Chicago and Canada Southern Railway

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Chicago and Canada Southern Railway
Map
Lines of the Chicago and Canada Southern Railway; the former Michigan Air Line Railroad is the northernmost and westernmost lines
Overview
Localewest-southwest from the
standard gauge

The Chicago and Canada Southern Railway was a planned extension of the

Detroit, Toledo and Ironton Railway and Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway
.

History

1872 map, including the Portland, Rutland, Oswego and Chicago Railroad
Bond of the Chicago and Canada Southern Railway Company, issued 20. December 1873

In 1873 the

Chicago, the Chicago and Canada Southern Railway was chartered July 11, 1871. The line had only reached Fayette, Ohio (though grading was done further west) in September 1873 when the Panic of 1873 had its full effect and construction was halted. [1]
Building the road to Chicago was suspended for the winter of 1873–74.[1] The next spring, the railroad's management hired General John S. "Jack" Casement, who had built part of the Union Pacific, as the railroad contractor for construction from Fayette to Chicago.[1] However, the company's financial situation never did improve and Casement did no work on the track.[1]

Some time after the Canada Southern was reorganized, the Chicago and Canada Southern was sold on November 22, 1888, to the Detroit and Chicago Railroad, owned by the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway.

The track between Grosvenor and Corbus, Michigan in the middle of the line, was abandoned in 1893. In 1897 it was abandoned from Corbus east to

Detroit, Toledo and Ironton Railway
. The remaining piece west of Grosvenor was operated as a branch of the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern's Old Road from the Grosvenor end.

West from Montpelier, Ohio to beyond North Liberty, Indiana, the unfinished C&CS alignment was later used[2] by the Wabash Railroad, which completed its line between Montpelier and Gary, Indiana in 1893.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d Meints, Graydon M. "The Railroads Come of Age, 1855–1875." Railroads for Michigan, Michigan State University Press, 2013, pp. 47–130. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/10.14321/j.ctt7zt9gp.4.
  2. ^ Historic maps showing the planned route where the Wabash later built: Andres & Baskin, Atlas of Williams County, Ohio, 1874; Baskin, Forster & Co., Illustrated Atlas of the State of Indiana, 1876