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Boyne City Railroad: BCRR 1935 1976 N/A Boyne City, Gaylord and Alpena Railroad: BCG&A 1905 1935 Boyne City Railroad: Boyne City and South Eastern Railroad: 1893 1905 Boyne City, Gaylord and Alpena Railroad: Buchanan and St. Joseph River Railroad: NYC: 1894 1912 Michigan Central Railroad: Buckley and Douglas Railroad: 1881 1889 N/A Cadillac and ...
Pages in category "Michigan railroads" The following 41 pages are in this category, out of 41 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. ...
The City of Detroit invested $50,000 in the project. The State of Michigan bailed out the railroad in 1837 by purchasing it and investing $5,000,000. The now state-owned company was renamed the Central Railroad of Michigan. John Murray Forbes, President of Michigan Central Railroad from 1846 to 1855
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]
Note: Per consensus and convention, most route-map templates are used in a single article in order to separate their complex and fragile syntax from normal article wikitext. See these discussions , for more information. Information from Meints, Graydon (2005). Michigan Railroad Lines. East Lansing: Michigan State University Press.
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 Clinton ...
The Detroit and Mackinac Railway (reporting marks D&M, DM), informally known as the "Turtle Line", was a railroad in the northeastern part of the Lower Peninsula of the U.S. state of Michigan. The railroad had its main offices and shops in Tawas City with its main line running from Bay City north to Cheboygan, and operated from 1894 to 1992. In ...
The Kalamazoo, Lake Shore and Chicago Railway (aka The Fruit Belt Line) operated on track laid between Kalamazoo and South Haven, Michigan. Much of the track has been removed and is now known as the "Van Buren Trail". The railway went through the following towns, starting from the east: Kalamazoo, Michigan; Oshtemo, Michigan; Brighton, Michigan