Trains.com

The Milwaukee Road Mainline

140028 views
24 replies
1 rating 2 rating 3 rating 4 rating 5 rating
  • Member since
    April 2005
  • From: Nanaimo BC Canada
  • 4,117 posts
Posted by nanaimo73 on Tuesday, July 15, 2008 1:49 AM

Thanks Al. I hope you've recovered from the jet lag.

2,200 miles in 7 hours, that's over 300 mph!

Dale
  • Member since
    March 2004
  • From: Central Valley California
  • 2,841 posts
Posted by passengerfan on Sunday, July 13, 2008 9:18 AM

Nanaimo 73

You cost me most of a good nights sleep with the Milwaukee Road Mainline article or should I call it tomb you put together. I started to read it yesterday evening at about  7:00 and finished it at three. I must say it is the most comprehensive work I have ever read on the Milwaukee Road. I grew up in South Seattle and Renton so remember the electrics passing down the street in Renton. I also remember the half full Olympian Hiawathas in both color schemes the Milwaukee colors and Union Pacific.

Your tomb is a worthy addition to anyones library and will probably have to go to Office Max today to buy a case of paper and more ink for the printer.

Congratulations, I sincerly wish you the best in any future endeavours I have read several of your works on the Bridges across the Mississippi etc. but this was your finest work by far.  It is now 7:17 AM and I am going back to bed.

Al - in - Stockton  

  • Member since
    April 2005
  • From: Nanaimo BC Canada
  • 4,117 posts
Posted by nanaimo73 on Friday, July 11, 2008 10:07 AM
Thanks! I've got it fixed.
Dale
  • Member since
    July 2003
  • 2 posts
Posted by lukpac on Saturday, July 5, 2008 4:25 PM

Great post. However, this is a bit unclear:

 nanaimo73 wrote:
Between Wauwatosa and Elm Grove the mainline passes under the former

C&NW mainline heading for Butler yard.
Wikimapia

That location shows the "Air Line", which I don't believe was used for passenger trains. That is now abandoned. The main line loops up and around and is located about a mile to the north. It can be seen here:

Wikimapia

The junction of the Air Line and main line can be seen here:

Wikimapia

  • Member since
    April 2005
  • From: Nanaimo BC Canada
  • 4,117 posts
Posted by nanaimo73 on Thursday, October 11, 2007 1:46 AM

Milwaukee Road's Structures

A summary of the Tunnels, major Bridges, and Substations of the
Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad.

Tunnels
The Milwaukee Road owned a total of 64 tunnels on their railroad.
Fifty one of these were located on the mainline between Chicago and Seattle,
of which two remain in use. The other 13 tunnels were on other lines, with 6 still used by various railroads. By the beginning of 1980, 5 tunnels had been daylighted, 1 was abandoned and another was bypassed. After the system rationalization during March 1980, only two tunnels remained on the slimmed down CMSP&P. Besides their own tunnels, the Milwaukee Road used Union Pacific's tunnel in Spokane, just east of Union Station.

Chicago-Seattle Mainline
Tunnel  1, Tunnel City WI, Canadian Pacific
Tunnel  2, Red Tunnel MT, abandoned 1980
Tunnel  3, Canyon Tunnel MT, abandoned 1980
Tunnel  4, Eagle Nest Tunnel MT, abandoned 1980
Tunnel  5, Josephine Tunnel MT, abandoned 1980
Tunnel  6, Deer Park Tunnel 1 MT, abandoned 1980
Tunnel  7, Deer Park Tunnel 2 MT, abandoned 1980
Tunnel  8, Deer Park Tunnel 3 MT, abandoned 1980
Tunnel  9, Lombard MT, abandoned 1980
Tunnel 10, Fish Creek Tunnel MT, abandoned 1980
Tunnel 11, Pipestone Pass Tunnel MT, abandoned1980
Tunnel 12, Blacktail Tunnel 1 MT, abandoned 1980
Tunnel 13, Blacktail Tunnel 2 MT, abandoned 1980
Tunnel 14, Garrison Tunnel MT, abandoned 1980
Tunnel 15, Nimrod Tunnel MT, abandoned 1980
Tunnel 16, Beavertail Tunnel MT, abandoned 1980
Tunnel 16.5, Bonner Tunnel MT, abandoned 1980
Tunnel 17, Nine Mile Tunnel MT, abandoned 1980
Tunnel 18, Cyr Tunnel MT, abandoned 1980
Tunnel 19, Dominion Creek Tunnel MT, abandoned 1980, Photos
Tunnel 20, St. Paul Pass Tunnel MT/ID, abandoned 1980
Tunnel 21, Dry Creek Tunnel ID, abandoned 1980
Tunnel 22, Moss Creek Tunnel ID, abandoned 1980
Tunnel 23, Small Creek Tunnel 1 ID, abandoned 1980
Tunnel 24, Small Creek Tunnel 2 ID, abandoned 1980
Tunnel 25, Loop Creek Tunnel 1 ID, abandoned 1980
Tunnel 26, Loop Creek Tunnel 2 ID, abandoned 1980
Tunnel 27, Clear Creek Tunnel 1 ID, abandoned 1980
Tunnel 28, Clear Creek Tunnel 2 ID, abandoned 1980
Tunnel 29, Deer Creek Tunnel 1 ID, abandoned 1980
Tunnel 30, Deer Creek Tunnel 2 ID, abandoned 1980
Tunnel 31, Glade Creek Tunnel 1 ID, abandoned 1980
Tunnel 32, Glade Creek Tunnel 2 ID, abandoned 1980
Tunnel 33, Kyle Tunnel ID, abandoned 1980
Tunnel 34, Stetson Tunnel 1 ID, abandoned 1980
Tunnel 35, Stetson Tunnel 2 ID, abandoned 1980
Tunnel 36, Stetson Tunnel 3 ID, abandoned 1980
Tunnel 37, Herrick Tunnel ID, abandoned 1987(?)
Tunnel 38, Omega Tunnel 1 ID, never built
Tunnel 39, Omega Tunnel 2 ID, never built
Tunnel 40, Benewah Tunnel ID, St. Maries River Railroad
Tunnel 41, Watts/Sorrento Tunnel ID, abandoned 1980
Tunnel 42, Rosalia Tunnel WA, daylighted 1911
Tunnel 43, Rock Lake Tunnel 1 WA, abandoned 1980
Tunnel 44, Rock Lake Tunnel 2 WA, abandoned 1980
Tunnel 45, Johnson Creek Tunnel WA, abandoned 1980
Tunnel 46, Horlick Tunnel 1 WA, abandoned 1980
Tunnel 47, Horlick Tunnel 2 WA, abandoned 1980
Tunnel 48, Easton Tunnel WA, abandoned 1980/1987
Tunnel 49, Whittier Tunnel WA, abandoned 1980/1987
Tunnel 50, Snoqualmie Tunnel WA, abandoned 1980/1987
Tunnel 51, Landsburg Tunnel WA, bypassed 1945
Tunnel 52, Noble Tunnel WA, daylighted 1912
Southern Indiana Line
Tunnel 1, Indian Springs Tunnel IN, Indiana Rail Road
La Farge Line
Tunnel 1, Tunnelville Tunnel WI, abandoned 1939
Great Falls Line
Tunnel 1, Sage Creek / Hoosac Tunnel MT, Central Montana Rail
Tunnel 2, Arrow Creek Tunnel MT, daylighted 1961
Tunnel 3, Lacey Tunnel MT, abandoned 1980
Tunnel 4, Amphitheater Tunnel MT, daylighted before 1980
Tunnel 5, Belt Creek Tunnel MT, abandoned 1980
Tunnel 6, Red Coulee Tunnel MT, abandoned 1980
Elk River Line
Tunnel 1, Rover Tunnel ID, St. Maries River Railroad
Tunnel 2
, Neva Tunnel ID, daylighted 1970s
Metaline Falls Line
Tunnel 1, Blueslide Tunnel WA, Pend Oreille Valley Railroad
Tunnel 2, Vail Tunnel WA, Pend Oreille Valley Railroad
Tunnel 3, Wolf Creek Tunnel WA, Pend Oreille Valley Railroad
.

Major Bridges
With over 10,000 route miles during most of its existance, it was natural that the Milwaukee Road had a large number of significant bridges. The following are the ones which I consider to be the most remarkable.

Mississippi River
DRI&NW Bridge, Davenport IA, BNSF Railway, Photos
CMSP&P Bridge, Savanna IL, Iowa, Chicago and Eastern, Photos
CMSP&P Bridge, Prairie du Chien WI, abandoned 1961, Photos
CMSP&P Bridge, La Crosse WI, Canadian Pacific, Photos
CB&Q/GB&W Bridge, Winona MN, used 1952-1979, Photo
W&SP/C&NW Bridge, Winona MN, used 1872-1876, Photos
CMSP&P Bridge, Wabasha MN, abandoned 1952
CMSP&P Bridge, Hastings MN, Canadian Pacific, Photos
CSPM&O Bridge, St. Paul MN, Union Pacific, Photos
CMSP&P Bridge, Minneapolis MN, Canadian Pacific, Photos
Missouri River
Harry S Truman Bridge, Kansas City MO, IC&E and UP
Choteau Bridge, Kansas City MO, replaced 1945, Photo
CMSP&P Bridge, Chamberlain SD, Dakota Southern Railway, Photo
CMSP&P Bridge, Mobridge SD, BNSF Railway, Photo
CMSP&P Bridge, Great Falls MT, abandoned 1980, Photo
CMSP&P Bridge, Lombard MT, abandoned 1980, Photos
Yellowstone River
CMSP&P Bridge, Calypso MT, abandoned 1982
CMSP&P Bridge, Tusler MT, abandoned 1980
CMSP&P Bridge, Paragon MT, abandoned 1980
Chatcolet Lake
CMSP&P Bridge, Benewah ID, St. Maries River Railroad, Photos
Columbia River
CMSP&P Bridge
, Beverly WA, abandoned 1980
SP&S Bridge, Portland OR, BNSF Railway
.

Substations
The western half of the Milwaukee Road mainline between Chicago and Seattle
crossed over 5 mountain ranges. These were the Belt, Rocky, Bitterroot, Saddle and Cascade Mountains. The decision was made to electrify the Rocky Mountain and
Coast Divisions, powered by 28 substations. The first 14 substations were located along the 440 mile section linking Harlowton, MT, with Avery, ID.
On the Coast Division, 216 miles were electrified from Othello to Tacoma,
including 8 stations. The Avery to Othello section was never completed, and substations #15 to #20 were not built.
Even though the power was turned off over 30 years ago, seven of these
substations are still standing.

Substation  1, Two Dot, MT, removed
Substation  2, Loweth, MT, still standing, Photo
Substation  3, Francis, MT, removed
Substation  4, Eustis, MT, removed, Photo
Substation  5, Piedmont, MT, removed
Substation  6, Janney, MT, removed
Substation  7, Morel, MT, removed
Substation  8, Gold Creek, MT, still standing, Photos
Substation  9, Ravenna, MT, still standing, Photo
Substation 10, Primrose, MT, still standing, Photo
Substation 11, Tarkio, MT, removed
Substation 12, Drexel, MT, removed
Substation 13, East Portal, MT, Photos
Substation 14, Avery, ID, removed, Photos
Substation 15, St. Joe, ID, never built
Substation 16, Plummer, ID, never built
Substation 17, Rosalia, WA, never built
Substation 18, Castleton, WA, never built
Substation 19, Ralston, WA, never built
Substation 20, Roxboro, WA, never built
Substation 21, Taunton, WA, still standing, Photo
Substation 22, Doris, WA, removed
Substation 23, Kittitas, WA, removed, Photos
Substation 24, Cle Elum, WA, still standing, Photos
Substation 25
, Hyak, WA, removed
Substation 26, Cedar Falls, WA, removed, Photo
Substation 27, Renton, WA, still standing, Photo
Substation 28, Tacoma Jct, WA, removed
.

Passenger Train Stations
All of the larger passenger train stations on the Milwaukee Road remain in place.

Chicago Union Station
Milwaukee
Madison
Minneapolis
Aberdeen
Miles City
Harlowton
Lewistown
Butte
Great Falls
Missoula
Seattle Union Station

Dale
  • Member since
    February 2002
  • From: Mpls/St.Paul
  • 13,892 posts
Posted by wjstix on Monday, October 8, 2007 8:10 AM
Excellent work!! You can still do part of this route, the Amtrak Empire Builder uses the former MILW mainline between St.Paul and Chicago. The miles along the Mississippi are especially scenic.
Stix
  • Member since
    September 2006
  • From: Marion,Iowa
  • 239 posts
Posted by billbtrain on Friday, February 23, 2007 10:13 PM

Thanks.Yeah,it would be hard to pin down over several eras.I wonder how close or how many errors crept into the Official Guide.I'll have to see if I can find a list of Officials,Agents,and Stations for the Milwaukee Road.I have one for the GN dated January 1970 that I have scanned and on CD(if you want a copy,let me know).I've seen them for the NP and IC.

Have a good one.

Bill B

  • Member since
    April 2005
  • From: Nanaimo BC Canada
  • 4,117 posts
Posted by nanaimo73 on Friday, February 23, 2007 11:34 AM

Bill,

I tried to piece the them together the best I could from several sources. I believe they changed several times due to line relocations.  

Dale
  • Member since
    September 2006
  • From: Marion,Iowa
  • 239 posts
Posted by billbtrain on Thursday, February 22, 2007 5:03 PM

What were your sources for the milepost numbers?I don't have any Milwaukee ETT's to compare,so I've looked at the June 1971 Official Guide and followed BNSF's milepost numbers on their map on their website.I noticed that the Guide listing varies wildly from Just beyond Aberdeen(listed as mile 711) to Tacoma(mile 2221).BNSF map has Aberdeen as 707.9 and some of the listings west of there vary quite a bit.Great Info on the list.I'm just confused by the milepost numbers.

Have a good one.

Bill B

  • Member since
    April 2005
  • From: Nanaimo BC Canada
  • 4,117 posts
Posted by nanaimo73 on Friday, August 11, 2006 1:56 AM

 da Milwaukee beerNut wrote:
  Electric substation numbers 15-20 are pink instead of the usual red - they're pink in Safari 2.0.4 as well. Sounds like a Winderz-Firefox spat. 

I wanted to make the substations stand out, and add some color to the post so I made them red. Since 15-20 were not built, I decided to make them orange to sepatate them from real substations. However, I thought the orange was too pale, so I made the planned substations pink

Jim Scribbins' book, The Hiawatha Story, should be the best place to look for passenger trains in Wausau. 

Dale
  • Member since
    December 2001
  • From: Aurora, IL
  • 4,515 posts
Posted by eolafan on Wednesday, August 9, 2006 1:35 PM
Holy cow, this is a lot of information for one person to post...let alone digest....would you happen to have or know where I can see picutures of some of the last Milwaukee Road passenger trains in and out of Wausau just before Amtrak?
Eolafan (a.k.a. Jim)
  • Member since
    July 2006
  • From: NW Milwaukee
  • 107 posts
Posted by da Milwaukee beerNut on Wednesday, August 9, 2006 10:50 AM
Opened thread in Firefox 1.5.0.1 [PPC Mac latest version].

Electric substation numbers 15-20 are pink instead of the usual red - they're pink in Safari 2.0.4 as well.
Sounds like a Winderz-Firefox spat. All good on the Mac side - but Mike Y will tell you that is not unusual!

Never ask what sort of computer a guy drives.
If he's a Mac user, he'll tell you.
If not, why embarrass him? -- Tom Clancy
  • Member since
    January 2002
  • From: Cedar Rapids, IA
  • 4,213 posts
Posted by blhanel on Sunday, August 6, 2006 10:05 PM

On this particular thread, I can view all the responses without any problem- it's just the stuff towards the bottom of your initial post that gets screwed up.  It's almost as if the sheer length of the post makes my browser (Firefox) choke on it.  I have noticed that the Iowa's Counties thread gives me trouble viewing the responses as well.  I'll go back and verify that.

EDIT:  OK, went over to that thread and experimented- when I initially opened the first page of the thread, it acted as noted above, except that the responses were all blank.  The posts were there and identified who put them there, and the post boxes were the correct size near as I could tell, but there was NOTHING in them.  I left the last post on the page showing on the screen and hit Refresh.  Voila! Text returns to posts visible on the screen.  I scrolled up and discovered that on the eighth post up (which coincidentally was my first post in that thread), text in the posts started getting messed up (overrunning the post windows, repeating lines, overlapping repeating quote boxes).  I hit the refresh button again with that post on the screen, after which ALL of the responses appeared to be OK, except for minor screw-ups in the thread title displayed above each post.  As soon as I scrolled up to your initial main post, though, I enter stuttering mode again.

EDIT #2:  Closed Firefox and accessed this thread using IE.  Problem solved.

  • Member since
    April 2005
  • From: Nanaimo BC Canada
  • 4,117 posts
Posted by nanaimo73 on Saturday, August 5, 2006 10:43 AM

I've never seen that Brian. Can you see the replies after my posts ? Does the refresh button help ?

If I get my next one done, Marion will be near the top.

Dale
  • Member since
    January 2002
  • From: Cedar Rapids, IA
  • 4,213 posts
Posted by blhanel on Friday, August 4, 2006 11:23 PM
I don't know what it is about your super long posts, Dale, but every one I try to access leads to trouble.  I can scroll down quite a ways into the post, but always end up not being able to scroll to the bottom as it starts a repeating loop of three or four lines at that point.  The post does have a scroll bar of its own, which allows me to make it a half dozen or so lines deeper, but that's it.  Is anyone else experiencing this problem?
  • Member since
    August 2005
  • From: Along the old Milwaukee Road.
  • 1,152 posts
Posted by CMSTPP on Monday, July 24, 2006 10:05 AM
 nanaimo73 wrote:
 CMSTPP wrote:

Thanks for the info. This will help a bit on my website.

That must have taken you quite a while to type up.

Thanks James. I think it would have taken longer to drive the route. Wink [;)]

Nice website. www.freewebs.com/cmstpp/

Thanks allot of it still being worked on but I will hopefully have most of it done by the end of August.

I don't know what it is about the Milwaukee road that sparked me to like it so much. It was just a cool railroad.

 

James

The Milwaukee Road From Miles City, Montana, to Avery, Idaho. The Mighty Milwaukee's Rocky Mountain Division. Visit: http://www.sd45.com/milwaukeeroad/index.htm
  • Member since
    April 2005
  • From: Nanaimo BC Canada
  • 4,117 posts
Posted by nanaimo73 on Monday, July 24, 2006 8:32 AM
 CMSTPP wrote:

Thanks for the info. This will help a bit on my website.

That must have taken you quite a while to type up.

Thanks James. I think it would have taken longer to drive the route. Wink [;)]

Nice website. www.freewebs.com/cmstpp/

Dale
  • Member since
    August 2005
  • From: Along the old Milwaukee Road.
  • 1,152 posts
Posted by CMSTPP on Saturday, July 22, 2006 10:28 PM

Thanks for the info. This will help a bit on my website.

That must have taken you quite a while to type up.

 

James

The Milwaukee Road From Miles City, Montana, to Avery, Idaho. The Mighty Milwaukee's Rocky Mountain Division. Visit: http://www.sd45.com/milwaukeeroad/index.htm
  • Member since
    January 2006
  • From: SE Wisconsin
  • 1,181 posts
Posted by solzrules on Tuesday, June 27, 2006 6:42 PM
I just got done going through this site, and I know it is late, but this was absolutely amazing!!!!!!!! Thanks for all the hard work!!!
You think this is bad? Just wait until inflation kicks in.....
  • Member since
    April 2003
  • 305,205 posts
Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, October 8, 2005 5:51 PM
YOU are verry welcome ; it took a lot of work ;some realy great photos ;more people should take advantage of them[angel][bow][4:-)]>>>>glennbob
  • Member since
    April 2005
  • From: Nanaimo BC Canada
  • 4,117 posts
Posted by nanaimo73 on Friday, October 7, 2005 1:17 AM
QUOTE: Originally posted by glennbob

THIS is a great posting i am supprised no one has commented on it by now. glennbob


Thank you.
Dale
  • Member since
    April 2003
  • 305,205 posts
Posted by Anonymous on Thursday, October 6, 2005 7:51 PM
THIS is a great posting i am supprised no one has commented on it by know[8D][8)][:)][:P][angel][bow][bow][C=:-)][%-)]>>>>glennbob
  • Member since
    April 2003
  • 305,205 posts
Posted by Anonymous on Wednesday, September 21, 2005 6:03 PM
Sorry Wow good info . thanks a lot glennbob
  • Member since
    April 2003
  • 305,205 posts
Posted by Anonymous on Wednesday, September 21, 2005 6:02 PM
WOW good info thanks a lit glennbob
  • Member since
    April 2005
  • From: Nanaimo BC Canada
  • 4,117 posts
The Milwaukee Road Mainline
Posted by nanaimo73 on Sunday, August 28, 2005 11:55 AM

  
The mainline of the Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad reached
2200 miles from Chicago to the west coast ports of Seattle and Tacoma.
The Last Spike ceremony took place on May 14, 1909 in Gold Creek, Montana,
marking the official completion of the line.

Although the Milwaukee Road had the shortest route between Chicago and Seattle, it had to cross 5 mountain ranges. These were the Belt, Rocky, Bitterroot, Saddle and Cascade Mountains. The decision was made to electrify the Rocky Mountain and
Coast Divisions, powered by 28 substations. 22 were actually built, of which 7 still exist. The line also required 51 tunnels, more than the competing Great Northern and Northern Pacific routes. This line also had 10 bridges were I consider significant. These crossed the Mississippi River at La Crosse, Hastings and Minneapolis, the Missouri River at Mobridge and Lombard, the Yellowstone River at Calypso, Tusler and Paragon, Lake Chatcolet at Benewah, and the Columbia River at Beverly. The CMSP&P was granted trackage rights into Portland during March 1971, and the use
of a second bridge crossing the Columbia River, north of Portland.

To reach Seattle and Tacoma from Chicago, the CMSP&P required 2,178 route miles. A slim majority of this trackage remains in use, almost all of it on the eastern of of the line. These 1,139 miles are divided amoung 8 operators-
BNSF Railway, 507 miles, in ND, SD and MT
Canadian Pacific, 394 miles, in IL, WI and MN
Twin Cities and Western, 143 miles, in Minnesota
Metra, 32 miles, in Illinois
Union Pacific, 28 miles, in Washington
St. Maries River, 20 miles, in Idaho
Columbia Basin, 13 miles, in Washington
Trinity Railcar, 2 miles, in Montana

This is a 16 page booklet of CMSP&P history.
Cover1        Cover2         Page 1         Page 2        Page 3
Page 4         Page 5         Page 6         Page 7         Page 8
Page 9         Page10        Page11        Page12        Page13
Page14        Page15        Page16        Cover3        Cover4

Further information on the Milwaukee Road can be found on Wikipedia.
Wikipedia-CMSP&P

These are links to 1973 and 1944 system maps of the CMSP&P.
webhome.idirect.com     mrcd.1944


Illinois

From Chicago the Milwaukee Road traveled 48 miles north to Wisconsin.
Metra, the Chicago commuter railroad, owns the first 32 miles to Rondout,
while Canadian Pacific has the following 16 miles to the border. 

The starting point of mainline was Chicago Union Station.
The Station was built in 1925 and owned by the Pennsylvania (50%), CB&Q (25%)
and the CMSP&P (25%). The Milwaukee and the PRR used the 10 northern tracks
while the PRR, CB&Q and the GM&O used the southern 18 tracks.
Amtrak took over the Milwaukee Road's intercity passenger trains on May 1, 1971.
Metra (the Regional Transportation Authority) operates the former CMSP&P
commuter trains to the west and north.
This aerial view of C.U.S. shows the waiting room building west of Canal Street
while the concourse is under the office building on the east side of Canal Street.
There was a concourse building here until 1967.
Wikimapia     Wikipedia     trainweb.org     hebners.net    

This is a photograph of the Afternoon Hiawatha leaving
Chicago Union Station in 1947 behind DL 109 14.
rr-fallenflags.org  

Intercity trains still operating at the start of Amtrak ran west to Omaha,
northwest to Madison and north to Milwaukee with the Morning Hiawatha running
on to Minneapolis. Power included 5 FP45 locomotives which were later used in
freight service, although they lacked dynamic brakes.
rrpicturearchives.net  

On January 1st, 1986 Metra purchased the Milwaukee Road mainline from
Chicago Union Station to Rondout, IL, and on to Fox Lake as well as west to
Big Timber Road (near Elgin). Until recently the commuter trains were handled by
a fleet of F40C locomotives.
rrpicturearchives.net   

At mile 2.9 is tower A2, Western Avenue and this Metra facility.
Wikimapia     Wikipedia-Metra

Tower A5 (Pacific Junction) is at mile 5.4. The Elgin sub runs west of here
through Elgin to Big Timber Road at mile 39.8 were ownership under
Iowa, Chicago and Eastern begins. The C&M subdivision continues to the north.
Wikimapia  

The line running to the east was called the Bloomingdale Line.
chicagoswitching.com   

The Wisconsin and Southern has trackage rights over this line into Chicago.
Here is a WSOR train in Morton Grove.
rrpicturearchives.net

Glenview, Il, at mile 17.7, is a stop for the Empire Builder and the Hiawathas.
Wikimapia     trainweb.org      hebners.net    

Northbrook is the location of Techny Junction, where the CMSP&P line passes
under the Union Pacific (former Chicago and North Western) line heading to
Proviso Yard. Milwaukee Road freight trains from the north would swing onto this
line on their way to Bensenville Yard.
Wikimapia

Bensenville Yard lies just south of O'Hare Airport.
Wikimapia     rrpicturearchives.net 

At mile 32.3 is the junction of Rondout where the tower is still manned.
The Elgin, Joliet and Eastern crosses here heading northeast to Waukegan.
The former Chicago, North Shore and Milwaukee Mundelein branch ran under the CMSP&P line. Metra's line to Fox Lake swings off to the west and Canadian Pacific ownership begins on the line heading for Milwaukee.
Wikimapia  

Here is a shot of the Rondout tower.
rrpicturearchives.net  

GP38-2 358 heads north past Rondout Tower during 1980.
rr-fallenflags.org


WISCONSIN

Canadian Pacific currently owns the 235 mile mainline across Wisconsin, from Illinois through Milwaukee and on into Minnesota.  

Here is an up to date railmap of Wisconsin.
dot.wisconsin.gov  

Mile 61.8 is Sturtevant and the junction with the "Southwestern" line which went through Beloit and joined the line to Kansas City at Kittredge until 1978. Today Canadian Pacific uses it to Kansasville, about 10 miles to the west.
Amtrak's Hiawathas stop here at a new Station.
Wikimapia     trainweb.org     rrpicturearchives.net

Mile 69.4 is Caledonia where this 1960 shot of a Hiawatha passenger train
was taken.
Wikimapia      rrpicturearchives.net     CMSP&P-Hiawathas

Another stop for the Hiawathas is the new Milwaukee Airport Station.
Wikimapia      trainweb.org     Amtrak-Hiawathas

The mainline used this bridge over the Menomonee to enter downtown.
Wikimapia      rrpicturearchives.net  

Milwaukee is at mile 85.7. The C&M subdivision ends and the Watertown Subdivision begins heading west. In the 1950s the line from Milwaukee to Minneapolis was part
of the La Crosse Division. This Terraserver image shows the line crossing the bridge
and running under the US Post Office building before getting to the station.
Wikimapia     rrpicturearchives.net     trainweb.org

This is a poster of one of CMSP&P's Atlantic 4-4-2 passenger locomotives.
rrpicturearchives.net  

Here is some information on Atlantics.
trains.com  

The Milwaukee Road was a good customer of Fairbanks Morse, buying 152
of the 1,460 Fairbanks Morse locomotives constructed.
Along with H10-44, H12-44, H16-44 and H16-66 frieght locomotives, they had
18 C-Liners and 20 Erie-Builds. The C-Liners included 12 A units and 6 B units which started arriving in July 1951. CFA 16-4 26A was traded in to EMD in 1968 and is pictured here.
rrpicturearchives.net  

West of the station the CMSP&P had their huge shops and several yards
which took up almost everything in this image.
terraserver.microsoft.com  

The heart of the Milwaukee Road was the shops in Milwaukee.
rr-fallenflags.org     rr-fallenflags.org  

Here is a photo of the yards from the age of steam.
rrpicturearchives.net  

Between Wauwatosa and Elm Grove the mainline passes under the former
C&NW mainline heading for Butler yard.
Wikimapia  

Duplainville is at mile 102.2 where there is a crossing and connection with a
Canadian National line, which was Soo Line's and then regional Wisconsin Central.
Wikimapia     Photos 

Mile 104.2 is Pewaukee where the line runs beside the lake.
rrpicturearchives.net     Wikimapia

Mile 117.9 is Oconomowoc, and here is a recent shot of Canadian Pacific
GP38-2 4521, formerly a GP40X.
rrpicturearchives.net     Wikimapia

Here is a train on Terraserver at Oconomowoc.
terraserver.microsoft.com 

Watertown is at mile 131.2 where a Union Pacific (C&NW) line down to
Fort Atkinson is crossed. The mainline runs northwest while the line to Madison
runs to the west, which is now a Wisconsin and Southern line.
terraserver.microsoft.com     Photos

Amtrak uses the 1906 Milwaukee Road Station in Columbus.
terraserver.microsoft.com     trainweb.org

GP40-2 2002 leads a Sprint train through Fall River Wisconsin during 1982.
rr-fallenflags.org  

Here is a westbound near Rio.
terraserver.microsoft.com  

At mile 178.2 is Portage, where the Watertown subdivision ends and the Tomah subdivision begins. This is a crew change location and a stop for the Empire Builder.
terraserver.microsoft.com     Photos      trainweb.org

The M&P subdivision runs south from Portage to Madison and serves the
Columbia power plant, which the CMSP&P began serving in Oct. 1974. 
terraserver.microsoft.com  

At mile 195.1 is Wisconsin Dells, another stop for the Empire Builder.
Here is a shot of F7A 70A leading a train.
The 70A was acquired in July 1950 and retired in May 1980.
rrpicturearchives.net     trainweb.org

On the west side of Wisconsin Dells is this bridge over the Wisconsin River.
rr-fallenflags.org     rr-fallenflags.org  

And another view of the bridge.
rrpicturearchives.net     terraserver.microsoft.com   

New Lisbon is at mile 221.2. This is the junction with the Wisconsin Valley Line
now owned by Canadian National.
terraserver.microsoft.com  

This is a photograph of the old coaling tower in New Lisbon.
rrpicturearchives.net  

Here is an aerial view of a westbound at Camp Douglas.
terraserver.microsoft.com

Tomah is served by the Empire Builder.
rrpicturearchives.net     trainweb.org     terraserver.microsoft.com

The CMSP&P and the Chicago and North Western built parallel lines between
Tomah and La Crosse. During 1973 the C&NW tunnel at Tunnel City collapsed so the North Western arranged trackage rights over the Milwaukee and tore up their line. 
This is an aerial image of two westbounds in 1999 about to enter the tunnel.
terraserver.microsoft.com  

This is a photo from 1985 showing an eastbound Milwaukee Road freight
coming out of the tunnel
. In the lead is SD40-2 147 which arrived in July 1972.
rrpicturearchives.net  

The Milwaukee Road called this Tunnel #1. There were 51 tunnels
between Chicago and Seattle, and this is one of two still in use.
Altogether, there was a total of 64 on the Milwaukee Road, of which 8 are
currently in service. The Soo line had studied daylighting this tunnel.
The C&NW tunnel was just to the north.
terraserver.microsoft.com  

Mile 265.5 is Sparta where this 1972 shot of 572 and 573 was taken.
The CMSP&P had 6 of these RSD 5 locomotives which came in 1953.
The 572 was scrapped in the Milwaukee's shops in 1976.
rrpicturearchives.net  

Here is a CMSP&P Diesel Roster by Fred Hyde.
trainweb.org/milwaukee 

Mile 265.0 is Bangor where this Canadian Pacific train lead by Soo Line 4506
was shot in 2004.
rrpicturearchives.net     terraserver.microsoft.com  

West Salem is the location of this 1984 photograph of CMSP&P SD40-2 186 on the point of this train. This locomotive joined the Soo Line and then went to GATX.
rrpicturearchives.net     terraserver.microsoft.com  

In La Crosse at Grand Junction is a busy crossing with the BNSF.
Here is a photo from 1984 of Milwaukee Road GP40 2001 at the crossing.
Until January 28, 1991 this was the last continuously manned tower in Wisconsin.
rrpicturearchives.net     wikimapia.org

The Empire Builder uses the Station in La Crosse.
wikimapia.org    rrpicturearchives.net     trainweb.org

La Crosse had a roundhouse in the wye, between 
the station to the east and the Black River drawbridge to the west.
wikimapia.org   

GP38-2 4411 is shown going over the Black River drawbridge.
rrpicturearchives.net     wikimapia.org

The Mississippi River is crossed with a total of 4 separate bridges, including a swing span along the Minnesota shore and a draw span on the Wisconsin side.
This crossing opened on November 27, 1876.
wikimapia.org          Johnweeks.Mainchannel     Johnweeks.Eastchannel   Johnweeks.Frenchslough           Johnweeks.Blackriver    


MINNESOTA

The Milwaukee Road's route through the Gopher State to the South Dakota border
ran 316 miles, of which 7 have been abandoned. This involves 2 miles from
South Minneapolis to the Minneapolis Station, and 5 miles running west to
Bass Lake. The remaining trackage is operated by Canadian Pacific, 143 miles,
Twin Cities and Western, 143 miles, and BNSF, 23 miles. 

Minnesota DOT state rail maps.
www.dot.state.mn.us  

At River Junction the mainline heads northwest towards Minneapolis,
while another route to Kansas City follows the Mississippi River southward.
wikimapia.org  

Here are some pictures of Milwaukee Road action around River Junction.
rrpicturearchives.net     rrpicturearchives.net  
rrpicturearchives.net     rrpicturearchives.net

The line south of River Junction is now the Iowa, Chicago and Eastern.
This had been the Dubuque subdivision.
rrpicturearchives.net  

The line north of River Junction to St. Paul Yard is the River subdivision.
This is a shot of Soo Line 4437 leading a train through Dresbach.
rrpicturearchives.net     wikimapia.org

This is another Soo Line train with 772 up front going through Dakota, Minnesota.
rrpicturearchives.net     wikimapia.org

FP7A 98C leads the Twin Cities Hiawatha along the Mississippi River.
rr-fallenflags.org  

The 1888 CM&StP Station in Winona is still in service with Amtrak.
rrpicturearchives.net     trainweb.org     wikimapia.org

The Milwaukee Road owned 6 bridges across the Mississippi River, three of which
were on the mainline, at La Crosse, WI, Hastings, MN, and Minneapolis, MN.
The other three were between Savanna and Sabula, and the pontoon bridges
near Wabasha, MN, and at Prairie du Chien, WI. The bridges of other railroads
were used at four other crossings, the DRI&NW bridge at Davenport, the C&NW
bridge in St. Paul, and two bridges at Winona. East of the City was a joint 
Chicago, Burlington and Quincy-Green Bay and Western bridge that was 
used to reach the Eau Claire branch from 1952 until 1979.
Google image   Photo   article   article   article

The Milwaukee Road also used the Winona and St. Peter bridge at Winona,
beginning in 1872 for a Milwaukee to Minneapolis route. During 1876 the railroad
opened it's own route between La Crosse and Winona up the west bank.
Google image   USACE article   Photo   Johnweeks.Winona

Milwaukee Road SD40-2s 200 and 143 are shown here running south through Wabasha, mile 341  
rrpicturearchives.net     wikimapia.org   

Just north of Wabasha is Reads Landing. Until 1952 the CMSP&P had a
pontoon bridge over the Mississippi river as part of a line to Eau Claire.
wikimapia.org   

This is an aerial view of a northbound in Lake City, mile 353.8.
terraserver.microsoft.com     rrpicturearchives.net

Red Wing has a beautiful station used by the Empire Builder.
trainweb.org   hebners.net    wikimapia.org    rrpicturearchives.net

Mile 391.1 is Hastings where this recent view shows Canadian Pacific
AC4400CW 8548 beside the station after crossing the Mississippi.
rrpicturearchives.net     wikimapia.org   

This is one of three operating lift bridges over the Mississippi and it first opened
in December 1871.
wikimapia.org   Johnweeks.Hastings    Photo    Photo    Wikipedia  

St. Croix is at mile 392.1. The former Milwaukee Road from the south meets
the BNSF line coming from the east in this view and they operate as
joint trackage to St. Paul yard.
wikimapia.org   

At mile 407.4 is St. Paul yard, commonly known as Pig's Eye.
The BNSF Dayton's bluff yard runs along the east side.
wikimapia.org   

The locomotive facility is at the north end.
wikimapia.org   

The Milwaukee Road had a wide variety of power in St. Paul over the years.
Baldwin AS 616 561(1951) rrpicturearchives.net  
Baldwin S12 907  (1953)  rrpicturearchives.net  
Baldwin DS4-4 1000 946 rrpicturearchives.net  
GE  U25B 5003  (1965)   rrpicturearchives.net  
GE  U28B 5500  (1966)   rrpicturearchives.net  
EMD FP7A 92A  (1950)   rrpicturearchives.net  
EMD GP20 950 (ex GP9)  rrpicturearchives.net  
EMD GP38-2 355 (1973)  rrpicturearchives.net  
EMD GP40 2059  (1968)  rrpicturearchives.net  
EMD SD10 545 (ex SD7)  rrpicturearchives.net  
EMD SDL39 581 (1969)    rrpicturearchives.net  
EMD MP15AC 463 (1976)  rrpicturearchives.net  

The line west of St. Paul yard is now the Merriam Park subdivision. This image
shows St. Paul Union Depot, which opened in 1920 and closed on April 30, 1971.
wikimapia.org     wikipedia.org   

Fordson Juction is at mile 412.0, beside the power plant. The mainline heads
west and a spur line goes southwest to the Ford plant. A third line crosses the
Mississippi on the old Omaha Road bridge and used to go down to Iowa.
wikimapia.org   

Mile 416.0 is Merriam Park, where Amtrak's Empire Builder leaves the former
CMSP&P and uses Minnesota Commercial trackage to reach Midway Station.
wikimapia.org   

This is a view of the Short Line Bridge crossing the Mississippi River.
wikimapia.org      rrpicturearchives.net      Photos
Wikipedia 
           Johnweeks.Shortline

South Minneapolis at mile 419 had a junction of Milwaukee Road north-south and east-west lines. The mileposts followed the passenger train route from the east and then to the north for two miles to the Minneapolis station and then back here before heading west. A through freight train would jump from mile 419 to mile 423.
Minnesota Commercial operates a two mile spur running south from here.
The line to the north and the next four miles to the west has been removed.
wikimapia.org  

Minnesota Commercial has greatly expanded over the last few years,
adding trackage from the former Milwaukee Road and several other railroad lines
throughout the region.
mnnr.net/      mnnr.org/

This Terraserver image from 1991 shows how the junction used to look.
terraserver.microsoft.com  

The Minneapolis Station opened in 1898 and hosted passenger service until
May 1971. The railroad used the office space until selling the building in 1984.
wikimapia.org      wikipedia.org

These are some pictures some of the locomotives seen in Minneapolis.
ALCo RSC-2 592 (1947) rrpicturearchives.net  
ALCo S4 802  (1951)    rrpicturearchives.net  
GE U30C 5652 (1974)  rrpicturearchives.net  
EMD F3A 82A (1949)   rrpicturearchives.net  
EMD F7A 88C (1949)   rrpicturearchives.net  
EMD GP35 1501 (1965) rrpicturearchives.net  
EMD FP45 1   (1968)    rrpicturearchives.net  

Minneapolis purchased the ROW from South Minneapolis to Bass Lake at
mile 428.0 for future rapid transit use in 1992. The track has been removed and
trains detour to the north using a piece of Minneapolis and St. Louis track now
owned by the Twin Cities and Western. This image shows an eastbound train
with its last 4 cars on the former CMSP&P.
wikimapia.org   

At mile 429.4 is St. Louis Park where the former MN&S crosses overhead.
wikimapia.org   

Hopkins at mile 431.8 was the end of the La Crosse Division and the start of the Aberdeen Division.
wikimapia.org   

This is an aerial showing an eastbound crossing Shady Oak Lake in Minnetonka.
wikimapia.org   

Canadian Pacific ownership comes to an end at Tower E 14 which is mile 435.0.
This was a crossing with the Minneapolis and St. Louis. The line west from here
to Appleton was sold to the Twin Cities and Western in April, 1991.
wikimapia.org   

This is a photograph of two CMSP&P SD40-2s passing through Chanhassen.
rrpicturearchives.net     wikimapia.org   

At Norwood, mile 461, was a crossing with another Minneapolis and St. Louis line.
The Twin Cities and Western has been operating this line to Hanley Falls since 2002.
wikimapia.org   

The Twin Cities and Western operate out of Glencoe mile 473.
rrpicturearchives.net     wikimapia.org    

This is the TCWR website
www.tcwr.net  

Just north of Granite Falls mile 542 the CMSP&P crossed a Great Northern line
which went into South Dakota and Iowa.
wikimapia.org    

Montevideo at mile 555 had a fair sized yard.
terraserver.microsoft     wikimapia.org    

Appleton at mile 578 is the end of Twin Cities and Western ownership.
Canadian Pacific sold the line from Appleton to Ortonville mile 600 to
Burlington Northern in 1992.
wikimapia.org  

Ortonville at mile 600 became the end of the CMSP&P in 1982 when the line to the west was sold to the state of South Dakota. There was a 118 mile line to Fargo
from Ortonville that was abandoned in 1980. The border between Minnesota and
South Dakota is just west of the bridge over the river.
wikimapia.org


SOUTH DAKOTA

The 299 mile line across South Dakota is now owned by BNSF.  

This is the South Dakota DOT site.
www.sddot.com  

Big Stone City at mile 602.2 has a spur running north to the Big Stone power plant. This 450 MW facility has been operating since 1975 and there are plans to build a second unit here. 
wikimapia.org     www.bigstoneii.com   

At Milbank mile 611 is the junction with the Sisseton Milbank Railroad.
The CMSP&P operated this until 1982 when Dakota Rail took over.
wikimapia.org

Lonnie King has put this photoessay together covering the line from Milbank to Harlowton.
themilwaukeeroadtrail.org   

Summit at mile 633 is the end of a 14 mile 1% climb out of the Minnesota River
valley and it had a wye for turning helpers.
terraserver.microsoft.com   

This link is just a TerraServer westbound at Bristol mile 669.
terraserver.microsoft.com   

West of Bristol the Milwaukee Road had a grade to 1.2 % as westbound trains drop down off of the Coteau des Prairies. A large loop was built during 1911 bending down to the south to give eastbounds a grade of 0.5% compensated. The original allignment was removed in 1959 and is now used by Highway 12.  
wikimapia.org    

Andover was the junction with a 50 mile branch to Cogswell, ND.
Most of the branch was removed in 1980 and a 5 mile section north of Britton
survives as part of the DMVW.
terraserver.microsoft.com   

Aberdeen was the headquarters of the Aberdeen division. Besides the mainline the
CMSP&P had a line coming up from Iowa that continued into North Dakota.
The C&NW also had a line from the south which went into North Dakota.
The Great Northern and the Minneapolis and St. Louis served Aberdeen as well.
Currently BNSF has the mainline and the line south to Sioux City while the DME
has rights over this line from Wolsey. The GN line is now operated by the
Dakota, Minnesota Valley and Western. Aberdeen became the western end of
passenger service after the last Olympian Hiawatha replacement train
(Numbers 15 and 16) pulled back from Deer Lodge at the end of January 1964.
The last scheduled passenger train to Aberdeen left Minneapolis on April 15, 1969. 
wikimapia.org      themilwaukeeroadtrail

CMSP&P FP7A 104A and F7A 118A, and Baldwin S12  921, in Aberdeen-
rrpicturearchives.net     rrpicturearchives.net   

A BN westbound train near mile 742-
terraserver.microsoft.com   

At Roscoe there was a line 41 miles south to Orient until 1978.
Another line went north 75 miles through Eureka, SD, to Linton, ND until 1980.
BN purchased the 49 miles of this line north of Eureka and operated it for several
years before turning it over to the Dakota, Missouri Valley and Western.
DMVW has since abandoned the line.
terraserver.microsoft.com

The CMSP&P, and later on the BN, made line changes to reduce curvature across
western South Dakota, which left some of the towns off of the mainline.
A 1946 line change from mile 772 to mile 782 left Java south of the main,
served by a spur line.
terraserver.microsoft.com

Another town bypassed by a line change was Glenham.
terraserver.microsoft.com   

The mainline ended at Evarts when the decision to build to the coast was made in 1905. The construction of the Oahe Dam in the early 1960s created Lake Oahe which has flooded the townsite.
terraserver.microsoft.com

This is an article on the Pacific Coast Extension.
northeast.railfan.net

Mobridge is where the Milwaukee Road mainlie crossed the Missouri River.
It took 3 years to build the PCE 1,400 miles to the Pacific Coast.
terraserver.microsoft.com      themilwaukeeroadtrail

The first bridge over the river was a wooden temporary bridge, which was in
place by April 1907. Construction of a permanent steel bridge took place while the
PCE headed west, and the second bridge was opened on March 19th, 1908.
The third bridge at this site was built by the USACE during 1961 for the Chicago,
Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific, necessitated by the Oahe Dam project.
CMSP&P operations in South Dakota came to an end during March 1982, resulting in
the purchase of the line by the State, with Burlington Northern contracted to
run the route. BNSF Railway now owns and operates the bridge.   
WikiMapia   Terraserver   Photo   Johnweeks.photos

Moreau Jct. was the start of 164 miles of light track to the towns of
Isabel and Faith which lasted until 1980. Several miles of the Mainline and the
branch had to be moved due to the Oahe dam.
terraserver.microsoft.com   

The relocation included this bridge over the Grand River.
terraserver.microsoft.com

This link has a westbound at Mahto near mile 828.
maps.google.com/maps   

McLaughlin was the start of a 134 mile branch to New England, ND. This line 
survived the March 1980 reorganization, only to be abandoned during March 1982.
wikimapia.org


NORTH DAKOTA

BNSF Railway operates the 103 miles of the mainline through North Dakota.

Near Gascoyne is the spur to Knife River
wikimapia.org   

The Knife River lignite mine originated coal for the Big Stone Power Plant on the Milwaukee Road. 
wikimapia.org   

Bowman reminds me of a model train layout. 
wikimapia.org 

The Little Missouri River was crossed on the east side of Marmarth.
wikimapia.org  

Marmarth was a crew change site and engine terminal.
This was the former site of a roundhouse and turntable.
wikimapia.org


MONTANA

The Milwaukee Road's Mainline traveled 746 miles through Montana, and currently 84 miles remains in service. BNSF operates 76 miles from North Dakota to the connection at Terry. They have another 5 miles between Butte and Newcomb, along with short sections in Miles City and Deer Lodge. Trinity Railcar are using 2 miles through the former Miles City shops. 

This is a map of Railroads in Montana.
mdt.mt.gov/travinfo  

Just inside Montana, the mainline leaves the Little Missouri Valley to enter the 
Yellowstone River Valley at Kingmont. This aerial image shows an westbound
empty BNSF unit coal train returning for another load, just cresting the summit.
wikimapia.org

A few pictures from Pelva-
themilwaukeeroadtrail     Wikimapia

The mainline came down into the Yellowstone River valley and crossed over Interstate 94 and the BNSF former NP mainline near mile 1,075. 
Wikimapia  

The mainline now ends just east of Terry where BN built a connection to their line. 
Wikimapia  

At mile 1,084 near Calypso the Milwaukee road crossed over to the north bank of
the Yellowstone River. At this location the river is flowing to the northwest on
its way east.
Wikimapia

The Olympian derailed on the Custer Creek bridge on June 19, 1938, killing 48 of
the 218 people on board. The swollen creek undermined the two center piers.
Wikimapia     billingsgazette.net    

At Tusler the CMSP&P crossed the Yellowstone for the second time.
terraserver.microsoft     Wikimapia

About 4000' of line is in use on the east side of Miles City to serve this facility. 
Wikimapia  

Miles City had a fair sized yard which is now used by Trinity Railcar Repair.
A transfer table is located between the two large buildigs. From Miles City 
crews ran west to Melstone and east to Marmarth. This was the west end
of the Aberdeen Division and the start of the Rocky Mountain Division. 
Wikimapia     themilwaukeeroadtrail  

Near Paragon was the third and final crossing of the Yellowstone River.
terraserver.microsoft     Wikimapia

Ingomar's station still stands.
themilwaukeeroadtrail     Wikimapia

Melstone had a roundhouse and was a crew change location. 
Wikimapia     themilwaukeeroadtrail  

At Roundup the CMSP&P had a spur 4 miles south to a coal mine at Klein.
terraserver.microsoft     Wikimapia 

A black and white photograph of the station in Roundup.
rr-fallenflags.org  

At Slayton the line passed under the former Great Northern line from
Great Falls to Billings. 
Wikimapia  

This is a station list covering Harlowton to Seattle and Tacoma from 1951.
webhome.idirect  

Harlowton at mile 1,335.5 was at 4,162' and was the beginning of the electrified territory. The CMSP&P served northern Montana from here with a line through Lewistown to Great Falls also serving Winnett, Roy, Winifred and Agawan.
111 out of the 394 miles of track north of Harlowton are still being operated.
On the mainline crews operated east to Melstone and west to Three Forks.
The next 95 miles to Lombard were built by the Montana Railroad. 
Wikimapia     themilwaukeeroadtrail

These are two articles on the Milwaukee Road's mainline electrification.
scn.org/cedar_butte     northeast.railfan 

Lonnie King put together this interesting Photo essay covering the Milwaukee from Harlowton to St. Maries, ID.
themilwaukeeroadtrail

E-57B is on display in Harlowton.
rr-fallenflags.org     Wikimapia

This is a roster of the electrics. 
web-archive-org 

Helmut Wisinger has put this Montana guide together of what can be
seen along the right of way.

webhome.idirect

Two Dot was at mile 1,347.5 and at 4,443'. This was the location of substation #1
Wikimapia     themilwaukeeroadtrail

Loweth was mile 1,380.9 and at 5,802' (5,787' before 1956) and was the summit through the Belt Mountains. This was also the location of substation #2
Wikimapia  

Ringling at mile 1,392.8 and 5,307 was the junction with the White Sulphur Springs and Yellowstone Park Railway. The CMSP&P owned the track and leased it out. 
Wikimapia     themilwaukeeroadtrail

The White Sulphur Springs and Yellowstone Park Railway operated 23 miles
north to the town of White Sulphur Springs, Montana, until March 1980.
Wikimapia 

The line from Ringling to Lombard through Sixteen Mile Canyon featured 8 tunnels
in 30 miles. Red Tunnel #2 was near mile 1,398, about 1,154 miles from
tunnel #1 in Wisconsin. 
Wikimapia     themilwaukeeroadtrail

Tunnels #3 and #4 were near mile 1,409. Tunnel #3 was also known as 
Canyon Tunnel.
Wikimapia     terraserver.microsoft

Eagle Nest Tunnel #4 was in the movie Danger Lights.
Wikimapia     imdb.com/title  

Josephine Tunnel #5 was near mile 1,410. 
Wikimapia  

Francis was at mile 1,411.4 at 4,652' and had substation #3.
Francis was originally named Josephine, and the named was changed to that
of a local family.
Wikimapia     terraserver.microsoft  

Deer Park Tunnels #6 and #7 were west of Maudlow near mile 1,420. 
Wikimapia#6     Wikimapia#7     themilwaukeeroadtrail

Deer Park Tunnel # 8 was near mile 1,422.
Wikimapia     terraserver.microsoft  

This is a 1956 timetable for the Olympian Hiawatha from Deer Park to Seattle
and Tacoma.
rrpicturearchives.net  

Lombard was at 3,985' and at mile 1,430.4, just west of Tunnel # 9.
The CMSP&P passed over the Northern Pacific (now MRL) and then crossed
the Missouri River.             Tunnel#9
Wikimapia     terraserver.microsoft     themilwaukeeroadtrail

Eustis at mile 1,441.2 and 4,014' was home to substation #4.
Wikimapia     terraserver.microsoft  

Across the river from Trident is the Holcim Cement manufacturing facility located
on Montana Rail Link. 
Wikimapia

Three Forks at 1,449.7 and 4,068' was a crew change location. A line to the east went through Bozeman to Menard. The town is named after the Madison, Gallatin
and Jefferson rivers which joined together here to form the Missouri.
Wikimapia     terraserver.microsoft  

A recent shot of the abandoned ROW near Three Forks.
rr-fallenflags.org

At Sappington the Northern Pacific (now MRL) crossed over the Milwaukee Road
mainline and the Jefferson River. 
Wikimapia

The CMSP&P itself crossed the Jefferson River at Jefferson Island.
Wikimapia  

Piedmont mile 1,484.2 was at 4,350' and was the location of substation #5.
The Continental Divide at Donald was 20.2 miles away and 2,002' higher resulting
in a grade of 1.83%.
Wikimapia     terraserver.microsoft  

Vendome at 1,489.7 had this 3 mile horseshoe to keep the grade below 2%.
Wikimapia     terraserver.microsoft  

Tunnel #10 at mile 1,497 was called Fish Creek Tunnel.
Wikimapia     terraserver.microsoft

Fish Creek Viaduct has been removed.
Wikimapia  

Donald at mile 1,504.9 was the highest point on the CMSP&P at 6,352'.
The Railroad crossed under the Continental Divide through
Pipestone Pass Tunnel #11, which was 2,290' long.
Wikimapia     terraserver.microsoft  

The Blacktail Viaduct, Blacktail #1 Tunnel (#12) and Blacktail #2 (#13)
were on the west slope of the Divide.
Wikimapia
Wikimapia     terraserver.microsoft
Wikimapia     terraserver.microsoft

Janney mile 1,511.6 was at 5,856' now has a house built beside the foundation
of substation #6 and a garage on the right of way.
200 yards to the west is another house on the ROW. 
Wikimapia  

BNSF serves Newcomb at mile 1,515.2 using 5 miles of the former mainline from
Butte. BNSF Railway acquired this trackage with the purchase of the
Montana Western in 2003. 
Wikimapia  

Butte Yard was at 1,519.8 and at 5,475' and was at the south end of the City.
The passenger station and a small yard were closer to downtown. This aerial image
shows the junction with the main from the south heading west and the line to the
station heading east.
terraserver.microsoft

The Butte Passenger Station now houses KXLF.
Wikimapia  

This is a photograph from 1973 of SW1 869 in Butte.
rrpicturearchives.net  

Near mile 1,531 the Butte, Anaconda and Pacific crossed over the CMSP&P on
one bridge and then crossed over the Northern Pacific and the Clark Fork River
on another bridge.
Wikimapia     terraserver.microsoft  

Morel was at mile 1,544.8 and 4,870 and was the location of substation #7.
Wikimapia     terraserver.microsoft  

Deer Lodge mile 1,561.8 is at 4,523 was home to the locomotive shops.
Crews from Deer lodge ran east to Three Forks and west to Alberton.
On May 24, 1961 this became the west end of passenger service following the
demise of the Olympian Hiawatha. With the end January,1964, passenger service
pulled back to Aberdeen, South Dakota. The last electric operations on the
Milwaukee Road took place here on June 15, 1974.
During the morning Little Joes E-73 and E-20 brought a 264 into Deer Lodge from
Alberton and in the afternoon steeple cab E-82 moved some cars around the yard.
It is believed E57B was used here on June 21st, 1974.
Wikimapia     terraserver     themilwaukeeroadtrail

The E34 Boxcab set and steeple cab E80 at Deer Lodge.
rr-fallenflags.org     rr-fallenflags.org  

E70 is on display in Deer Lodge.
Wikimapia    
rrpicturearchives.net     highironillustrations.com

Garrison Tunnel #14 is near mile 1,573 west of Garrison.
Montana Rail Link's former NP Garrison Tunnel cuts through the same ridge,
about one mile west of where the two NP routes over Mullan and Homestake
came together. The shorter MRL tunnel to the east is still in use.
Wikimapia     terraserver.microsoft  

Gold Creek at mile 1,580.4 and at 4,167' was the home of substation #8.
The official last spike ceremony took place here on May 9, 1909.
The actual last spike was driven closer to Missoula a couple of weeks earlier.
This substation still stands. 
Wikimapia     themilwaukeeroadtrail     webhome.idirect

Here a is photograph that shows the ROW today.
rrpicturearchives.net  

Nimrod Tunnel #15 was near mile 1,612 just east of Ravenna.
MRL's Nimrod Tunnel runs parallel through the same ridge.
Wikimapia     terraserver.microsoft  

Ravenna was the site of substation #9 which still stands. 
Wikimapia     webhome.idirect

Beavertail Tunnel #16 was at mile 1616 (fitting) and beside another one of 
Montana Rail Link's ex NP tunnels, Bonita Tunnel.
Wikimapia     terraserver.microsoft  

Bonner Junction was at mile 1,635.0 and 3,280' and was the junction with a
line that went 40 miles east to Cottonwood.
Wikimapia     terraserver.microsoft  

Bonner Tunnel #16.5 was added after the mainline was completed.
Wikimapia

Missoula mile 1,641.3 was at 3,184'. 
Wikimapia     themilwaukeeroadtrail

A switcher with cabeese at Missoula, and the Missoula Station.
The Station is currently used by the Boone & Crockett Club.
rr-fallenflags.org     Wikimapia     RRpicturearchives 

Primrose was the site for substation #10 at mile 1,650.8 and 3,073'.
This is the third consecutive substation still in relatively good shape.
Wikimapia    
webhome.idirect

Some photographs from Frenchtown-
themilwaukeeroadtrail     Wikimapia

Nine Mile Tunnel #17 was near Soudan around mile 1,667. 
Wikimapia     terraserver.microsoft

Crews from Deer Lodge and Avery (later St. Maries) changed at Alberton,
mile 1,672.6 which was at 3,048'. The former station is now a small museum. 
Wikimapia    themilwaukeeroadtrail

Cyr Tunnel #18 was near mile 1,678.
Wikimapia 

Tarkio at mile 1,687.6 was at 2,919' and had substation #11
Wikimapia     terraserver.microsoft

At St. Regis mile 1,715.9 at 2,684' the CMSP&P crossed over the Clark Fork River
and the Northern Pacific. Montana Rail Link removed one span from the bridge.
This was the lowest spot for the CMSP&P between the Rocky Mountains and the
Bitterroots. The climb to East Portal was 1,485' in 33.2 miles.
Wikimapia     terraserver.microsoft  

Drexel was home to substation #12 at 2,858' and at mile 1,725.5.
Wikimapia     terraserver.microsoft  

Haugan was at mile 1,734.8 and at 3,142'. After a flood by the St. Regis River
in 1933 the Northern Pacific used the CMSP&P from St. Regis to Haugan as part
of their Wallace branch. After the Milwaukee Road abandoned their line during March
1980 BN continued to use this trackage until they could abandon their line a few
months later in 1980.
Wikimapia     terraserver.microsoft  

Bryson mile 1,744.3 was at 3,787' and was located on the east side of the loop
up Dominion Creek.
Dominion Creek Tunnel #19 was at the apex of the loop.
Wikimapia     terraserver.microsoft     themilwaukeeroadtrail

East Portal was the summit of St. Paul Pass at 4,169'. Substation #13 was
here at mile 1,749.1. St. Paul Pass Tunnel #20 was 8,771' long and took the
line into Idaho.
Wikimapia     terraserver.microsoft     themilwaukeeroadtrail


Idaho

The St. Maries River Railroad are running 20 of the 99 miles that ran through Idaho. Their section is from Regulus to Plummer Jct.

St. Paul Pass is located in the Bitterroot Mountains, which divide Montana and
Idaho in this area. The summit of the Pass is 5,162'. With the use of the 8,771' long tunnel, the Milwaukee Road kept their summit to 4,170'.
The original survey looked at a longer tunnel of approximately 4 miles in length, from Bryson, MT, to Adair, ID. This would have created a summit below 3800', and reduced the route by several miles.
A later study looked at another tunnel between Bryson and Adair, replacing Tunnels #19 to #34, four high steel bridges, about 1,000 degrees of curvature, ten miles of line, and lowering the grade to about .6% at 3500 feet. This would have involved moving the line lower down into the valleys for 10 miles between Haugan and Bryson, as well as 17 miles between Adair and Avery.
Wikimapia     terraserver.microsoft  

This is a guide to what can be seen of the Milwaukee Road in Idaho today.
webhome.idirect 

The Route of the Hiawatha trail uses the old right of way.
wallace-id.com     themilwaukeeroadtrail     brian894x4.com  

From the west portal of the St. Paul Pass Tunnel to the end of the electrification in Avery, the CMSP&P mainline dropped 1,660' in 22 miles.
This segment had 16 tunnels and several large bridges.
Roland siding, mile 1751, elv. 4153'       Wikimapia
Dry Creek Tunnel #21 (790')               Wikimapia
Moss Creek Tunnel #22 (1516')           Wikimapia
Small Creek Tunnel (#1) #23 (279')     Wikimapia
Small Creek Tunnel (#2) #24 (377')     Wikimapia
Kelly Creek Trestle                                    Wikimapia

Adair siding mile 1,755.9, elv. 3,777'      Wikimapia
Loop Creek Tunnel (#1) #25 (996')      Wikimapia
Loop Creek Tunnel (#2) #26 (683')      Wikimapia
Turkey Creek Trestle                                Wikimapia
Bear Creek Trestle                                    Wikimapia
Clear Creek Trestle                                   Wikimapia

Clear Creek Tunnel (#1) #27 (470')  i   Wikimapia
Clear Creek Tunnel (#2) #28 (178')      Wikimapia
Falcon siding, mile 1760, elv. 3420'        Wikimapia
Deer Creek Tunnel (#1) #29 (217')      Wikimapia
Pearson, mile 1763, elv. 3200'                   Wikimapia
Deer Creek Tunnel (#2) #30 (221')      Wikimapia
Glade Creek Tunnel (#1) #31 (332')     Wikimapia
Glade Creek Tunnel (#2) #32 (638')     Wikimapia
Kyle siding mile 1,756.7, elv. 3,000'        Wikimapia
themilwaukeeroadtrail
Kyle Tunnel #33 (462')                        Wikimapia
Stetson Trestle                                           Wikimapia

Stetson Tunnel (#1) #34 (462')            Wikimapia
Stetson Tunnel (#2) #35 (416')            Wikimapia
Stetson Tunnel (#3) #36 (552')            Wikimapia 

Avery was at mile 1,772.9 at 2,495' and was the end of the electrification.
This was a crew
change point between Alberton to the east and Malden to the west. After the wirers came down in 1974 the crew change was moved to St. Maries. Substation #14 was here and this is where the Rocky Mountain Division met the
Coast Division. The line west of Avery was purchased by the St. Maries River Railroad and was abandoned in stages after 1980. 
Wikimapia     themilwaukeeroadtrail

Herrick Tunnel #37, 515', was near mile 1,790. 
Wikimapia     themilwaukeeroadtrail

St Joe MP 1,806.2 at 2,148' would have had substation #15 if the gap had been
filled in the electrification.
Wikimapia     terraserver.microsoft  

Omega Tunnel #1 (#38) and #2 (#39) were never built. The numbers were
reserved for both locations to straighten the line, but the money was never available.
Omega Tunnel #1 (#38) would have been at mile 1,811.9
Wikimapia     terraserver.microsoft
  
Omega Tunnel #2 (#39) was never built, and was to be at mile 1,813.4.
Wikimapia     terraserver.microsoft

The Regulus stud mill just west of St. Maries is now marks the end of track.
Wikimapia     terraserver.microsoft

St. Maries is at mile 1,818.3 at 2,145' and was a crew change point after 1974.
The St. Maries River Railroad operates from here east to Regulus, and south along
the St. Maries River to Bovill. 
Wikimapia     themilwaukeeroadtrail

This photograph was taken in the area.
rrpicturearchives.net  

Lonnie King's photoessay, part 3, covers the St. Maries Branch and the rest of the mainline to the coast.
themilwaukeeroadtrail

Benewah Tunnel #40 (363') was near mile 1,825, just east of the long bridge over
the south end of Chatcolet Lake. The 1% grade for eastbounds begins in the middle
of the bridge. 
Wikimapia     themilwaukeeroadtrail

This photograph from 1962 shows an eastbound coming across the bridge about to enter the tunnel. The locomotives are wearing the old paint scheme with blue paint.
rrpicturearchives.net

Several miles to the west is Peedee Viaduct.
Wikimapia  

Plummer Junction mile 1,837.3 at 2,653' had a wye where the passenger line
through Spokane left the mainline heading north.
Substation #16 would have been built at this location.
Union Pacific came to Plummer Junction from 3 directions as well. The Wallace branch from the east was along the north side of the ROW and a line to Tekoa in Washington State was along the north side of the ROW heading west. Union Pacific used the CMSP&P line for 19 miles to Manito and then the Milwaukee Road used UP through Spokane and then back to the mainline at Marengo. At this time the line to the north
is owned by UP and St. Maries River Railroad owns the line to the east and the others are gone. 
Wikimapia     themilwaukeeroadtrail

Watts Tunnel #41 at Sorrento mile 1,840 was 2,559' long.
Wikimapia     terraserver.microsoft


WASHINGTON

Two sections remain in Washington State, accounting for only 41 of the 332 miles. Columbia Basin use 13 miles, from Warden to Othello. Union Pacific own 28 miles connecting Black River with Tacoma.

This is Helmut Wisinger's guide to Washington State.
webhome.idirect

The mainline across Washington State is now the John Wayne Trail.                       spokaneoutdoors.com     CoastDivMap

In Tekoa mile 1,853.0 the mainline crossed over a Union Pacific line which has been abandoned as well.
terraserver.microsoft     themilwaukeeroadtrail

In Seabury at mile 1,860.2 the CMSP&P crossed over a former Great Northern line
that is long gone.                                                                            terraserver.microsoft  

Rosalia tunnel #42 was daylighted in 1911.
terraserver.microsoft     terraserver.microsoft  

Rosalia was at mile 1,872.6 (2,250') the line crossed over a former Northern Pacific
line which is now operated by the Palouse and Coulee City Railroad. A Great Northern line also passed under the Milwaukee Road here. Substation #17 would have been here. 
Wikimapia     themilwaukeeroadtrail

Malden was at mile 1,881.7 (2,085') and was a crew change point in the middle of
the gap between Avery and Othello. After 1974 this crew change was moved east to St. Maries. 
Wikimapia     themilwaukeeroadtrail

Rock Lake Tunnel #1 (#43) was 756' long and at mile 1,892.
terraserver.microsoft  

Rock Lake Tunnel #2 (#44) was 704' long at mile 1,894.
terraserver.microsoft  

Castleton was near mile 1,907 and would have had substation #18.
terraserver.microsoft  

Paxton at mile 1,915.1 (1,669') was where the CMSP&P passed under the Spokane, Portland and Seattle. The SP&S was abandoned in 1989.
terraserver.microsoft  

Marengo mile 1,925.7 (1,656') was the connection with the Union Pacific where passenger trains through Spokane rejoined the mainline.
terraserver.microsoft     themilwaukeeroadtrail

West of Marengo was a long Viaduct over Cow Creek Coulee.
terraserver.microsoft

Ralston at mile 1,935.2 (1,665') would have been home for substation #19.
terraserver.microsoft  

Lind at mile 1,949.7 (1,415') was where the CMSP&P crossed over the
Northern Pacific mainline.
terraserver.microsoft     rrpicturearchives.net     themilwaukeeroadtrail

Roxboro at mile 1,962.6 would have had substation #20.
Wikimapia     terraserver.microsoft  

At Warden mile 1,972.3 (1,279') The CMSP&P had branch lines to the north serving Moses Lake and Marcellus
Wikimapia     terraserver.microsoft     rrpicturearchives

The Columbia Basin Railroad now operates the mainline from Warden to Othello
as well as branchline track to Moses Lake.
http://www.cbrr.com/     rrpicturearchives  

Othello was at mile 1,985.1 (1,075') and was the beginning of the Coast Division electrification. The Royal Slope Ry. has operated west from Othello to Royal City. 
Wikimapia     themilwaukeeroadtrail     mrcd.org

This is a photograph which shows U28B 5500 sitting in Othello.
rrpicturearchives  

Taunton at mile 1,994.3 (856') was the location of substation #21.
terraserver.microsoft     rrpicturearchives.net  

Royal City Junction is near mile 2,006. During 1967 a 6.4 mile line was built
north to Royal City. 
Wikimapia     rrpicturearchives.net  

Beverly was at mile 2,022.9 (532') on the east bank of the Columbia River.
The United States Government did make some use of the line from Royal City Junction during the 1980s to service the Priest Rapids Dam. On the west bank of the river is Beverly Junction with the mainline which headed north and a branch to Hanford
which headed south to Hanford.
terraserver.microsoft     Wikimapia     themilwaukeeroadtrail

This is a photograph of SW1200 618 at Beverly.
rrpicturearchives 

The lengthy Columbia River Bridge is still in place.
Wikimapia 

Doris was at mile 2,029.1 (1,106') on the 2.2% climb up the Saddle Mountains. Substation #22 was located here.
Wikimapia     terraserver.microsoft  

East of Boylston (MP 2,041.7) was the 1973' Johnson Creek Tunnel #45.   
terraserver.microsoft  

At Renslow the CMSP&P passed over Interstate 90. 
Wikimapia     themilwaukeeroadtrail

Kittitas was at mile 2,052.3 (1,645') and was the location of substation #23
Wikimapia      themilwaukeeroadtrail

From Ellensburg the Milwaukee Road followed the Northern Pacific west.
Near mile 2,065 the CMSP&P crossed over the Northern Pacific Stampede Pass line. 
Wikimapia     rrpicturearchives.net  

Horlick Tunnels #46 and #47 were along the Yakima River between Thorp
and Horlick. The BNSF line is along the east and north bank of the river.
Wikimapia     Wikimapia

Cle Elum was at mile 2,084.0 (1,944') and was where crews changed between
Othello and Tacoma or Seattle. Substation #24 was here as well.
terraserver.microsoft     themilwaukeeroadtrail

Easton at mile 2,095.6 (2,150) had a wye and now BNSF has a wye crossing the CMSP&P.
terraserver.microsoft  

Easton Tunnel #48 was near mile 2,096.
terraserver.microsoft      theslowlane.com  

Burlington Northern purchased the mainline over Snoqualmie Pass from Easton through Cedar Falls (MP 2,134.8) to Maple Valley (2,151.8). BN never used the line east of Cedar Falls and during 1987 they decided to scrap the line. A connection was built in September at Hubner near mile 2,098 to allow removal of the rail east of Snoqualmie Tunnel.
terraserver.microsoft  

Whittier Tunnel #49 was near mile 2,104 and is in the lower right corner of this
image. The east entrance to BNSF's Stampede Tunnel can be seen on the left.
terraserver.microsoft  

Hyak was at mile 2,113.0 (2,570') and was home to substation #25. The east entrance to Snoqualmie tunnel is at the top left corner of this image.
terraserver.microsoft     themilwaukeeroadtrail

Snoqualmie Tunnel #50 was 11,888' long, longest on the CMSP&P. After
the mainline opened in May 1909 this tunnel was built from 1912 to 1914.
The original line crested the summit at 3,010' two miles north of the tunnel using grades up to 2.75% and 1,239 degrees of curvature. The new summit was 2,562', saving 448'.
terraserver.microsoft  

This is the eastern entrance to Snoqualmie Tunnel.
rr-fallenflags.org  

The CMSP&P followed the Snoqualmie River west from the tunnel on a grade of
1.74% from Rockdale to Cedar Falls. Near mile 2,120 was this curved trestle over
Hansen Creek.
terraserver.microsoft  

Burlington Northern's plans of using the Snoqualmie Pass line were thwarted by a slide which took out the middle spans of the trestle over Hull Creek, near mile 2,128.
Wikimapia     terraserver.microsoft  

Cedar Falls was at mile 2,134.8 (937') and was the junction with the line north to Everett. This was also the location of substation #26. Burlington Northern used the line from Maple Valley through here and then north 11 miles to serve a mill until 1990.
terraserver.microsoft

This is an article about the CMSP&P in Cedar Falls.
scn.org/cedar_butte 

Bagley Junction was at mile 2,138.8 and the start of a 13 mile branch to Enumclaw.
terraserver.microsoft

Landsburg Tunnel #51 was bypassed with a 1945 line change.
Wikimapia 

Noble Tunnel #52 was the last tunnel on the mainline from Chicago,
and was daylighted during 1912.
Wikimapia

Maple Valley was at mile 2,151.8 and from here into Seattle the CMSP&P used the track of the Pacific Coast Railroad. The PCR was purchased by the Great Northern 
during 1956.
Wikimapia     terraserver.microsoft  

Renton was at mile 2,162.1 and the home of substation #27. After 1970 the
CMSP&P received trackage rights over BN from Renton north to Bellingham. 
Wikimapia  

This is a Spirit of Washington dinner train in Renton 
Wikimapia  

Black River Junction was at mile 2,164.5. From here Milwaukee Road trains could
stay on the PCRR-GN-BN and go north to Seattle or regain CMSP&P rails south to Tacoma. 
Wikimapia  

The CMSP&P operated on the Pacific Coast Railroad (later GN and BN) from Black River up to Argo at mile 2,170.5 where it switched to Union Pacific tracks.
terraserver.microsoft  

Stacy Street Yard was at mile 2,172.9.
terraserver.microsoft  

Union Pacific's Union Station in Seattle was at mile 2,173.9, just east of the Hill Line's King Street Station. Milwaukee Road passenger service to Seattle and Tacoma came to an end when the last Olympian Hiawatha left Minneapolis on May 22, 1961. 
Wikimapia  

Union Station opened in 1911.
historylink.org  

This photograph of U25B 5007 from 1970 looks like the Tacoma area to me.
rr-fallenflags.org  

At Tacoma Junction mile 2,190.7 (under the north end of the Interstate highway bridge) the Tacoma Hill line branched off and crossed the Puyallup River. Tacoma Jct. was also the location of substation #28. Union Pacific crosses the River just east of the Interstate Bridge, at the bottom of this image. The substation was at the right hand edge, north of the tracks. 
Wikimapia     Substation

This is a photograph of E23B in Tacoma in the Union Pacific passenger scheme.
rrpicturearchives    

Tideflats Yard was between the Puyallup River and the Sitcum Waterway
(now the APM Terminal). Most of the Milwaukee Waterway has been filled in. 
Wikimapia  

Things looked a little different in 1990.
terraserver.microsoft

The first leg of the line from Tacoma to Portland was built by the Tacoma and Eastern Railroad during 1900. The T&E played a key role in the history of the Mount Rainer area.
nps.gov/archive

Tacoma Hill was the steepest grade on the Milwaukee Road, at 3.67 %.
Wikimapia 

Tacoma Rail now owns the CMSP&P track in Tacoma and south to Chehalis.
tacomarail.com

The Chehalis Western Railroad operated the trackage from 1980 until 1992.
trainweb.org

The Tacoma and Eastern built south from Tacoma through Elbe to Morton.
The Mt. Rainer Scenic Railroad runs passenger trains on the south end of the line. 
mrsr.com/home

On December 31, 1918, the T&E was acquired by the Milwaukee Road. From Frederickson the CMSP&P built their line to Chehalis.
Wikimapia

The Chehalis Western used Western Junction as a base for operations and was the location of their shops.
Wikimapia

CMSP&P SW1200 630 was at Western Junction on September 11, 1976.
rrpicturearchives

The Milwaukee Road branch to Aberdeen started in Maytown.
Wikimapia

At Blakeslee Junction near Centralia the CMSP&P crossed over Burlington Northern and Union Pacific lines, both heading for Aberdeen.
Wikimapia     rrpicturearchives

The Milwaukee Road reached Chehalis and then turned west towards the Pacific
and the town of Raymond. 
Wikimapia

Trackage rights were obtained over Northern Pacific from Chehalis to Longview Junction during 1931.
Wikimapia

The Milwaukee Road received trackage rights from Longview Jct. to Portland as a
result of the Burlington Northern merger. The first train crossed the Columbia River
on March 23, 1971.
Wikimapia



OREGON
The Burlington Northern and Southern Pacific lines used by the Milwaukee Road
in Oregon remain in use by BNSF Railway and Union Pacific.
x
The rights on Burlington Northern ended at Portland Union Station.
From there rights were acquired over Union Pacific's Steel Bridge to reach
Southern Pacific.
Wikipedia     Wikimapia

The end of the line was Southern Pacific's Brooklyn Yard.
Wikimapia


More information about the Milwaukee Road can be found on these websites.

http://webhome.idirect.com/~helmutw/milwrd/

http://www.mrcd.org/ 

http://www.rr-fallenflags.org/milw/milw.html

LocoPhotos  

http://www.milwest.org/  

http://www.trainweb.org/milwaukee/homepage.html

http://www.railroadforums.com/forum/showthread.php?t=873 

http://www.wwvrailway.com/milwauke.htm

http://www.themilwaukeeroadtrail.org/Current/RoadTrips/King_LT/LonniesTrip_July.html   

http://www.nwlink.com/~kruegerp/milw/1927_division.htm  

http://www.rrpicturearchives.net/locoList.aspx?id=MILW  

http://www.rrpicturearchives.net/rsList.aspx?id=MILW

http://donsdepot.donrossgroup.net/indexmil.htm   

http://www.mrha.com/  

http://www.brian894x4.com/index.html  

http://www.mtnwestrail.com/gallery.htm  

http://www.angelfire.com/mt/sd40

http://www.freewebs.com/cmstpp/

http://www.trains.com/TRC/CS/forums/308087/ShowPost.aspx

http://www.trains.com/TRC/CS/forums/309802/ShowPost.aspx

http://www.trains.com/TRC/CS/forums/788857/ShowPost.aspx


Dale's Trackside Guides

#1-Mississippi River Crossings
This is a study of the Railroad crossings over the Mississippi River.

#2-Amtrak's Current Routes
A detailed accounting of which railroad owns every mile of track used by Amtrak.

#3-Class 1 Railroads in the 1950s 
A summary of the 127 class 1 railroads in 1950.

#4-The Milwaukee Road Mainline
Points of interest on the CMSP&P mainline from Chicago to Seattle and Portland.

#5-Montana Rail Link, I&MRL and IC&E Rosters 

#6-GP30 Ownership
A simple rundown of the dozens of owners of GP30 locomotives.

#7-Amtrak's Original Routes
A look at the routes used by Amtrak on May 1st, 1971.

#8-Continental Divide Crossings
A summary of the railroad crossings of the Continental Divide in North America

#9-Iowa's Counties
A listing of the railroads operating in Iowa's 99 Counties today and in
1985 and 1930.

#10-America's Regional Railroads
A look at the 62 current and former Regional Railroads in the United States

#11-AC Ownership
Owners of locomotives with AC traction motors

#12-Ohio's Counties
A listing of the railroads operating in Ohio's 88 Counties today and in
1985 and 1930.

#13-1980
A look at the events that took place during 1980 affecting America's railroads.

#14-Pieces of the Rock
Surviving rail lines and locomotives of the Rock Island Railroad.

#15-Amtrak's Abandoned Routes
A State by State list of routes previously used by Amtrak.

#16-Missouri River Crossings
A study of the Railroad crossings over the Missouri River.

Dale's Nexus

Dale

Join our Community!

Our community is FREE to join. To participate you must either login or register for an account.

Search the Community

Newsletter Sign-Up

By signing up you may also receive occasional reader surveys and special offers from Trains magazine.Please view our privacy policy