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Milwaukee Road Thru Marion Iowa

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Posted by blhanel on Thursday, October 22, 2020 9:50 PM

I've been watching the progress on that project- Seventh Ave. will be completely closed next Monday night while they bust up the center pier.  The bridge will be replaced with a pedestrian version that spans the whole street with no piers.

As far as the year of construction is concerned, that was before my time.  I moved to Marion from Minnesota in 1974.

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Posted by Opahujo on Thursday, October 22, 2020 4:32 PM

The Milwaukee Road bridge across Seventh Avenue in Marion is being dismantled. I remember when it was being constructed, but I am not sure about the year. I think it was late 1950s or early 1960s. I was interestin to watch how the bridge was put in place while maintaing the use of that main line, includin four daily UP "City" streamliners in each direction. Any suggestions as to the year?

This really is not a reply, but I did not see a way for posting the question other than as a reply or starting a new topic.

 

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Posted by RONALD BEAUCHAMP on Friday, June 22, 2018 1:23 PM

RONALD BEAUCHAMP
I was employed at Lefebure 73 - 77 .I believe it was 29th st N.E off of 1st ave. The Milwaukee road ran right behind the company. Also I was at Olies either 67 or 68  and saw a the passenger train. Not to mention growing up near 8th ave S.W and seeing Milwaukee Road Fairbanks Morrison working the area.Link belt Speeder Pinike Ford Wilson Meat etc.

 

 
Victrola1
Olie's Ham H' Egger

Olies was the greatest place to soak up excess spirits at 3:00 in the morning within 70 miles of Marion. It sat just accross the drive way from the huge early 20th century Milwaukee depot. As a student at Cornell College in nearby Mt. Vernon with no such attraction, many an early morning ended with a road trip to Marion for breakfast.

Olies was where the Milwaukee crews ate. Weekend crowds may have made them seem trivial, but though the week they were the heart and soul of Olies. The third shift cook and waitresses knew the railroaders on a first name basis.

A switch engine in the depot siding was good indicator the crew was in Olies. Sometimes, to go orders were readied for through freights which slowed to pick up their order on the fly from a yardman.

Being a member of Cornell's class of 1976, I saw the swan song of the Milwaukee in Marion. While massive numbers of Union Pacific freights now roar past Cornell's football field in Mt. Vernon, the Milwaukee Road in Linn County is mostly old maps and memories.

Even Olies is gone. It was part of the block ripped out along with the old Milwaukee depot to make a cookie cutter design strip mall.

I have yet to find a place that can top the cheese omlets the week night cook used to make Olies. No fake plants and neon can match the honest atmosphere of cold men coming in from the bite of a -20 night in mid January to refill their thermoses with hot coffee for the next bunch of cars to sort.
 

 

 

 
Victrola1
Olie's Ham H' Egger

Olies was the greatest place to soak up excess spirits at 3:00 in the morning within 70 miles of Marion. It sat just accross the drive way from the huge early 20th century Milwaukee depot. As a student at Cornell College in nearby Mt. Vernon with no such attraction, many an early morning ended with a road trip to Marion for breakfast.

Olies was where the Milwaukee crews ate. Weekend crowds may have made them seem trivial, but though the week they were the heart and soul of Olies. The third shift cook and waitresses knew the railroaders on a first name basis.

A switch engine in the depot siding was good indicator the crew was in Olies. Sometimes, to go orders were readied for through freights which slowed to pick up their order on the fly from a yardman.

Being a member of Cornell's class of 1976, I saw the swan song of the Milwaukee in Marion. While massive numbers of Union Pacific freights now roar past Cornell's football field in Mt. Vernon, the Milwaukee Road in Linn County is mostly old maps and memories.

Even Olies is gone. It was part of the block ripped out along with the old Milwaukee depot to make a cookie cutter design strip mall.

I have yet to find a place that can top the cheese omlets the week night cook used to make Olies. No fake plants and neon can match the honest atmosphere of cold men coming in from the bite of a -20 night in mid January to refill their thermoses with hot coffee for the next bunch of cars to sort.
 

 

 

RONALD BEAUCHAMP

 

 
Victrola1
Olie's Ham H' Egger

Olies was the greatest place to soak up excess spirits at 3:00 in the morning within 70 miles of Marion. It sat just accross the drive way from the huge early 20th century Milwaukee depot. As a student at Cornell College in nearby Mt. Vernon with no such attraction, many an early morning ended with a road trip to Marion for breakfast.

Olies was where the Milwaukee crews ate. Weekend crowds may have made them seem trivial, but though the week they were the heart and soul of Olies. The third shift cook and waitresses knew the railroaders on a first name basis.

A switch engine in the depot siding was good indicator the crew was in Olies. Sometimes, to go orders were readied for through freights which slowed to pick up their order on the fly from a yardman.

Being a member of Cornell's class of 1976, I saw the swan song of the Milwaukee in Marion. While massive numbers of Union Pacific freights now roar past Cornell's football field in Mt. Vernon, the Milwaukee Road in Linn County is mostly old maps and memories.

Even Olies is gone. It was part of the block ripped out along with the old Milwaukee depot to make a cookie cutter design strip mall.

I have yet to find a place that can top the cheese omlets the week night cook used to make Olies. No fake plants and neon can match the honest atmosphere of cold men coming in from the bite of a -20 night in mid January to refill their thermoses with hot coffee for the next bunch of cars to sort.
 

 

 

 
Victrola1
Olie's Ham H' Egger

Olies was the greatest place to soak up excess spirits at 3:00 in the morning within 70 miles of Marion. It sat just accross the drive way from the huge early 20th century Milwaukee depot. As a student at Cornell College in nearby Mt. Vernon with no such attraction, many an early morning ended with a road trip to Marion for breakfast.

Olies was where the Milwaukee crews ate. Weekend crowds may have made them seem trivial, but though the week they were the heart and soul of Olies. The third shift cook and waitresses knew the railroaders on a first name basis.

A switch engine in the depot siding was good indicator the crew was in Olies. Sometimes, to go orders were readied for through freights which slowed to pick up their order on the fly from a yardman.

Being a member of Cornell's class of 1976, I saw the swan song of the Milwaukee in Marion. While massive numbers of Union Pacific freights now roar past Cornell's football field in Mt. Vernon, the Milwaukee Road in Linn County is mostly old maps and memories.

Even Olies is gone. It was part of the block ripped out along with the old Milwaukee depot to make a cookie cutter design strip mall.

I have yet to find a place that can top the cheese omlets the week night cook used to make Olies. No fake plants and neon can match the honest atmosphere of cold men coming in from the bite of a -20 night in mid January to refill their thermoses with hot coffee for the next bunch of cars to sort.
 

 

 

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Posted by jeffhergert on Wednesday, January 31, 2018 7:24 PM

Milwaukee Road strategic planning studies, May 1979 by Booz-Allen-Hamilton Consulting.   

http://www.milwaukeeroadarchives.com/Bankruptcy/1979.05.02.Milwaukee%20Road%20Strategic%20Planning%20Studies.pdf 

http://www.milwaukeeroadarchives.com/Bankruptcy/StrategicPlanningStudiesVol2.pdf 

http://www.milwaukeeroadarchives.com/Bankruptcy/Bankruptcy.htm 

Council Bluffs was still being looked at.  Another study that was somewhere on the Milwaukeeroadarchives site (that I can't find at the moment-it looks like they redid some of the site since I last visited) stated that the UP had agreed to accept the MILW-UP run through via Kansas City instead of Council Bluffs.  That may have been a big reason to abandon that gateway.

Jeff 

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Posted by Overmod on Tuesday, January 30, 2018 7:33 PM

Ye gods! how did I know nothing about that item immediately below the MILW-C&NW combination!

N&W, C&O, CNJ and B&M all in it together, in 1969?  THAT would have produced some interesting results, especially if something akin to Dereco brought some D&H and EL into the mix afterward...

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Posted by MilesWRich on Tuesday, January 30, 2018 2:46 PM

The decision to abandon the Milwaukee Road from Green Island to Manilla preceded the Rock Island shut down by three years.  But the Rock Island's line from Muscatine throught Fairfield and Eldon to Allerton where it joined the Spine Line,  was in terrible shape.  Remember also that the Milwaukee and the Northwestern tried to acquire the Rock Island while the ICC kept delaying the decision on the RI-UP merger.  The Northwestern bought the Great Western in 1968 and within a few years abandoned the line from Chicago to Dubuque as it was a circuitous routing to Omaha.  

CMStPnP

 

 
jeffhergert
I think the coming shutdown of the RI may have been a big part in the decision. The MILW picked up most of the RI's business in the Quad Cities/Muscatine, and for a while Iowa City line(interchange with the Crandic and a mini steel mill).  Enough business that half the income of the slimmed down railroad was from that section of the railroad.  (A friend of mine was an agent, orginally for the RI, then DRI Line, and finally the MILW.  All in the same office, the agency that covered the mini-mill.  A MILW auditor had told him they couldn't understand how the RI went broke with all the business they had in that area.)  I also can't help but wonder if the MILW had heard through the grapevine that if they expected any federal government help, they would get out of the Chicago-Omaha corridor.  The government had started pouring money into the CNW and had made it known that anyone who picked up the old RI in that corridor for use as a through route would get no help in it's rehabilitation from them. Jeff

 

Could have been that too.   I have no idea of online business on the Kansas City line. 

 I remember the Rock Island Bankruptcy, I got the impression the Feds in particular the bankruptcy Trustee was a little PO'd as well that the RI railway union went on strike during reorganization attempt.........then he voted for liquidation.  

 

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Posted by Murphy Siding on Friday, July 29, 2016 1:16 PM

schlimm
 
Murphy Siding
Milwaukee Road was set up to be a Grainer railroad. It had a lot of lines through heavy farming areas.  It’s logical when you look at the economy when those lines were built. America produced grain and livestock. America and the world ate that grain and livestock.  Surely, there would be a never-ending supply of traffic…

 

Whoa!!  Iowa (and IL, NB, etc.) produces more ag products than ever and exports a lot of them. What has changed is the logistics.  And it's Granger, not Grainer.

 

Yes, now they do.  When the lines built, not so much.  That's my point. The grainger lines were built to service the little house on the prairie.  As they economics and the logistics changed, the grainger railroads had to evolve or die.  It wasn't limited to just the Milwaukee Road.

ps.  You got me on the spelling. The BNSF unit trains that run through our city are refered to as grainers.

Thanks to Chris / CopCarSS for my avatar.

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Posted by Miningman on Friday, July 29, 2016 12:30 PM

Wanswheel- Holy smokes! That's a week worth of reading ...you are a genius. Being a Canadian I can only watch with fascination,and some amusement, your presidential election race, however, if you are truly undecided may I suggest you pencil in Wanswheel. 

CM&N..that's got a ring to it. Too bad it didn't happen. In the end I suppose Union Pacific and Canadian Pacific made out well. 

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Posted by wanswheel on Friday, July 29, 2016 12:07 PM
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Posted by schlimm on Friday, July 29, 2016 9:20 AM

Murphy Siding
Milwaukee Road was set up to be a Grainer railroad. It had a lot of lines through heavy farming areas.  It’s logical when you look at the economy when those lines were built. America produced grain and livestock. America and the world ate that grain and livestock.  Surely, there would be a never-ending supply of traffic…

Whoa!!  Iowa (and IL, NB, etc.) produces more ag products than ever and exports a lot of them. What has changed is the logistics.  And it's Granger, not Grainer.

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Posted by Murphy Siding on Friday, July 29, 2016 7:15 AM

schlimm
 
VerMontanan

 

 
Miningman

If ALL the Milwaukee Road trackage, as it was in 1955, miraculously  appeared intact tomorrow morning and someone told you to make a railroad out of it I think it would be extremely viable and very competitive in today's market as it once existed. 

 

 

It wouldn't.  Strong routes survive.

http://www.trainweb.org/milwaukeemyths/

 

 

 

 

Good research but it does not concern the failure of the MILW in Iowa.  That failure is primarily a consequence of little online business because it missed most Iowa cities of consequence and it failed to achieve a guaranteed source of interchange from the UP.

 

I wonder if that didn't have a lot to do with how the Milwaukee was planned in the farm states.  Milwaukee Road was set up to be a Grainer railroad. It had a lot of lines through heavy farming areas.  It’s logical when you look at the economy when those lines were built. America produced grain and livestock. America and the world ate that grain and livestock.  Surely, there would be a never-ending supply of traffic…unless the world changed.  I think the PCE was Milwaukee’s attempt to evolve in a changing world economy. It didn’t work, and the Grainer railroad shriveled up on the vine.

 

Thanks to Chris / CopCarSS for my avatar.

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Posted by Miningman on Thursday, July 28, 2016 10:59 PM

It absolutely is incredulous that Milwaukees mainline across Iowa is no more. I remember reading in Trains magazine that there was far far to much track in Iowa and that it needs rationalization. What if instead the multiple mains across Iowa reaching for points West showed the way to as many transcontinental railroads in end to end mergers, all in competition. Instead of 4 big systems there were 10 or so pretty healthy railroads in a vigorous but cooperative competition. In my view that's a better option all around, but, it was not to be. 

Then again, try explaining to someone from that era today's Trains "Photo of the Day" ...let's say C&O locomotive's, hauling a Canadian National train, on Santa Fe tracks. They would haul you off to the looney bin. 

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Posted by Los Angeles Rams Guy on Thursday, July 28, 2016 6:07 PM

Schlimm makes a good point about how and if the proposed merger with CNW might have changed things back in the day.  For me, in the final analysis, I vividly recall as a very young boy when the MILW's mainline across Iowa was in great shape and had not only healthy freight business but the "Cities" trains as well and it seems incredulous to me that that's all gone now.  

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Posted by CMStPnP on Thursday, July 28, 2016 5:46 PM

jeffhergert
I think the coming shutdown of the RI may have been a big part in the decision. The MILW picked up most of the RI's business in the Quad Cities/Muscatine, and for a while Iowa City line(interchange with the Crandic and a mini steel mill).  Enough business that half the income of the slimmed down railroad was from that section of the railroad.  (A friend of mine was an agent, orginally for the RI, then DRI Line, and finally the MILW.  All in the same office, the agency that covered the mini-mill.  A MILW auditor had told him they couldn't understand how the RI went broke with all the business they had in that area.)  I also can't help but wonder if the MILW had heard through the grapevine that if they expected any federal government help, they would get out of the Chicago-Omaha corridor.  The government had started pouring money into the CNW and had made it known that anyone who picked up the old RI in that corridor for use as a through route would get no help in it's rehabilitation from them. Jeff

Could have been that too.   I have no idea of online business on the Kansas City line. 

 I remember the Rock Island Bankruptcy, I got the impression the Feds in particular the bankruptcy Trustee was a little PO'd as well that the RI railway union went on strike during reorganization attempt.........then he voted for liquidation.  

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Posted by jeffhergert on Thursday, July 28, 2016 3:25 PM

CMStPnP

I think there are a couple more reasons why Milwaukee Road favored retention of the Kansas City line over Council Bluffs....

1. Interchange with Southern Pacific (were they not a traffic partner in the NW?)

2. Interchange with Kansas City Southern (were they not also a traffic partner?)

3. Only Santa Fe had a better Chicago to Kansas City rail route, in my opinion.

 

 

I think the coming shutdown of the RI may have been a big part in the decision. The MILW picked up most of the RI's business in the Quad Cities/Muscatine, and for a while Iowa City line(interchange with the Crandic and a mini steel mill).  Enough business that half the income of the slimmed down railroad was from that section of the railroad.  (A friend of mine was an agent, orginally for the RI, then DRI Line, and finally the MILW.  All in the same office, the agency that covered the mini-mill.  A MILW auditor had told him they couldn't understand how the RI went broke with all the business they had in that area.) 

I also can't help but wonder if the MILW had heard through the grapevine that if they expected any federal government help, they would get out of the Chicago-Omaha corridor.  The government had started pouring money into the CNW and had made it known that anyone who picked up the old RI in that corridor for use as a through route would get no help in it's rehabilitation from them.

Jeff

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Posted by Victrola1 on Thursday, July 28, 2016 3:23 PM

 In fact, Marion was the county seat of Linn County until 1919 when it was moved to the a-bit-larger (by that time) Cedar Rapids.  Of course, in more modern times, Cedar Rapids grew to the point that Marion became known as a suburb even though people in Marion still don't think they are (my aunt lives in Cedar Rapids). 

The roof of Marion's long gone Milwaukee Road depot lives. It is the roof of the Shelter house in Marion's town Square half a block from where the depot stood. 

On the west side of Marion's town square there is a Civil War cannon. It is pointed toward Cedar Rapids. 

 

 

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Posted by schlimm on Thursday, July 28, 2016 9:42 AM

As late as 1963, maybe later, the CNW line was in bad shape while the MILW line, greatly improved for the Cities transfer, was still very good (a foolish move according to one poster).  So quite possibly the CNW would have been reduced to single track for locals.

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Posted by CMStPnP on Thursday, July 28, 2016 9:28 AM

I think there are a couple more reasons why Milwaukee Road favored retention of the Kansas City line over Council Bluffs....

1. Interchange with Southern Pacific (were they not a traffic partner in the NW?)

2. Interchange with Kansas City Southern (were they not also a traffic partner?)

3. Only Santa Fe had a better Chicago to Kansas City rail route, in my opinion.

 

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Posted by Victrola1 on Thursday, July 28, 2016 7:49 AM

Assume the Milwaukee Road and C&NW merger occurred in the late 1950's. Two mainlines running from Chicago to Omaha. Two mainlines not that far apart running across Iowa now owned by one enitity. 

The line in the stronger position would be the C&NW. The Milwaukee's route across Iowa to Omaha probably would have been largely abandon before 1980. 

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Posted by Miningman on Wednesday, July 27, 2016 11:45 PM

Schlimm adds more to the point. The Milwaukee was counting on this to happen and was "heartbroken" for lack of a better term when the merger did not happen. 

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Posted by schlimm on Wednesday, July 27, 2016 11:14 PM

Miningman

VerMontanan & Victrola1- Seems as though I fell into VerMontanan's trap as he answered real quick with that Mark Meyer article. Now that is a heck of a read and very well done. There are many counterpoints that can be made, about the Pacific Extension, and I recall a heated debate on this forum on the fate of the Milwaukee and what happened. Victrola1 gives good reasons on what happened in Iowa. The weakness to both arguments in this context is that neither position  considers the other existing trackage. It would be an interesting economic study to see what could be accomplished, what connections could be made. At this point I can only use common sense and the knowledge of what was there and my instincts tell me it's a winner. It would make an interesting economic thesis. 

 

Post 1955, what if the long-planned CNW/CMStP merger had occured?

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Posted by Miningman on Wednesday, July 27, 2016 9:24 PM

VerMontanan & Victrola1- Seems as though I fell into VerMontanan's trap as he answered real quick with that Mark Meyer article. Now that is a heck of a read and very well done. There are many counterpoints that can be made, about the Pacific Extension, and I recall a heated debate on this forum on the fate of the Milwaukee and what happened. Victrola1 gives good reasons on what happened in Iowa. The weakness to both arguments in this context is that neither position  considers the other existing trackage. It would be an interesting economic study to see what could be accomplished, what connections could be made. At this point I can only use common sense and the knowledge of what was there and my instincts tell me it's a winner. It would make an interesting economic thesis. 

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Posted by Victrola1 on Wednesday, July 27, 2016 8:26 PM

Miningman

If ALL the Milwaukee Road trackage, as it was in 1955, miraculously  appeared intact tomorrow morning and someone told you to make a railroad out of it I think it would be extremely viable and very competitive in today's market as it once existed. 

 

Your Cadillac grows tail fins over night and the Milwaukee is now as it was in 1955. The route from Green Island, Iowa to Council Bluffs would most likely be the first mainline to be abandon.

The dust has settled. Union Pacific took the C&NW and needs nobody else to reach Chicago. The Burlington and its current incantation never had any reason to share what it found west of Omaha going to Chicago. Those remain the two main routes through Iowa going east. 

Canadian National (Illinois Central) and Iowa Interstate (Rock Island) mostly live off what they gather in their territory. What the Milwaukee offered off the land the Burlington Northern picked up. BN took the Milwaukee from Council Bluffs to just east of Coon Rapids, but its gone from there to the Mississippi River. 

Six from Omaha to Chicago across Iowa in 1955 have become four. There is no foreseeable room for more. 

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Posted by schlimm on Wednesday, July 27, 2016 8:15 PM

VerMontanan

 

 
Miningman

If ALL the Milwaukee Road trackage, as it was in 1955, miraculously  appeared intact tomorrow morning and someone told you to make a railroad out of it I think it would be extremely viable and very competitive in today's market as it once existed. 

 

 

It wouldn't.  Strong routes survive.

http://www.trainweb.org/milwaukeemyths/

 

 

Good research but it does not concern the failure of the MILW in Iowa.  That failure is primarily a consequence of little online business because it missed most Iowa cities of consequence and it failed to achieve a guaranteed source of interchange from the UP.

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Posted by VerMontanan on Wednesday, July 27, 2016 8:00 PM

Miningman

If ALL the Milwaukee Road trackage, as it was in 1955, miraculously  appeared intact tomorrow morning and someone told you to make a railroad out of it I think it would be extremely viable and very competitive in today's market as it once existed. 

It wouldn't.  Strong routes survive.

http://www.trainweb.org/milwaukeemyths/

 

Mark Meyer

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Posted by VerMontanan on Wednesday, July 27, 2016 7:57 PM

Los Angeles Rams Guy

 Marion and Cedar Rapids have always been one big metropolitan area.  

 

 
Not always.  In 1860, Marion had 1500 people and Cedar Rapids 1800. Being six miles apart and very small communities, they were very separate entities. In fact, Marion was the county seat of Linn County until 1919 when it was moved to the a-bit-larger (by that time) Cedar Rapids.  Of course, in more modern times, Cedar Rapids grew to the point that Marion became known as a suburb even though people in Marion still don't think they are (my aunt lives in Cedar Rapids).  (My 1947 Rand McNally Road Atlas shows them clearly as separate unconnected entities.)  And that's the point: Marion became known as the stop for Cedar Rapids on the Milwaukee Road, but on the C&NW, Cedar Rapids WAS the stop.  One could also say that the C&NW served Marshalltown, Ames (Iowa State University) and the Rock Island served Des Moines directly and the Milwaukee "just missed" all these places on the route, but when it came to tapping population along a route, the "near miss" at Marion for Cedar Rapids was just luck.  Though the other cities were anywhere from 10 to 25 miles away from the Milwaukee Road, there was never an attempt to establish stops nearby or dedicated bus connections (there were bus connections early on at places like Davis Jct., Savanna, and Perry, but these were not specifically timed to meet the trains).  With the exception of the Chicago suburb of Elgin and Davis Jct., "Cities" trains on the Milwaukee Road stopped only at crew change points: Savanna, Marion, Perry. When the UP lost its link to Chicago via the North Western and CB&Q wouldn't take the "Cities" trains, obviously UP pretty much wrote off everything in between Chicago and Omaha.
 
Trivia: By Amtrak Day in 1971, the California Zephyr had been discontinued and through cars to Salt Lake City and Ogden for the "California Service" rode the remant of the Nebraska Zephyr (trains 11 and 12) from Chicago to Omaha. Westbound, train BN train 11 made 26 positive and conditional stops between Chicago and Omaha making the trip in 8 hours, 46 minutes (the Denver Zephyr took 8 hours).  But that was still 4 minutes faster than the combined "Cities" trains did Chicago to Omaha on the Milwaukee with its 5 stops.  The demise the Milwaukee line started almost immediately after capturing the "prize" of the "Cities" trains.....
 

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Posted by Miningman on Wednesday, July 27, 2016 7:48 PM

If ALL the Milwaukee Road trackage, as it was in 1955, miraculously  appeared intact tomorrow morning and someone told you to make a railroad out of it I think it would be extremely viable and very competitive in today's market as it once existed. 

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Posted by schlimm on Tuesday, July 26, 2016 7:11 PM

Los Angeles Rams Guy
Marion and Cedar Rapids have always been one big metropolitan area.  

I defer to your expert knowledge.

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Posted by Los Angeles Rams Guy on Tuesday, July 26, 2016 4:51 PM

schlimm

 

 
Los Angeles Rams Guy

 

 
Victrola1

 

 
CSSHEGEWISCH

Observation about the late MILW Chicago-Omaha main.  It was once noted in the pages of TRAINS that the various passenger stops on that line for the "Cities" Streamliners depended on bus connections to reach the city that was nearby.  This would suggest that the line may have been suitable for overhead traffic but very little local business.

 

 

 

Marion, IA is a good example of the late to build to Omaha Milwaukee missing major cities. The C&NW built earlier and mainline served nearby, but much larger Cedar Rapids. 

 

 

 

The MILW definitely did serve Cedar Rapids.  They had a yard in downtown Cedar Rapids (next to the IC's facility) not to mention a Regional Accounting office in downtown Cedar Rapids as well.  

 

 

 

But not on the MILW main line.

 

Marion and Cedar Rapids have always been one big metropolitan area.  

"Beating 'SC is not a matter of life or death. It's more important than that." Former UCLA Head Football Coach Red Sanders

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