fbpx
Wikipedia

Burlington Northern Railroad

The Burlington Northern Railroad (reporting mark BN) was a United States-based railroad company formed from a merger of four major U.S. railroads. Burlington Northern operated between 1970 and 1996.

Burlington Northern Railroad
With three of four predecessor railroad locomotives in a five-unit consist, BN 5738, a GE U33C, departs Livingston, Montana in August 1971.
Overview
HeadquartersSaint Paul, Minnesota (1970–1981)
Seattle, Washington (1981–1988)
Fort Worth, Texas (1988–1996)
Reporting markBN
LocalePacific Northwest, Midwestern United States, Central United States
Dates of operation1970; 53 years ago (1970)–1996; 27 years ago (1996)
PredecessorGreat Northern Railway
Northern Pacific Railway
Spokane, Portland and Seattle Railway
Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad (all merged by March 2, 1970)
St. Louis-San Francisco Railway (merged 1980)
Colorado and Southern Railway (merged 1981)
Fort Worth and Denver Railway (merged 1982)
SuccessorBNSF Railway
Technical
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Length27,000 miles (43,000 km)

Its historical lineage begins in the earliest days of railroading with the chartering in 1848 of the Chicago and Aurora Railroad, a direct ancestor line of the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad, which lends Burlington to the names of various merger-produced successors.

Burlington Northern acquired the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway on December 31, 1996, to form the Burlington Northern and Santa Fe Railway (later renamed BNSF Railway), which was owned by the Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corporation. That corporation was purchased by Berkshire Hathaway in 2009[1] which is controlled by investor Warren Buffett.

History

The Burlington Northern Railroad was the product of the merger of four major railroads: the Great Northern Railway, the Northern Pacific Railway, the Spokane, Portland and Seattle Railway and the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad.

The four railroads shared a very intertwined history, due to the efforts of James J. Hill, the railroad tycoon who had founded the Great Northern Railway. Hill purchased an interest in the Northern Pacific in 1896 as the railway endured a period of financial turmoil. Hill attempted to merge the two railways but was rebuffed by the leaders of the Northern Pacific.

In 1901, the two railways teamed up to purchase nearly all shares of the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad, giving both a needed connection to Chicago, the nation's railroad hub. That same year, came the next attempt to merge the railroads with the establishment of the Northern Securities Company, a trust that controlled all three, with Hill serving as president. The company was sued in 1902 under the Sherman Antitrust Act and in 1904 the Justice Department won in the Supreme Court ruling Northern Securities Co. v. United States.

Although the ruling forced the three companies to be operated independently, they were still closely linked, even sharing a headquarters building, the Railroad and Bank Building in Saint Paul, Minnesota. In 1905, the Spokane, Portland and Seattle Railway was founded. Like the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad, this new railroad was co-owned by the Great Northern and Northern Pacific and allowed both to access the Pacific Northwest.

Leaders attempted to merge another two times, in 1927 and 1955, but were unsuccessful.

The four railroads were finally cleared to merge on March 2, 1970, after a legal challenge that once again went to the Supreme Court. A newly established holding company, Burlington Northern, Inc. purchased the four railroad companies and merged them into the Burlington Northern Railroad.

To further expand the Burlington Northern, a single track was constructed in 1972 into the Powder River Basin to serve various coal mines. The expansion was a source of traffic unprecedented in United States railroad history. In 1971, the first full year for the new railroad, trains carried 64,116 million revenue ton-miles of freight, by 1979 the total was 135,004 million.[2] Most of the increase was attributed to Powder River coal from Wyoming.

The Burlington Northern, along with handling freight trains, briefly operated inter-city passenger trains. The BN had started operations just a matter of weeks before the end of service of the original California Zephyr, which had been operated by the CB&Q, in conjunction with the Denver & Rio Grande Western and Western Pacific railroads, and continued to operate the North Coast Limited, Mainstreeter, Empire Builder, Western Star, Denver Zephyr, "Gopher", and "International", until Amtrak took over intercity passenger service in May 1971, thus becoming the last "new" Class I railroad to operate its own passenger trains. The BN also operated a commuter line inherited from the CB&Q from Chicago Union Station to Aurora, Illinois. This line is still owned and operated to this day by the BNSF Railway under a purchase-of-service agreement with Metra.

In May 1980 when Mount St. Helens erupted, the BNR owned the land around the summit of Mount St. Helens in Washington state. In the 19th century, the United States government distributed land to railroads as a way to open up the American West and the 9,677-foot peak was granted to the Northern Pacific. It was inherited in the 1970 merger by Burlington Northern. Following the eruption the land including the volcano was subsequently transferred in a land swap between the railroad and the United States Forest Service so the Mount St. Helens National Volcanic Monument could be established.

On November 21, 1980, the St. Louis–San Francisco Railway was acquired, giving the railroad trackage as far south as Florida.

In the early 1980s two independently operated railroads, owned by Burlington Northern Inc. were absorbed into the Burlington Northern Railroad; the Colorado and Southern Railway was absorbed in 1981, followed by the Fort Worth and Denver Railway in 1982.

The railroad relocated its headquarters from Saint Paul to Seattle, Washington in 1981,[3] as well as its parent company and sister companies.

All of Burlington Northern, Inc's non-rail operations were spun off to a new company, Burlington Resources in 1988.

The railroad once again relocated its headquarters in 1988, moving from Seattle to Fort Worth, Texas.

On September 22, 1995, the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway merged with the Burlington Northern to create the Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railway. However, the merger was not official until December 31, 1996, when a common dispatching system was established, Santa Fe's non-union dispatchers were unionized and the implementation of Santa Fe's train identification codes systemwide.[4] On January 24, 2005, the railroad shortened its name to BNSF Railway.[5]

Route

 
Main line heading north out of Seattle, Washington along the shore of Puget Sound
 
Burlington Northern used fuel tenders between specially equipped locomotives in areas that lacked service facilities. BNSF has eliminated this practice with the construction of new facilities like the Hauser Refueling Facility in Idaho.[6]

The Burlington Northern traversed the most northerly routes of any railroad in the western United States. These routes started at Chicago, Illinois and ran west-northwest to La Crosse, Wisconsin. From here the routes continued northwest through Minneapolis and St. Paul, Minnesota to Grand Forks, North Dakota. From Grand Forks the routes ran west through North Dakota, Montana, and Idaho to Spokane, Washington. The former GN routed through North Dakota/Northern Montana, crossing the continental divide at Marias Pass, while the former NP line routed through the southern part of Montana (which was spun off to Montana Rail Link in 1987), crossing the continental divide at Mullan and Homestake Passes. At Spokane the routes split into three. The former Great Northern route ran west to Wenatchee, Washington, crossed under the Cascade Range at New Cascade Tunnel on Stevens Pass, and descended to the Puget Sound region through Everett, Washington. The former Northern Pacific turned southwest towards the Tri-Cities, then northwest to Yakima, Washington, and crossed under the Cascade Range at Stampede Tunnel, descending to the Green River Valley at Auburn, Washington where it connected with existing NP lines from British Columbia to Portland, Oregon. The Spokane, Portland and Seattle ran southwest to the Tri-Cities, then followed the north bank of the Columbia River to Vancouver, Washington.

With the acquisition of the St. Louis – San Francisco Railway the route was extended into the South Central and Southeastern United States.

Transport Statistics shows BN operated 23609 miles of line and 34691 miles of track at the end of 1970;[7] it shows 4547 SLSF miles of line not including QA&P and AT&N. At the end of 1981 BN showed 27374 miles of line and 40041 miles of track.[8]

At the time of the 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens the summit of the volcano that was blasted away was owned by Burlington Northern. Following the eruption, Burlington Northern agreed to a land swap with the U.S. government and exchanged its square mile of land on the mountain for national forest land elsewhere to allow for the creation of the Mount St. Helens National Volcanic Monument to preserve the volcano and allow for its aftermath to be scientifically studied.[9]

Company officers

Presidents of the Burlington Northern Railroad

See also

References

  1. ^ Barr, Greg Morcroft, Alistair. "Berkshire Hathaway to buy Burlington Northern Santa Fe". MarketWatch.
  2. ^ Moody's Transportation Manual 1981
  3. ^ "Taking Control at Burlington". New York Times. April 16, 1982. Retrieved February 15, 2019.
  4. ^ . RailNews. Pentrex: 87. March 1997. Archived from the original on October 6, 2013. Retrieved March 24, 2012.
  5. ^ "Form 10-K: Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corporation for the year ended December 31, 2007". Securities and Exchange Commission. February 15, 2008. Retrieved March 24, 2012.
  6. ^ "BNSF in Idaho". BNSF Northwest. Retrieved March 12, 2022.
  7. ^ Not including 692 route-miles operated by C&S, 1201 FW&D, 186 Oregon Electric, 152 Oregon Trunk, 19 Walla Walla Valley and 2 MA&CR.
  8. ^ Not including 678 route-miles C&S and 1181 miles FW&D.
  9. ^ "Burlington Northern loses its mountaintop in Mount St. Helens blast on May 18, 1980". historylink.org.
  10. ^ "nrrhof.org".
  11. ^ . Archived from the original on November 21, 2011.
  12. ^ BN News, May 1971, p. 1
  13. ^ "Spokane Daily Chronicle". news.google.com – via Google News Archive Search.
  14. ^ BN News, 1976 Overview pp. 3–5
  15. ^ "Topic Galleries – Chicago Tribune". chicagotribune.com.
  16. ^ "Stocks". bloomberg.com.[dead link]
  17. ^ Kenneth N. Gilpin & Eric Schmitt. "Business People; Burlington Northern Promotes 2 Executives". The New York Times, December 18, 1985.
  18. ^ Daniel F. Cuff. "Business People; Burlington Northern Names 2 Executives", The New York Times, October 21, 1988.

External links

  • Portrait of a Railroad (1973)
  • Friends of the Burlington Northern Railroad (BN historical society)
  • Railroads in the Midwest: Early Documents and Images
  • List and Family Trees of North American Railroads

burlington, northern, railroad, reporting, mark, united, states, based, railroad, company, formed, from, merger, four, major, railroads, burlington, northern, operated, between, 1970, 1996, with, three, four, predecessor, railroad, locomotives, five, unit, con. The Burlington Northern Railroad reporting mark BN was a United States based railroad company formed from a merger of four major U S railroads Burlington Northern operated between 1970 and 1996 Burlington Northern RailroadWith three of four predecessor railroad locomotives in a five unit consist BN 5738 a GE U33C departs Livingston Montana in August 1971 OverviewHeadquartersSaint Paul Minnesota 1970 1981 Seattle Washington 1981 1988 Fort Worth Texas 1988 1996 Reporting markBNLocalePacific Northwest Midwestern United States Central United StatesDates of operation1970 53 years ago 1970 1996 27 years ago 1996 PredecessorGreat Northern RailwayNorthern Pacific RailwaySpokane Portland and Seattle RailwayChicago Burlington and Quincy Railroad all merged by March 2 1970 St Louis San Francisco Railway merged 1980 Colorado and Southern Railway merged 1981 Fort Worth and Denver Railway merged 1982 SuccessorBNSF RailwayTechnicalTrack gauge4 ft 8 1 2 in 1 435 mm standard gaugeLength27 000 miles 43 000 km Its historical lineage begins in the earliest days of railroading with the chartering in 1848 of the Chicago and Aurora Railroad a direct ancestor line of the Chicago Burlington and Quincy Railroad which lends Burlington to the names of various merger produced successors Burlington Northern acquired the Atchison Topeka and Santa Fe Railway on December 31 1996 to form the Burlington Northern and Santa Fe Railway later renamed BNSF Railway which was owned by the Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corporation That corporation was purchased by Berkshire Hathaway in 2009 1 which is controlled by investor Warren Buffett Contents 1 History 2 Route 3 Company officers 3 1 Presidents of the Burlington Northern Railroad 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksHistory EditThe Burlington Northern Railroad was the product of the merger of four major railroads the Great Northern Railway the Northern Pacific Railway the Spokane Portland and Seattle Railway and the Chicago Burlington and Quincy Railroad The four railroads shared a very intertwined history due to the efforts of James J Hill the railroad tycoon who had founded the Great Northern Railway Hill purchased an interest in the Northern Pacific in 1896 as the railway endured a period of financial turmoil Hill attempted to merge the two railways but was rebuffed by the leaders of the Northern Pacific In 1901 the two railways teamed up to purchase nearly all shares of the Chicago Burlington and Quincy Railroad giving both a needed connection to Chicago the nation s railroad hub That same year came the next attempt to merge the railroads with the establishment of the Northern Securities Company a trust that controlled all three with Hill serving as president The company was sued in 1902 under the Sherman Antitrust Act and in 1904 the Justice Department won in the Supreme Court ruling Northern Securities Co v United States Although the ruling forced the three companies to be operated independently they were still closely linked even sharing a headquarters building the Railroad and Bank Building in Saint Paul Minnesota In 1905 the Spokane Portland and Seattle Railway was founded Like the Chicago Burlington and Quincy Railroad this new railroad was co owned by the Great Northern and Northern Pacific and allowed both to access the Pacific Northwest Leaders attempted to merge another two times in 1927 and 1955 but were unsuccessful The four railroads were finally cleared to merge on March 2 1970 after a legal challenge that once again went to the Supreme Court A newly established holding company Burlington Northern Inc purchased the four railroad companies and merged them into the Burlington Northern Railroad To further expand the Burlington Northern a single track was constructed in 1972 into the Powder River Basin to serve various coal mines The expansion was a source of traffic unprecedented in United States railroad history In 1971 the first full year for the new railroad trains carried 64 116 million revenue ton miles of freight by 1979 the total was 135 004 million 2 Most of the increase was attributed to Powder River coal from Wyoming The Burlington Northern along with handling freight trains briefly operated inter city passenger trains The BN had started operations just a matter of weeks before the end of service of the original California Zephyr which had been operated by the CB amp Q in conjunction with the Denver amp Rio Grande Western and Western Pacific railroads and continued to operate the North Coast Limited Mainstreeter Empire Builder Western Star Denver Zephyr Gopher and International until Amtrak took over intercity passenger service in May 1971 thus becoming the last new Class I railroad to operate its own passenger trains The BN also operated a commuter line inherited from the CB amp Q from Chicago Union Station to Aurora Illinois This line is still owned and operated to this day by the BNSF Railway under a purchase of service agreement with Metra In May 1980 when Mount St Helens erupted the BNR owned the land around the summit of Mount St Helens in Washington state In the 19th century the United States government distributed land to railroads as a way to open up the American West and the 9 677 foot peak was granted to the Northern Pacific It was inherited in the 1970 merger by Burlington Northern Following the eruption the land including the volcano was subsequently transferred in a land swap between the railroad and the United States Forest Service so the Mount St Helens National Volcanic Monument could be established On November 21 1980 the St Louis San Francisco Railway was acquired giving the railroad trackage as far south as Florida In the early 1980s two independently operated railroads owned by Burlington Northern Inc were absorbed into the Burlington Northern Railroad the Colorado and Southern Railway was absorbed in 1981 followed by the Fort Worth and Denver Railway in 1982 The railroad relocated its headquarters from Saint Paul to Seattle Washington in 1981 3 as well as its parent company and sister companies All of Burlington Northern Inc s non rail operations were spun off to a new company Burlington Resources in 1988 The railroad once again relocated its headquarters in 1988 moving from Seattle to Fort Worth Texas On September 22 1995 the Atchison Topeka and Santa Fe Railway merged with the Burlington Northern to create the Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railway However the merger was not official until December 31 1996 when a common dispatching system was established Santa Fe s non union dispatchers were unionized and the implementation of Santa Fe s train identification codes systemwide 4 On January 24 2005 the railroad shortened its name to BNSF Railway 5 Route Edit Main line heading north out of Seattle Washington along the shore of Puget Sound Burlington Northern used fuel tenders between specially equipped locomotives in areas that lacked service facilities BNSF has eliminated this practice with the construction of new facilities like the Hauser Refueling Facility in Idaho 6 The Burlington Northern traversed the most northerly routes of any railroad in the western United States These routes started at Chicago Illinois and ran west northwest to La Crosse Wisconsin From here the routes continued northwest through Minneapolis and St Paul Minnesota to Grand Forks North Dakota From Grand Forks the routes ran west through North Dakota Montana and Idaho to Spokane Washington The former GN routed through North Dakota Northern Montana crossing the continental divide at Marias Pass while the former NP line routed through the southern part of Montana which was spun off to Montana Rail Link in 1987 crossing the continental divide at Mullan and Homestake Passes At Spokane the routes split into three The former Great Northern route ran west to Wenatchee Washington crossed under the Cascade Range at New Cascade Tunnel on Stevens Pass and descended to the Puget Sound region through Everett Washington The former Northern Pacific turned southwest towards the Tri Cities then northwest to Yakima Washington and crossed under the Cascade Range at Stampede Tunnel descending to the Green River Valley at Auburn Washington where it connected with existing NP lines from British Columbia to Portland Oregon The Spokane Portland and Seattle ran southwest to the Tri Cities then followed the north bank of the Columbia River to Vancouver Washington NW2 510 at Aurora IllinoisWith the acquisition of the St Louis San Francisco Railway the route was extended into the South Central and Southeastern United States Transport Statistics shows BN operated 23609 miles of line and 34691 miles of track at the end of 1970 7 it shows 4547 SLSF miles of line not including QA amp P and AT amp N At the end of 1981 BN showed 27374 miles of line and 40041 miles of track 8 At the time of the 1980 eruption of Mount St Helens the summit of the volcano that was blasted away was owned by Burlington Northern Following the eruption Burlington Northern agreed to a land swap with the U S government and exchanged its square mile of land on the mountain for national forest land elsewhere to allow for the creation of the Mount St Helens National Volcanic Monument to preserve the volcano and allow for its aftermath to be scientifically studied 9 Company officers EditPresidents of the Burlington Northern Railroad Edit Louis W Menk 1970 1971 10 Robert W Downing 1971 1976 11 12 Norman Lorentzsen 1976 1981 13 14 Richard C Grayson 1981 1982 Walter A Drexel 1982 1985 Darius W Gaskins Jr 1985 1989 15 16 17 Gerald Grinstein 1989 1995 18 Robert D Krebs 1995 1996 Post BN See also Edit Trains portalPaul Bunyan Trail Rail Trail List of Superfund sites in MinnesotaReferences Edit Barr Greg Morcroft Alistair Berkshire Hathaway to buy Burlington Northern Santa Fe MarketWatch Moody s Transportation Manual 1981 Taking Control at Burlington New York Times April 16 1982 Retrieved February 15 2019 Burlington Northern amp Santa Fe Merger RailNews Pentrex 87 March 1997 Archived from the original on October 6 2013 Retrieved March 24 2012 Form 10 K Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corporation for the year ended December 31 2007 Securities and Exchange Commission February 15 2008 Retrieved March 24 2012 BNSF in Idaho BNSF Northwest Retrieved March 12 2022 Not including 692 route miles operated by C amp S 1201 FW amp D 186 Oregon Electric 152 Oregon Trunk 19 Walla Walla Valley and 2 MA amp CR Not including 678 route miles C amp S and 1181 miles FW amp D Burlington Northern loses its mountaintop in Mount St Helens blast on May 18 1980 historylink org nrrhof org bnsf com Archived from the original on November 21 2011 BN News May 1971 p 1 Spokane Daily Chronicle news google com via Google News Archive Search BN News 1976 Overview pp 3 5 Topic Galleries Chicago Tribune chicagotribune com Stocks bloomberg com dead link Kenneth N Gilpin amp Eric Schmitt Business People Burlington Northern Promotes 2 Executives The New York Times December 18 1985 Daniel F Cuff Business People Burlington Northern Names 2 Executives The New York Times October 21 1988 Burlington System from the Handbook of Texas Online Retrieved 2005 05 26 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Burlington Northern Railroad Portrait of a Railroad 1973 Friends of the Burlington Northern Railroad BN historical society Railroads in the Midwest Early Documents and Images List and Family Trees of North American Railroads EPA Superfund Fact Sheet for Burlington Northern Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Burlington Northern Railroad amp oldid 1109673944, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.