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Monroe County, at the intersection of the Norfolk Southern Railway and Steiner Roads, 4 miles north, northwest of Monroe Village of Stoney Creek 41°57′51″N 83°20′03″W / 41.96417°N 83.33417°W / 41.96417; -83.33417 , Frenchtown Township, Monroe County, 4 miles north of Monroe, and east of where Interstate 75 crosses Stoney
Michigan Central Railroad; Michigan Interstate Railway; Michigan Lake Shore Railroad; Michigan Northern Railway; Michigan and Ohio Railroad; Michigan Southern Railroad (1846–55) Michigan Southern and Northern Indiana Railroad; Michigan Southern Railroad (1846–1855) Michigan United Railways; Milwaukee Road; Minneapolis, St. Paul and Sault ...
The Kalamazoo and South Haven Railroad is a defunct railroad which operated in southern Michigan during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The company incorporated on April 2, 1869 with the intention of constructing a 40-mile (64 km) line from Kalamazoo to South Haven , on the shores of Lake Michigan .
The Michigan railroad network, c. 1876. Railroads have been vital in the history of the population and trade of rough and finished goods in the state of Michigan.While some coastal settlements had previously existed, the population, commercial, and industrial growth of the state further bloomed with the establishment of the railroad.
Detroit, Lansing and Lake Michigan Railroad: Detroit and Huron Railway: CN: 1912 1928 Grand Trunk Western Railroad: Detroit and Ironton Railroad: DT&I: 1920 1931 Detroit, Toledo and Ironton Railroad: Detroit, Lansing and Lake Michigan Railroad: PM: 1871 1876 Detroit, Lansing and Northern Railroad: Detroit, Lansing and Northern Railroad: PM ...
Counties Original railroad References Bay County Riverwalk/Railtrail System 17.8 28.6 Bay: Detroit, Bay City and Alpena Railroad [62] [63] Bay-Zil Trail 5.7 9.2 Bay, Saginaw: Michigan Central Railroad [64] Cass City Walking Trail 1.4 2.3 Tuscola: Pontiac, Oxford & Northern Railroad [65] [66] Fred Meijer Clinton-Ionia-Shiawassee Trail 41.4 66.6
The United States has a high concentration of railway towns, communities that developed and/or were built around a railway system. Railway towns are particularly abundant in the midwest and western states, and the railroad has been credited as a major force in the economic and geographic development of the country. [1]
The Iron Range & Huron Bay Railroad (IR&HB) is a defunct railroad constructed to haul iron ore in Michigan's Upper Peninsula during the 1890s. Financial and engineering problems prevented the railroad's operation; it remains an unusual example of a railroad which was completed but never used.