
* {{cite book| title=Grand Trunk Western in Color Volume 1: Steam & Green 1941-1961| author=Jerry A. Pinkepank| year=2004| isbn=1-58248-112-1}}
* {{cite book| title=Grand Trunk Western in Color: Visual Redesign, 1962-1982 (Volume 2)| author= Jerry A. Pinkepank| year=2004| isbn=1-58248-123-7}}
* {{cite book| title=The Back Shop Illustrated, Volume 2: Midwest Region| author=Starr, Timothy| year=2022}}
* {{cite book| title=Grand Trunk Western: An Illustrated History| author= Quastler, I. E.| year=2009| isbn=978-0-946985-82-1}}
* {{cite book| title=Railways of Canada| author= Mika, Nick and Helma| year=1972| isbn=0-07-082815-6}}


==External links==
==External links==
{{Portal|Railways}}
{{Portal|Railways}}
{{Commons category}}
* [http://www.gtwhs.org/ Grand Trunk Western Historical Society]
* [http://www.lib.msu.edu/uri-res/N2L?urn:x-msulib::vvl:DB37575 "Grand Trunk Western." on the February 10, 1948 episode of ''Western Michigan at Work'' radio program on WKZO]. 14 min., 38 seconds.
* [http://www.shorpy.com/node/10045?size=_original/ Photo of Grand Trunk Ferry crossing the Detroit River ]
*[http://www.gtwhs.org/ Grand Trunk Western Historical Society]
*[http://www.shorpy.com/node/10045?size=_original/ Photo of Grand Trunk Ferry crossing the Detroit River ]


{{Chicago Rail}}
{{Illinois railroads}}
{{Former Class I}}
{{Former Class I}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Grand Trunk Western Railroad}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Grand Trunk Western Railroad}}
[[Category:Grand Trunk Western Railroad| ]]
[[Category:Grand Trunk Western Railroad| ]]
[[Category:Grand Trunk Railway subsidiaries]]
[[Category:Grand Trunk Railway subsidiaries]]
[[Category:Canadian National Railway subsidiaries]]
[[Category:Canadian National Railway subsidiaries]]
[[Category:Former Class I railroads in the United States]]
[[Category:Michigan railroads]]
[[Category:Michigan railroads]]
[[Category:Indiana railroads]]
[[Category:Indiana railroads]]
[[Category:Illinois railroads]]
[[Category:Illinois railroads]]
[[Category:Ohio railroads]]
[[Category:Ohio railroads]]
[[Category:Companies based in Detroit, Michigan]]
[[Category:Companies based in Detroit]]
[[Category:Former Class I railroads in the United States]]
[[Category:Predecessors of the Grand Trunk Railway]]
[[Category:Predecessors of the Grand Trunk Railway]]
[[Category:Railway companies established in 1928]]
[[Category:Railway companies established in 1928]]
[[Category:Companies operating former Grand Trunk Railway lines]]
[[Category:American companies established in 1928]]
[[Category:Ontario railways]]
[[Category:Ontario railways]]
[[Category:Railroads in the Chicago Switching District]]
[[Category:Railroads in the Chicago metropolitan area]]
[[Category:Non-operating common carrier freight railroads in the United States]]

[[fr:Grand Trunk Western Railroad]]

Latest revision as of 01:46, 20 December 2024

Grand Trunk Western Railroad
Overview
HeadquartersTroy, Michigan
Reporting markGTW
LocaleMichigan, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio
Dates of operation1859–1991
SuccessorCanadian National Railway
Technical
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge

The Grand Trunk Western Railroad Company (reporting mark GTW) was an American subsidiary of the Grand Trunk Railway, later of the Canadian National Railway (reporting mark CN) operating in Michigan, Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio. Since a corporate restructuring in 1971, the railroad has been under CN's subsidiary holding company, the Grand Trunk Corporation. Grand Trunk Western's routes are part of CN's Michigan Division.[1] Its primary mainline between Chicago and Port Huron, Michigan serves as a connection between railroad interchanges in Chicago and rail lines in eastern Canada and the Northeastern United States. The railroad's extensive trackage in Detroit and across southern Michigan has made it an essential link for the automotive industry as a hauler of parts and automobiles from manufacturing plants.

Early history

[edit]
A 1912 postcard of the Grand Trunk Depot at Charlotte, Michigan built in 1885 by GTW predecessor Chicago and Grand Trunk Railroad

Grand Trunk Western grew out of a collection of 19th century Michigan rail lines[2] which included:

Mainline

[edit]

Grand Trunk Western began as a route for the Grand Trunk Railway (GTR) to link its line to Chicago through lower Michigan. GTR's objective was to have a mainline from shipping ports in Portland, Maine, to rail connections in Chicago through the southern part of the Province of Canada that would serve Toronto and Montreal.[3][4]

In 1859 the Grand Trunk completed its route to Sarnia, Canada West, and began a ferry service across the St. Clair River to Port Huron. GTR leased the Chicago, Detroit and Canada Grand Trunk Junction Railroad to reach Detroit and from there then ran over the Michigan Central Railroad's line from Detroit into Chicago.[4] It was on the line from Port Huron to Detroit that a 12-year-old Thomas Edison held his first job as a newsboy and candy butcher onboard passenger trains.[5] Grand Trunk established its own route to Chicago across Michigan when the New York Central Railroad's William Henry Vanderbilt took over control of the Michigan Central in 1878.[5] GTR sought to put together a route by acquiring three railroads it had already been sending some of its Chicago-bound trains on since 1877.[4] The Chicago and Lake Huron Railroad, the Chicago and Northeastern Railroad (C&NE) and the Peninsular Railway of Michigan and Indiana together formed a direct route from Port Huron through Flint and Lansing, Michigan, to Valparaiso, Indiana, where it connected into Chicago on the Pittsburgh, Fort Wayne & Chicago Railroad. However, Vanderbilt owned the Chicago and Northeastern section of the route from Flint to Lansing and charged Grand Trunk higher rates to move its freight over the line. Vanderbilt soon sold the C&NE to Grand Trunk when GTR bought the other two lines in 1879 and proposed building its own route between Flint and Lansing just north of Vanderbilt's line.[4] Grand Trunk completed its own route into Chicago from Valparaiso in 1880 and incorporated the entire line from Port Huron to Chicago as the Chicago and Grand Trunk Railway.[6]

More routes

[edit]

Over the next two decades through either leases or purchases Grand Trunk acquired several other branch lines in Michigan. It took control of the Michigan Air Line Railway through a lease in 1881. The line connected with the Chicago, Detroit and Canada Grand Trunk Junction at Richmond, Michigan, and ran to Jackson, Michigan, through Romeo and Pontiac.[7] When Grand Trunk purchased the Great Western Railway in 1882 it also acquired the Detroit Grand Haven and Milwaukee Railway (DGH&M), which Great Western had owned since 1877.[8] The DGH&M gave Grand trunk a route from Detroit through Pontiac, Durand and Grand Rapids to Grand Haven, Michigan, where it began its Lake Michigan railcar ferry operations in 1902.[6] The DGH&M connected with the Chicago and Grand Trunk at Durand and with the Chicago, Detroit and Canada Grand Trunk Junction in Detroit. Durand became a major junction point for Grand Trunk when it continued to increase its mileage. It acquired the 96-mile (154 km) Toledo, Saginaw and Muskegon Railway from Ashley, Michigan, to Muskegon, Michigan, in 1888. GTR obtained trackage rights to reach the line at Ashley from Owosso, Michigan, with the Toledo, Ann Arbor and North Michigan Railway, the predecessor of the Ann Arbor Railroad.[4] Grand Trunk acquired a route into Saginaw, Michigan, in 1890 with the lease of the Cincinnati, Saginaw & Mackinaw Railroad from Durand to Bay City, Michigan. The line was the last to be held as a leased property until January 1943, when it was fully merged into Grand Trunk Western.[4]

Western Division

[edit]

By 1900 Grand Trunk united the operations of the Chicago and Grand Trunk Railway and all of its lines in Michigan, Illinois and Indiana under a subsidiary company called the Grand Trunk Western Railway Company. The name derived from the fact that GTR's rail lines west of the St. Clair and Detroit rivers were referred to as its Western Division. The lines had also operated under the name Grand Trunk Railway System.[5] Pontiac also continued to become another important junction point when the Pontiac Oxford and Northern Railroad was acquired in 1909. It ran north from Pontiac to Caseville in Michigan's thumb region.[9] By 1910, GTW had a network of trackage connecting all of lower Michigan's major manufacturing cities when it acquired a lease on a short branch of the Chicago, Kalamazoo and Saginaw Railroad giving it access to Kalamazoo, Michigan. A few years before, in 1902, GTW had gained access into Ohio with its shared ownership of the Detroit and Toledo Shore Line Railroad. The line was a small carrier that had a multi-track mainline bridging Detroit and Toledo, Ohio, and was purchased equally by GTW and the Toledo, St. Louis and Western Railroad, a predecessor of the Nickel Plate Road.[5] GTW eventually took complete control of the line when it bought Nickel Plate's half interest from its successor Norfolk and Western Railway in 1981.[10]

Terminal railroads

[edit]

Grand Trunk Western also owned or co-owned terminal switching railroad companies in some of the cities it operated in. Beginning in 1905, it co-owned equal shares of the Detroit Terminal Railroad with New York Central (NYC). By the 1970s Detroit Terminal was suffering financial losses, and GTW negotiated to sell its share to NYC's successors Penn Central and Conrail until it dropped its ownership in 1981.[6] In Grand Rapids, Michigan, it acquired the Grand Rapids Terminal Railroad in 1906. In Bay City, Michigan, it owned the Bay City Terminal Railway and in Kalamazoo it took over the nearly 3-mile-long (4.8 km) Chicago and Kalamazoo Terminal Railroad by 1910. Prior to moving its ferry operations to Muskegon, GTW also acquired the railway belt-line Muskegon Railway and Navigation Company in 1924. The company existed as a GTW subsidiary until 1955.[11] For its entry into Chicago GTW, along with the Erie, Wabash, Chicago and Eastern Illinois and Monon railroads, was a co-owner of the Chicago and Western Indiana Railroad (C&WI), beginning in 1883. It performed passenger and express car-switching duties at Chicago's Dearborn Station. GTW was also part of a group that created and shared ownership in the Belt Railway Company of Chicago, which connects every rail line in the Chicago area.[5]

Canadian National

[edit]

By 1919, GTW's parent, Grand Trunk Railway of Canada, was suffering financial problems related to its ownership of the Grand Trunk Pacific Railway. The Canadian government nationalized Grand Trunk and other financially troubled Canadian rail companies by 1923 and amalgamated them into a new government-owned entity, the Canadian National Railway.[3] GTW became a subsidiary of the new entity and was reincorporated as the Grand Trunk Western Railroad Company on November 1, 1928, when nearly all of its lines were formally merged under the company.[3][6]

River tunnel

[edit]

GTW's predecessor Grand Trunk Railway also sought to expedite its rail service between Port Huron and Sarnia by constructing the world's first international submarine rail tunnel under the St. Clair River. The St. Clair Tunnel, completed in 1891, approximately 6,000 feet (1,800 m) long and hand-dug, allowed Grand Trunk to discontinue its ferry service across the river. The tunnel was the last link in GTR's complete mainline from Chicago through southern Canada.[6] In 1992, Canadian National began construction of a new, larger tunnel next to the original tunnel to accommodate double-stacked intermodal containers and tri-level auto carriers used in freight train service. The new tunnel was completed in 1994 and dedicated on May 5, 1995. GTW also gained trackage rights in 1975 to use Penn Central's Detroit River Tunnel between Detroit and Windsor, Ontario. Penn Central's successor Conrail sold the tunnel to CN and Canadian Pacific Railway in 1985. Eventually, CN sold its share of the Detroit tunnel in 2000 after the new St. Clair tunnel was completed.[6]

The railroad's first major line abandonment came in 1951 when it abandoned about half of the former Toledo, Saginaw and Muskegon Railway line from Muskegon to Greenville, Michigan. That same year, Grand Trunk Western bought its headquarters building at 131 West Lafayette Avenue in downtown Detroit.[6] At the end of 1970, GTW operated 2,154 miles (3,467 km) of track on 946 miles (1,522 km) of road, and that year it reported 2,732 million net revenue ton-miles of freight and 49 million passenger-miles.

Grand Trunk Corporation

[edit]

After several years of Canadian National subsidizing the financial losses of Grand Trunk Western, a new holding company would be established by CN in 1971 to manage GTW. The Grand Trunk Corporation was created to shift full control of GTW operations to Detroit and begin a strategy to make the railroad profitable. CN's other American properties, the Central Vermont Railway and the Duluth, Winnipeg and Pacific Railway (DW&P), would also be placed under the new corporation initially for tax purposes.[6]

GTW GP9R #4623 sits in CN's Green Bay yard.

With the new corporation came a new autonomy for GTW from its parent CN. Grand Trunk Western had always shared equipment, color schemes and corporate logos with Canadian National. It shared CN's herald styles with its own name on the previous "tilted herald" and "Maple Leaf" logos. In 1960, when CN launched its new image, GTW had its own initials incorporated into the "wet noodle" logo and followed with CN's black red/orange and gray locomotive color scheme. However, to show its new autonomy from CN, in 1971 GTW began receiving its new locomotives in its famous bright-blue, red/orange and white scheme.[6] Most of GTW's freight cars also received the blue and white color scheme. With new management, the railroad implemented a new strategy to market to shippers and improve its performance. In 1975, the railroad adopted its company slogan: The Good Track Road. This slogan promoted GTW's track maintenance efforts at a time when many Eastern and Midwest railroads suffered from deferred maintenance. The company also encouraged better safety practices, which earned it the E.H. Harriman Award for safety five times in the 1980s.[5][6]

Detroit, Toledo and Ironton merger

[edit]

Part of the railroad's new strategy in the 1970s and 1980s was to seek new routes to expand and compete in the long-haul railroad market. After Conrail took over the railroad operations of Penn Central in 1976, the Penn Central Corporation sought to divest itself of its subsidiary, the Detroit, Toledo and Ironton Railroad (DT&I). After petitioning the Interstate Commerce Commission, GTW won approval over a joint bid by Norfolk and Western and Chessie System to acquire the DT&I in June, 1980. The acquisition increased GTW's trackage around Detroit's industries, including Ford Motor Company's large River Rouge Complex, DT&I's classification hump yard in Flat Rock, Michigan and routes south into Ohio with access to rail interchanges in Cincinnati, Ohio. As part of the ICC's approval, GTW was obligated to divest its half or buy Norfolk and Western's share in the Detroit and Toledo Shore Line. It purchased N&W's share in April 1981 for $1.9 million and completely merged the line into GTW later that same year.[6]

Milwaukee Road

[edit]

Grand Trunk Western sought to further expand its trackage by seeking to purchase one of the bankrupt Midwest railroads, the Milwaukee Road or the Rock Island, in the 1970s. After inspecting the Rock Island's property and finding its trackage in need of costly repairs, GTW turned its attention in 1981 to acquiring the Milwaukee Road. GTW saw the acquisition of the Milwaukee Road (shorn of its Pacific Coast Extension and many of its midwestern branchlines) as an opportunity to expand its route further south and west to rail interchanges in Kansas City, Missouri, and Louisville, Kentucky. It would also afford GTW the opportunity to connect directly with its corporate cousin, the DW&P, at Duluth, Minnesota. Instead of initially placing a bid for the Milwaukee Road and seeking immediate ICC approval, GTW embarked on a strategy to improve the line's revenue and track maintenance. GTW and Milwaukee Road would enter into a voluntary coordination agreement where GTW would direct more of its shipments over the Milwaukee Road's route. It would also launch a marketing effort promoting the merger. However, as the Milwaukee Road became more successful, two other potential bidders, the Soo Line Railroad and the Chicago and North Western Railway, petitioned the ICC to purchase the railroad. Despite GTW's efforts, the ICC rejected its bid and, after a further bidding war between the Soo and the C&NW, approved the Soo Line's acquisition of the Milwaukee Road. The two roads were merged in January, 1986.[6]

Improving efficiency and downsizing

[edit]

During the 1970s and 1980s, Grand Trunk Western would continue to improve its efficiency and embark on efforts to improve its operating ratio. It had consolidated some of its operations, including dispatching in Pontiac, locomotive maintenance in Battle Creek and railcar maintenance in Port Huron. Its intercity passenger train operations would be handed over to Amtrak on May 1, 1971. Responsibility for GTW's commuter rail operation in Detroit was turned over in 1974 to the regional transportation authority SEMTA.[5] GTW moved into the intermodal freight business by creating intermodal transfer yards in Chicago in 1975, and suburban Detroit in 1978.[6] The railroad's president at the time, John H. Burdakin, was also a proponent of the Automatic Car Identification (ACI) system. It was a means to identify the location of shipments and equipment with bar code labels on the sides of freight cars and locomotives. The labels were read by automatic scanners at various rail yards. When Conrail was formed in 1976, GTW sought to acquire some of its routes in Michigan. It gained 151 miles (243 km) of trackage between Saginaw and Bay City as well as near Muskegon and Midland, Michigan.[6] Several of GTW's cuts in its expenditures came from reductions in its workforce through changes it negotiated in union work rules.[6] In 1978, it discontinued its Lake Michigan railcar ferry operations after several years of annual financial losses of over $1 million. By 1987, the company sold its headquarters building on Lafayette Avenue in Detroit and moved to the new office-park complex Brewery Park. The complex was developed on the site of the former Stroh's Brewery near downtown Detroit. Locomotive performance was also enhanced with a rebuilding program of its EMD GP9s.[6] By the 1990s, several miles of routes and facilities were abandoned or sold to regional rail companies. GTW would eliminate all of the former Pontiac, Oxford and Northern line north of General Motors' Lake Orion manufacturing plant by 1985.[12] In 1987, the former Cincinnati, Saginaw, and Mackinaw and the former Detroit, Grand Haven and Milwaukee routes north of Durand were sold to the Central Michigan Railway. Elsdon Yard, GTW's primary terminal and rail yard in Chicago, had been downsized and closed by 1990. It had also sold almost the entire route of the Detroit, Toledo and Ironton in 1997 to the shortline rail operator Railtex. By 1998, it had abandoned the entire former Michigan Air Line route except for a portion in Oakland County, Michigan, which it sold to Coe Rail. With the end of SEMTA commuter rail service to downtown Detroit, in 1983, GTW abandoned and sold its trackage from the Milwaukee Junction area to downtown Detroit. That line was the former route to Brush Street Station and its railcar ferry dock on the Detroit River. It is known as the Dequindre Cut, which has been transformed into an urban greenway rail trail. By the year 2000, engine terminals and maintenance facilities had also been eliminated or downsized in Chicago, Detroit, Durand, Pontiac, Port Huron and Battle Creek.

CN North America

[edit]
Grand Trunk Western GP38-2 4900 at Battle Creek, Michigan in the CN color scheme with GTW reporting marks

In December 1991, Canadian National announced a corporate image and restructuring program to consolidate all of its U.S. railroads under the CN North America brand. Grand Trunk Western, along with other CN owned subsidiaries, would see their images replaced with the CN logo and name.[6] All GTW corporate identification and that of its new corporate cousins, the Illinois Central Railroad (acquired by CN in 1999) and Wisconsin Central Ltd. (acquired by CN in 2001), are referred-to with CN's name and corporate image. However, while each railroad's locomotives would eventually receive CN's logo and black, red-orange and white paint scheme, they would still retain their respective reporting marks. Despite the corporate re-branding, GTW's blue color scheme and its logo would persist on rolling stock and locomotives for several years while they were slowly either repainted or retired. CN also reintegrated managerial and some operational control of GTW, as it would gradually shift out of Detroit and into CN headquarters in Montreal.[6] GTW would continue to maintain some office and dispatching functions from offices in suburban Troy, Michigan. All the routes that make up GTW are part of CN's Midwest Division in its Michigan Zone. Grand Trunk Corporation, now formally headquartered at CN in Montreal, is the holding company for almost all of CN's U.S. properties, which include Grand Trunk Western, Illinois Central, Wisconsin Central, Duluth, Winnipeg & Pacific and Great Lakes Transportation, which includes the Bessemer & Lake Erie Railroad and the Duluth, Missabe and Iron Range Railway. The Association of American Railroads has considered the Grand Trunk Corporation as a single, non-operating Class I Railroad since 2002. Grand Trunk Western still exists as a corporate entity, but can now be considered a company on paper. CN refers to GTW's routes and operations in its corporate communications as the former Grand Trunk Western territory.[1]

Locomotives

[edit]

Steam

[edit]

Grand Trunk Western was one of the last U.S. railroads to employ steam locomotives. It ran the last scheduled steam passenger train in the United States on March 27, 1960, on its train #21 from Detroit's Brush Street Station north to Durand Union Station. The run drew thousands of rail enthusiasts. With 3,600 passengers holding tickets, train #21 had to be run in two sections (as two separate trains) to accommodate the excess of passengers. GTW U-3-b class 4-8-4 Northern-type locomotive 6319 led the first section of train #21 with 15 passenger cars, and GTW 4-8-4 Northern 6322 pulled the second section with 22 passenger cars. Steam was used on some freight trains until 1961. [5][13][14]

A 1909 photograph of a Grand Trunk Western locomotive and crew at the Durand, Michigan roundhouse

GTW's predecessor lines primarily used 4-4-0 American-type locomotives before the turn of the 20th century.[5] Throughout its history, GTW has shared the same type and class designations of its locomotives with parents Grand Trunk Railway and Canadian National. Its locomotive road numbers would also be integrated into CN's roster sequence. By the first half of the 20th century, the railroad's largest steam power would be its Northern type 4-8-4 locomotives, called Confederations by CN. The locomotives, built by the American Locomotive Company in the 1930s and 1940s, had 73-inch (1.854 m) driving wheels with 60,000 pounds of tractive effort and would be used in mainline freight and passenger service. Six GTW U-4-b class 4-8-4s built by Lima Locomotive Works would have streamlined shrouding and 77-inch (1.956 m) driving wheels, to be used only in passenger service.[15]

Other steam locomotives in GTW's fleet at the time included the Mikado type 2-8-2s built by Baldwin Locomotive Works and Alco, primarily used in mainline freight service. 4-6-2 Pacific type and 4-8-2 Mountain type locomotives, also built by Baldwin and Alco in the 1920s, and 4-6-0 Ten-Wheelers built around 1900 began in mainline service but later were eventually both found mostly on branch lines and mixed train service. GTW also had a variety of other models of steam engines, including several 0-8-0 and 0-6-0 switching locomotives used to move rolling stock around in rail yards.[5][15]

Surviving steam locomotives

[edit]

Some of GTW's steam engines survive today as static park displays or in operation. Three are park displays in Michigan; they include two 4-6-2 "Pacifics" at Durand and Jackson and an 0-6-0 at Sidney Montcalm Community College Heritage Village. Steamtown National Historic Site has GTW No. 6039, a U-1-c class 4-8-2 Mountain type. The Illinois Railway Museum in Union, Illinois, has U-3-b class 4-8-4 No. 6323, which was the last GTW steam locomotive to operate in regular service, and P-5-g class 0-8-0 No. 8380 as part of its collection. Locomotive No. 4070, an S-3-a class 2-8-2 Light Mikado, has been used in excursion service by the Midwest Railway Preservation Society and as of 2021 was being restored back to service in Cleveland, Ohio. The Age of Steam Roundhouse in Sugarcreek, Ohio, possesses U-3-b class No. 6325, which was previously restored and operated on the Ohio Central System from 2001 until 2004. One of the two 4-6-2s in Michigan, K-4b 5632, is on display in Durand. J-3-b No. 5030 was purchased in February 2021 by the Colebrookdale Railroad, which has the intent of restoring it to operating condition after moving it to Boyertown, Pennsylvania.[16] Although there was a third Pacific, K-4a 5629, that was used on excursions from the 1960s to 1970s, it was scrapped in July 1987, in Blue Island, Illinois.

Diesel

[edit]
GTW 4619 heading south from Kalamazoo near Battle Creek is one of the GP9s the railroad rebuilt and designated a GP9R

The first diesel locomotive to operate in regular service in Michigan arrived in 1938. It was GTW 7800, an EMC SC switching locomotive to work in Detroit. Previously, in 1925, GTW acquired from EMC an early motorized gasoline-electric railcar known as a Doodlebug. The cars were self-propelled units resembling a passenger car, with a baggage compartment and a coach section for passengers that GTW used on its Detroit to Port Huron and Richmond to Jackson routes until 1953. GTW also had another gasoline-electric locomotive referred to as a box-cab, built by Brill in 1926. Originally built for the Long Island Rail Road, GTW purchased it in 1934 and numbered it 7730. It was relegated to loading and unloading freight cars from GTW ferries in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. The unit was eventually converted to diesel power in 1939 and served in Milwaukee until 1960.[17]

GTW continued to dieselize its locomotive fleet in the 1940s and 1950s, primarily with models from EMD, which was owned by one of GTW's largest freight customers, General Motors. The exceptions were approximately 40 Alco S-2 and S-4 switching locomotives. Other diesel locomotives from EMD included several NW2s, SW900s and SW1200s, purchased for switching duties in rail yards and on branch lines. Grand Trunk Western's first mainline road diesel locomotives were almost two dozen EMD F3As, acquired in 1948. They were followed in the 1950s by EMD GP9s and GP18s for freight and passenger service. The GP9s were rebuilt by GTW's Battle Creek locomotive shops into GP9Rs, with improved internal components and modern low-nose cabs.

Second-generation diesel locomotives

[edit]
GTW 5812, an EMD GP38-2, in Waukesha, Wisconsin, on May 16, 2020.

The next new motive power to be acquired was the EMD SD40 in 1969. These were GTW's first six-axle locomotives, and most lasted on GTW for at least four decades.[18] GTW's most-dominant diesel locomotive in its fleet was the 2,000-horsepower (1.5 MW) EMD GP38. The first GP38s were delivered in 1971, and were also the first locomotives to wear GTW's blue, red/orange and white scheme.[5] It proved to be a versatile locomotive for GTW, used in switching and mainline service. The GP38AC was the first version to be purchased by GTW which had an alternating current alternator instead of the typical direct current generator. This was followed by the acquisition of several GP38-2s into the 1980s. GTW also purchased its new locomotives without dynamic brakes?[citation needed] since the company did not have any significant grades on its routes. GTW also inherited several locomotives, including its first 3,000-horsepower (2.2 MW) GP40-2s, from its acquisition of the Detroit, Toledo and Ironton Railroad. It also rostered its first EMD GP7s when it obtained full ownership of the Detroit and Toledo Shore Line Railroad, in 1981.[18] GTW management found it cost-effective to lease or purchase second-hand diesel locomotives. It purchased several former Rock Island GP38-2s after that railroad closed in 1980. Union Pacific sold GTW several surplus former Missouri Pacific SD40-2s after it had acquired that railroad.[18] It was also common for GTW and CN to share steam and diesel locomotives when either of them was in need of extra motive power.[5] GTW also sent diesel locomotives for use to its fellow GTC subsidiary railways Central Vermont and Duluth, Winnipeg and Pacific. As of 2012, many GTW GP38s still wore their original blue, red/orange and white paint scheme and were found operating throughout CN's other US subsidiaries. However, since 1991, CN gradually retired, sold or applied its own paint scheme to GTW locomotives. As of December 2020, the last GTW-painted SD40-2, 5936, was still operated by CN.

Facilities

[edit]
The first locomotive in Grand Trunk Western's Battle Creek locomotive shops. c. 1908

Over its history, Grand Trunk Western has had rail yards and engine terminals located in Detroit, Battle Creek, Durand, Flat Rock, Flint, Grand Rapids, Pontiac, Port Huron, Blue Island, Illinois and Chicago. In each of these cities, GTW had engine terminals and facilities for locomotive maintenance, including roundhouses and turntables. Prior to 1900, the railroad constructed its major locomotive repair shops in Battle Creek, while railcar repair and maintenance was handled by GTW's Port Huron car shops.[5][6] The Battle Creek Shops were upgraded and modernized in 1907. The original Port Huron car shops were destroyed by fire in 1913 and rebuilt on a new 55-acre site at Griswold Road and 32nd Street. Its major freight yards were Durand Yard and Pontiac Yard, located in the two Michigan cities that were major GTW junction points. There is also Nichols Yard in Battle Creek,[13] Tunnel Yard in Port Huron, Torrey Yard near Flint and East Yard near the Milwaukee Junction area in the Detroit enclave of Hamtramck. City Yard was the railroad's rail yard on the Detroit riverfront adjacent to Brush Street Station and its ferry slip dock. The yard, dock and station were eventually all removed and redeveloped by 1975 for construction of the Renaissance Center. It also obtained the former Penn Central Winona Yard in Bay City when it acquired that trackage from Conrail, in 1976.[6]

On Chicago's southwest side, GTW's Elsdon Yard served as its primary yard and locomotive facility there since the railroad laid tracks into the city in the 1880s. GTW also had a smaller transfer yard south of Chicago near rail junction Blue Island, Illinois. In 1975, GTW opened an intermodal freight terminal yard in Chicago known as Railport. The facility is in Chicago's Back of the Yards neighborhood and was formerly the Pennsylvania Railroad's Levitt Street Yard. GTW also increased intermodal operations in Detroit In 1976, when it expanded its Ferndale, Michigan railyard into an intermodal facility it called GT MoTerm.[6] The Elsdon Yard was closed and abandoned by 1990 and has been redeveloped. Detroit, Toledo and Ironton's former hump classification yard in Flat Rock, which GTW acquired from its 1983 merger with DT&I. It still serves as an important freight hub for Canadian National. Several interlocking and crossing gate towers were also maintained by GTW through its history.

Passenger trains

[edit]
Durand Union Station in Durand, Michigan, a former major GTW hub.

Grand Trunk Western's primary passenger trains were the Maple Leaf, the International Limited, the Inter-City Limited and The LaSalle, which provided service between Chicago's Dearborn Station and Toronto Union Station. In 1967, GTW introduced The Mohawk as a fast through train between Chicago and Brush Street Station in Detroit. Passenger operations were handed-over to Amtrak (National Railroad Passenger Corporation) on May 1, 1971. Amtrak's Chicago to Port Huron trains, known as its Blue Water Service, operate over GTW's route between Battle Creek and Port Huron.

The railroad also operated suburban commuter trains between downtown Detroit and Pontiac, Michigan, from August, 1931 until January 1974, when the now-defunct Southeast Michigan Transportation Authority (SEMTA) took over operating the commuter trains. Amtrak's Detroit–Chicago trains now originate or terminate over this former commuter line, making stops in the northern Detroit suburbs of Pontiac, Troy and Royal Oak, Michigan. Part of GTW's former route in Detroit, to Brush Street Station and its railcar ferry dock known as the Dequindre Cut, has been transformed into an urban greenway rail trail.

Car ferries

[edit]

Lake Michigan

[edit]
The carferry steamship Grand Rapids at Muskegon, Michigan in 1980

Grand Trunk Western was one of three Michigan railroads, along with the Ann Arbor Railroad and Pere Marquette Railway, that operated separate railcar ferry service across Lake Michigan between Michigan and Wisconsin. Loading rail cars onto ships that had rails mounted to their decks, and ferrying the cars east and west across Lake Michigan, allowed railroads to bypass the congested rail interchanges in Chicago and move time-sensitive freight more quickly.

GTW's ferry service was originally operated by the former Detroit, Grand Haven and Milwaukee Railway (DGH&M), which Grand Trunk Railway acquired in 1882. DGH&M initially had agreements with ferry companies operating on Lake Michigan to transfer its passengers and freight onto ships bound for Milwaukee from Grand Haven, Michigan.[19] GTW's rail car ferry service began in 1902 with an operating agreement with the steamship company, Crosby Transportation Company. The railway constructed ferry slip docks at Grand Haven and Milwaukee and had two steamships built, the SS Grand Haven and SS Milwaukee, capable of carrying 26 freight railcars. In 1905, Grand Trunk assumed Crosby's interest and incorporated the Grand Trunk Milwaukee Car Ferry Company to operate the ships. In Milwaukee, GTW interchanged rail cars with the Milwaukee Road, Chicago and North Western and the Soo Line.[17] The ownership of the ferry company was shared with the Pennsylvania Railroad (PRR) from 1927 until 1954, and sailed as the Grand Trunk-Pennsylvania Route.[19] The SS Milwaukee sank, loaded with rail cars, in a storm after departing Milwaukee in October, 1929, with everyone aboard lost. Three new ships, the Grand Rapids, Madisonand the City of Milwaukee, constructed between 1926 and 1931, replaced the Grand Haven and Milwaukee.[5] The ships required a crew of 34 and, with strengthened ice-breaking hulls, operated year-round.[6] At PRR's request, GTW moved its Michigan docks to Muskegon, Michigan, in 1937, where its subsidiary, the Muskegon Railway and Navigation Company, initially operated ferry loading and switching operations. GTW had also changed its route into Muskegon, with trackage rights over PRR's line from Grand Rapids.

By 1968, GTW was shipping over 800,000 short tons (710,000 long tons; 730,000 t) of freight a year across Lake Michigan. However, the ferry service began running deficits of over $1 million annually in the 1970s and, in 1975, GTW petitioned the ICC to end the service. Permission was eventually granted, and the last ferry sailed on October 31, 1978.[6]

River ferries

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St. Clair River

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The first river ferry service began in 1860, when the Grand Trunk Railway's tracks reached Sarnia, Ontario, and it had to transfer its passengers and freight across the St. Clair River to Port Huron, and onto the Chicago, Detroit and Canada Grand Trunk Junction Railroad to Detroit or its Chicago and Grand Trunk Railway route to Chicago. GTR started its St. Clair River ferry service with a type of swing ferry-barge. The barge was anchored by 1,000 feet (300 m) of chain. When the barge was loaded, it was released into the current to dock on the opposite side of the river. When this proved unreliable, Grand Trunk replaced it with the wood-burning steamer International II in 1872.[20] It soon was joined in service by the steamer Huron. The ferries continued until 1891, when Grand Trunk completed its rail tunnel connecting Sarnia and Port Huron under the river. However, GTW and CN reinstated the ferry service 80 years later, in 1971, with its Rail-Barge service to accommodate the larger freight railcars that were higher than the 1891 tunnel's height clearance. The St. Clair river barges discontinued service again in 1995, after the new, larger St Clair Tunnel was completed.[20]

Detroit River

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Grand Trunk's river ferry service on the Detroit River connecting Detroit and Windsor, Ontario was also inherited from its 1882 purchase of the Great Western Railway. Great Western's ferry service began after its rails reached Windsor in 1853. Because Great Western's track gauge of 5 ft 6 in (1,676 mm) was different from the standard American gauge of 4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm), it had to transfer its cargo off railcars and onto the ships. By the 1860s, Great Western made its railway dual gauge by adding a third rail to its tracks to accommodate rail cars of both gauges. Its first side-wheel steam ferry, the Great Western, arrived in 1866, and when first launched was the largest steel vessel on the Great Lakes.[20] The Wabash Railroad contracted with Grand Trunk in 1897 to use its ferry service to connect Wabash's own route from Detroit through Southwest Ontario to Buffalo, New York. Wabash started its own service after 1910, when it acquired Michigan Central's ferries after that railroad opened the Detroit River Tunnel.[20] Eventually, GTW's parent CN took over sole responsibility for ferry operations on the Detroit and St. Clair rivers.[5] The Detroit River ferry operation ceased running in 1975, when GTW was granted trackage rights to use Penn Central's Detroit River Tunnel to connect with CN in Windsor. The start of construction of the Renaissance Center in Detroit in 1973 necessitated the removal of GTW's Detroit ferry-slip docks.[6] During the more than 130 years of rail car ferry operations on the Detroit and St. Clair rivers, all the major railroads, including Michigan Central, Pere Marquette, Wabash and Canadian Pacific, had ferry operations on the Detroit River. The GTW/CN rail car ferry service was the last to operate in the Great Lakes when it ended operations on the St Clair River in 1995.[20]

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Notes

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  1. ^ a b Canadian National CN-News
  2. ^ Galbraith's railway mail service maps, Michigan. Publ. Chicago 1897, c1898. Library of Congress. Accessed April 2020.
  3. ^ a b c Mika, Nick and Helma. Railways of Canada, A Pictorial History. 1972. McGraw Hill Ryerson Ltd. ISBN 0-07-082815-6
  4. ^ a b c d e f "reprinting of The History of the GTW Mainline from Port Huron to Chicago, Cleland B. Wyllie, The Inside Track, Sept. 1972". Michiganrailroads.com. 1961-05-18. Archived from the original on 2014-02-16. Retrieved 2014-07-22.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Dorin (1977).
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x Hofsomer, Don. Grand Trunk Corporation, The Canadian National Railways in the United States 1971–1992. 1995. Michigan State University Press. ISBN 18790-94703
  7. ^ "orchard-trail-news-2008-Smr-1.pdf Platz, Richard. Rail Trails. Macomb Orchard Trail News, July 2008". Orchardtrail.org. Archived from the original on 2009-07-06. Retrieved 2014-07-22.
  8. ^ "The Quebec History Encyclopedia, Grand Trunk Railway". Faculty.marianopolis.edu. 1923-01-30. Retrieved 2014-07-22.
  9. ^ "Oakland History, Means of Transportation". Avonhistory2008.com. Retrieved 2014-07-22.[permanent dead link]
  10. ^ Moody's Transportation Manual, 1992, p. 233, 237
  11. ^ Labelle Models Muskegon Railway and Navigation[dead link]
  12. ^ "Enjoy a Slice of the Polly Ann Trail from Oxford to Leonard, Jonathan Schechter, The Oakland Press, June 11, 2011". Theoaklandpress.com. Retrieved 2014-07-22.[permanent dead link]
  13. ^ a b Wells, Charles Chauncey. Ride of a Lifetime, When Grand Trunk Western honored a cab-ride request for a 12-year-old. Classic Trains Magazine, Kalambach Publishing, Spring 2010
  14. ^ "Grand Trunk Western / Canadian National 4-8-4 Northern Type Locomotive". Steamlocomotive.com. 1960-03-23. Archived from the original on 2014-07-28. Retrieved 2014-07-22.
  15. ^ a b "Richard Leonard's Steam Locomotive Archive, Grand Trunk Western". Railarchive.net. Retrieved 2014-07-22.
  16. ^ "Our Equipment". Colebrookdale Railroad. Retrieved 2021-04-04.
  17. ^ a b "Don's Depot, Grand Trunk Western at Milwaukee". Donsdepot.donrossgroup.net. 2011-07-19. Retrieved 2014-07-22.
  18. ^ a b c "The Diesel Shop, Grand Trunk Western, All Time Diesel Roster (prior to 1982)". Thedieselshop.us. Retrieved 2014-07-22.
  19. ^ a b Great Lakes Car Ferries–Grand Trunk, Suite101.com, September 18, 2010
  20. ^ a b c d e Great Lakes Car Ferries – The River Ferries, Suite101.com, June 18, 2010

References

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