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Chicago Aurora and Elgin Railroad

The Chicago Aurora and Elgin Railroad (CA&E), known colloquially as the "Roarin' Elgin" or the "Great Third Rail", was an interurban railroad that operated passenger and freight service on its line between Chicago and Aurora, Batavia, Geneva, St. Charles, and Elgin, Illinois. The railroad also operated a small branch to Mt. Carmel Cemetery in Hillside and owned a branch line to Westchester.

Chicago Aurora and Elgin Railroad
Map of the Chicago Aurora and Elgin Railroad from a 1936 public timetable folder
Overview
HeadquartersWheaton, Illinois
LocaleChicago, Illinois and western suburbs
Dates of operation1902–1959
Technical
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Route map

× = stations not served by CA&E
Aurora
Elgin
Illinois Avenue
National Street
Aurora Avenue
Collingbourne
Church Road
Renwick
Poss Road
Clintonville
Batavia
St. Charles Road
Glenwood Park
Wayne
Hart Road
Smith Road
Radant Road
St. Andrews
Wagner Road
Prince Crossing
State Road
Geneva Road
Bilter Road
St. Charles
CA&E Batavia branch
Geneva
Batavia Junction
Good Templar Park
Diehl Road
Kirk Road
Ferry Road
Kautz Road
Williams Road
Kress Road
Warrenville
West Chicago
East Warrenville
High Lake
Gary Road
Fannette
Weisbrook Road
Winfield Road
Plamondon
CA&E Geneva branch
Chicago Golf Club
Geneva Junction
Emory
Jewell Road
Chicago Avenue
Wesley Street
CA&E Aurora branch
CA&E Elgin branch
Wheaton
College Avenue
Glen Ellyn
Taylor Avenue
Glen Oak
Green Valley
Lombard
Stewart Avenue
Westmore
Ardmore Avenue
Villa Park
Spring Road
York Street–Elmhurst
Poplar Avenue
Stratford Hills
Mount Carmel
Berkeley
Oak Ridge
Wolf Road
Harrison Street
Garden Home
CA&E Mount Carmel branch
Bellwood
×
25th Avenue
×
17th Avenue
×
11th Avenue
×
5th Avenue
×
Hannah
×
Harlem
×
Home
Oak Park
×
Gunderson
×
Lombard
×
Austin
×
Central
Laramie
×
Cicero
×
Kilbourn
×
Tripp
×
Pulaski
×
Garfield Park
×
St. Louis
Kedzie
×
Sacramento
×
California
×
Western
×
Hoyne
×
Ogden
Marshfield
×
Laflin
×
Racine
×
Halsted
Canal
Wells Street Terminal

Wounded by the increased use of automobiles after World War II, the CA&E abruptly ended passenger service in 1957. Freight service was suspended in 1959, and the railroad was officially abandoned in 1961. Most of the right-of-way has since been converted to the Illinois Prairie Path rail trail.

The Aurora Elgin and Chicago Railway edit

Origin (1899–1901) edit

The first known attempt to create an electric railway between the metropolis of Chicago and the Fox Valley settlement of Aurora was in late 1891. By this time, passengers in Aurora and Elgin were served by steam railways. Elgin was served by the Milwaukee Road, Geneva and West Chicago served by the Chicago and North Western Railway, St. Charles served by the Chicago Great Western, and Aurora was served by the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy (CB&Q). However, it was thought that an electric line would greatly facilitate interurban travel, as there would be no freight trains to slow passenger trains. A group of investors founded the Chicago & Aurora Interurban Railway with a $1 million investment. However, the railroad was unable to secure additional funds; it failed to meet an 1893 construction deadline and effectively ceased operation thereafter. A second attempt came two years later with the Chicago, Elgin & Aurora Electric Railway. Plans called for the railroad to run through Turner (now West Chicago), Wheaton, and Glen Ellyn. Like its predecessor, the railroad failed to acquire the necessary funds for construction. Yet another group incorporated the DuPage Interurban Electric Railway in 1897, but was met with a similar fate.[1] Small electric lines opened in the 1890s that connected the municipalities of the Fox River Valley. A profitable streetcar railway stretched from Aurora north to Carpentersville. The success of this railway inspired investors to again attempt an electric connection to Chicago. A group led by F. Mahler, E. W. Moore, Henry A. Everett, Edward Dickinson, and Elmer Barrett formed independent railway lines that were projected to stretch from Aurora and Elgin to Chicago. These two companies were incorporated on February 24, 1899. The Everett-Moore group was Ohio's largest interurban railroad company and had experience administrating several lines around Cleveland, most notably the Lake Shore Electric Railway. These two companies, the Aurora, Wheaton & Chicago Railway and Elgin & Chicago Railway, were incorporated on February 24, 1899.[2]

Only one day after their founding, a second group of Cleveland-based investors, led by the Pomeroy-Mandelbaum group, incorporated the Aurora, Wheaton, & Chicago Railroad Company. Pomeroy-Mandelbaum was the second largest interurban railway company in Ohio and intended to compete against the Everett-Moore group. A meeting between the Everett-Moore syndicate and Pomeroy-Mandelbaum group occurred in either 1900 or 1901 to discuss the future of the two companies. They came to an agreement: Everett-Moore would build and maintain the railways connecting Aurora to Chicago while the Pomeroy-Mandelbaum group would control railways linking cities in the Fox River Valley (eventually consolidating as the Aurora, Elgin and Fox River Electric Company [AE&FRE]).[3] A third railway, the Batavia & Eastern Railway Company, was incorporated by the Everett-Moore group in 1901 to link the town of Batavia to the Aurora line. On March 12, 1901, all of the previously incorporated Everett-Moore companies were merged into one, renamed the Aurora, Elgin & Chicago Railway Company (AE&C). Three million dollars' worth of bonds were issued in 1901 to support track construction.[4]

Construction (1901–1902) edit

Construction commenced on September 18, 1900, when the AE&C started to grade its right-of-way. The AE&C received permission to cross existing track lines in February 1902, alleviating one of the largest obstacles in the railway's construction. Construction escalated following the winter months; by April, the third rail had been completed between Aurora and Wheaton. Later that month, the railway connected to the Metropolitan West Side Elevated Railroad at 52nd Avenue (modern day Laramie Avenue) in Chicago. The company operated steam locomotives on completed portions to deliver construction goods to where they were needed. Wheaton was selected as the site of the railroad's headquarters, car barn, and machine shop. $1.5 million in preferred stock was issued in April 1902 to cover unexpected costs.[5]

 
The AE&C station at Lombard (left), pictured in 1902. The station doubled as an electrical substation.

AE&C purchased a 28-acre (11 ha) lot south of Batavia and constructed a power station to provide electricity. Commercial electric power was not yet available at the time, so the railroad needed to provide its own power for the third rail. Steam boilers were fed with coal provided by the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad. On April 11, 1902, they signed a contract with General Electric to provide electrical generators, transformers, and converters for the powerhouse. The line completed a network of utility poles through the right-of-way, allowing communication and power exchange between electrical substations along the track in Aurora, Warrenville, and Lombard. A fifth station was built southeast of Wayne for the Elgin branch. The substations converted the alternating current in the power lines to a lower-voltage direct current for use in the third rail. After its completion, the power station also provided power for at least three small trolley lines and several Fox Valley communities.[6] [7]

The Cleveland Construction Company was hired to build the line. All three rails were traditional "T" design rails laid on stone ballast. Wooden railroad ties were laid 2,816 ties to the mile and separated at standard gauge. Every fifth tie was 9 feet (2.7 m) long to support the third rail. The majority of the line was a double track, with a single track running from the Chicago Golf Club to Aurora. Roadbeds for the double track were 30 feet (9.1 m) wide and were surrounded by woven wire fencing. The third rail was usually placed on the inner sides of the double track, providing safety for residents and employees. The third rail was interrupted at railroad crossings, where a cable was placed underground to carry the current across the 75-foot (23 m) gap.[8][9]

The first inspection trip of the 34.5-mile (55.5 km) line was held on May 16, 1902. the train departed from 52nd Avenue to Aurora, then traversed the AE&FRE south to Yorkville then north to Dundee. AE&C management announced later that evening that they planned on opening the line on July 1. The AE&FRE announced soon afterward that it would offer express transfer service from Fox Valley communities to the AE&C. On May 17, the AE&C tested the powerhouse in Batavia and found several problems with its performance. Heavy rains in June stalled construction and washed out some completed roadbed. The opening date was pushed to July 12, but delays in rolling stock production further stalled it to August.[10]

Poor investments forced the Everett-Moore syndicate to sell its shares in the AE&C in mid-1902. The company had formed a telephone company, but struggled to compete with the Bell Telephone Company. In addition, one of their construction companies went bankrupt, spurring a credit crisis in Cleveland. Creditors demanded pay, and the Everett-Moore group sold off several assets, including their shares of the railroad company totaling $200,000. The Pomeroy-Mandelbaum group still held a large share in the company and became leaders in its operation.[11]

The G. C. Kuhlman Car Company was tasked with providing thirty passenger cars but, for unknown reasons, the deal fell through. An order was placed with the Niles Car and Manufacturing Company in March 1902 for ten cars. Niles Cars were in such high demand that the company was unable to fulfill the full order, but did deliver the AE&C's first six cars on July 29, 1902. The cars were 74,325 pounds (33,713 kg) with four 125 horsepower (93 kW) motors and 36-inch (910 mm) wheels. They were described as "miniature Pullmans" and could seat forty-six or fifty-two passengers. Another twenty cars were ordered from the John Stephenson Car Company and would arrive after the railway was opened.[12][13]

 
Car 10 during an inspection on August 4, 1902. The first ten cars were assigned even numbers from 10 to 28.

One final problem for the AE&C was finding enough qualified motormen to run the trains. The company found none in the immediate area and had to recruit sixteen men from Dayton, Ohio. Another inspection tour occurred on August 4, from Wheaton to 52nd Avenue. A Niles Car was pulled by a steam locomotive along the track to ensure that none of the curves were too sharp for the intended rolling stock. Original plans called for the third rail to guide the car, but the company experienced many electrical problems along its power lines. By the time the third rail was functioning properly, two hundred and fifty utility poles had burned to the ground due to faulty insulators. A final inspection took place on August 21 from Wheaton to Elmhurst. Although problems with the utility poles were noted, the inspection was otherwise considered a success. For the next three days, engineers tested the line from Aurora to Wheaton so that they would have a familiarity with the track.[14]

Early service edit

 
Map of the Aurora Elgin and Chicago RR c 1912

Despite a malfunctioning power system, a group of nearly-untrained motormen, and only six pieces of operational rolling stock, the Aurora branch of the Chicago Aurora and Elgin Railroad opened on August 25, 1902. Fares were 25 cents one-way and 45 cents round-trip. Passengers who wanted to enter The Loop had to transfer to the Metropolitan West Side Elevated at 52nd Avenue for an additional five cents. Service began at 5:33am and concluded at 11:33pm, with trains running every thirty minutes. Terminals were opened to the public at 52nd Avenue, Austin Avenue (in Chicago), Oak Park, Harlem Avenue (in Forest Park), Maywood, Bellwood, Wolf Road (in Hillside), South Elmhurst, Secker Road (in Villa Park), Lombard, Glen Ellyn, College Avenue (in Wheaton), Wheaton, Gary Road (in Wheaton), Chicago Golf Grounds, Warrenville, Ferry Road (in Warrenville), Eola Junction (in Aurora), and Aurora.[15][16] A one-way trip from Aurora to Chicago was seventy-five minutes. The final four cars from the Niles Car Company arrived on September 5 and were put into service seven days later. The original train schedules posted at stations showed service on the Batavia branch. However, actual service did not begin until the last week of September 1902. The Batavia branch met the Aurora branch at Eola Junction. Even when opened, the Batavia branch experienced little traffic and may have been primarily used as convenient transport for railroad officials to the Batavia powerhouse.[17][18]

 
Car 12, pictured southwest of Wheaton on October 22, 1902. Note that the trains ran on a single track on this portion of the line.

The AE&C issued promotional leaflets to citizens of Fox Valley cities and towns. They also sent these pamphlets to settlements west of Aurora, hoping that people would take a steam train to Aurora and then transfer to the electric line. They boasted that the AE&C was the "finest electric railroad in the world." By the end of the year, the AE&C was seeing monthly earnings in excess of $16,500. In addition, the nearby Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad had a dramatic decrease of passengers between Aurora and Chicago.[19]

The twenty cars from Stephenson arrived in December 1902. Fifteen cars were equipped with motors (even numbers 30–58) and five did not (odd numbers 101–109); these latter five cars were intended to only be used as trailing cars. Trailing cars would often be added or removed at Wheaton depending on the number of passengers. The Stephenson cars were almost identical in every respect to the Niles cars. These new cars reduced the travel time between Aurora and Chicago to one hour. The new cars also allowed the railroad to operate at faster speeds—one run from 52nd Avenue to Aurora averaged 65 miles per hour (105 km/h).[20]

Service to Elgin began on May 29, 1903.[21][22] The 17.5-mile (28.2 km) branch split off from the main line at Wheaton, and allowed trains from Chicago to reach the Fox Valley city in sixty-five minutes. When opened, the AE&C was able to change its schedules to allow trains to leave 52nd Avenue every fifteen minutes, alternating between Aurora and Elgin. All trains at this point ran locally, stopping at every station. The AE&C briefly considered expanding to Mendota in late 1903, but determined that it was not worth the financial risk. Though cars primarily carried passengers, some early morning cars carried light freight. Notably, the AE&C reached a deal with the Chicago Record Herald in October 1903 to distribute the paper to the suburbs along the line.[23]

On December 1, 1909,[24] the railroad added a branch from near Wheaton to Geneva. This was extended to St Charles August 25, 1910. Most of the interurban's lines used a third rail for power collection, which was relatively unusual for interurban railroads. While third rail had become the standard for urban elevated railroad and subway systems, most interurban railroads used trolley poles to pick up power from overhead wire; the AE&C only used trolley wire where necessary, such as in the few locations where the interurban had street running.

Originally, the railroad's Chicago terminus was the 52nd Avenue station that it shared with the Garfield Park elevated railroad line of the Metropolitan West Side Elevated Railroad, and where passengers transferred between interurban and elevated trains.[25] Beginning on March 11, 1905, the interurban began operating over the Metropolitan's "L" tracks, allowing AE&C trains to directly serve downtown Chicago. At the same time, the Metropolitan's Garfield Park service was extended west of 52nd Avenue, replacing the AE&C as the provider of local service over the interurban's surface-level trackage as far west as Desplaines Avenue in Forest Park. The interurban's trains terminated at the stub-ended Wells Street Terminal, adjacent to the Loop elevated.[25] The interurban continued to use the "L" tracks through the years of Chicago Rapid Transit Company (CRT) ownership and into the Chicago Transit Authority (CTA) era.[26][27][28]

The Chicago Aurora and Elgin Railroad edit

World War I was tough for the AE&C, and the railroad entered bankruptcy in 1919. Having shed the Fox River Lines (an interurban which paralleled the Fox River), the reorganized company emerged from bankruptcy as the Chicago Aurora and Elgin Railroad on July 1, 1922, under the management of Dr. Thomas Conway Jr.

A branch from Bellwood to Westchester opened October 1, 1926.[29] CRT's elevated train service was extended onto the branch; the "L" company was the sole provider of passenger service on the branch and this new service replaced the CA&E's own local service on its main line east of Bellwood.[30]

 
CA&E public timetable dated February 2, 1936. The railroad ran enough service to fill most of a 12-page folder with train schedules.

Utilities magnate Samuel Insull gained control of the CA&E in 1926. Insull and his corporate interests had already taken over and improved the properties of the North Shore and South Shore Lines. Insull's plans to make similar improvements to the CA&E were scrapped as the result of the Great Depression. With the collapse of his utilities empire, Insull was forced to sell his interest in the CA&E, and the railroad was once again bankrupt by 1932. The line connecting West Chicago with Geneva and St. Charles was abandoned October 31, 1937.[31]

Postwar years of decline edit

The railroad was unable to exit from bankruptcy until 1946. Even though the railroad suffered from low revenue, high debt, and shortage of capital, wartime revenues and hopes for a stronger customer base in the growing west suburban region led the railroad to undertake an improvement of its service. The railroad made substantial improvements to its physical plant and acquired ten new all-steel passenger cars in 1946 and made plans for eight more, with the intention of retiring the oldest wooden cars that had been on the railroad's roster from its earliest years.[citation needed]

However, the postwar years saw increasing shifts of passengers away from rail traffic and into automobiles, and then the CA&E found the rug pulled from beneath the railroad. The plans for construction of the Congress Street Expressway (now known as the Eisenhower Expressway) in the early 1950s not only loomed as a source of further drain on CA&E traffic, but the right-of-way of the new highway necessitated the demolition of the CTA's Garfield Park elevated line, which the CA&E depended upon to reach its downtown terminus.[citation needed]

The expressway's construction plans provided a dedicated right-of-way for trains in the highway's median strip. However, during the estimated five years to complete the superhighway, both "L" and interurban trains would need to use a temporary street-level right-of-way. When the plans circulated in 1951, CA&E objected to the arrangement, citing the effects on running time and scheduling of its trains as they negotiated the streets of Chicago's busy West Side at rush hour. The railroad estimated that the delays would cost the railroad nearly a million dollars a year, to say nothing of the long-term effects of the new superhighway on the railroad's revenue. Another long-term concern was the railroad's downtown terminal; the new median strip line would have no access to Wells Street Terminal.[32] Instead, the replacement line would access the Loop through the Milwaukee-Dearborn Subway, where wood-bodied cars, which still made up a good portion of CA&E rolling stock, were prohibited.

As a compromise, the railroad gained approval to cut back its service to the Desplaines Avenue station in Forest Park — the westernmost terminus of CTA Garfield Park service, after the CTA ended its unprofitable elevated train service on the CA&E's Westchester line in 1951. At the new Forest Park terminal, riders would transfer from the CA&E interurban to a CTA train to complete their commute into the city. This terminal consisted of two loop tracks (one for CA&E and one for CTA) where passengers could make a cross-platform transfer between the interurban and trains of the CTA operating over the temporary street-level trackage — and presumably the eventual new median strip Congress line.[33] Unfortunately, with the change being put into effect on September 20, 1953, CA&E riders lost their one-seat ride to downtown Chicago. Within a few months of the cutback, half of the line's passengers abandoned it in favor of the parallel commuter service provided by the Chicago and North Western Railroad — today operated by Metra as the Union Pacific West Line.[34][35]

Rolling stock edit

Final years edit

 
The CA&E prior to September 1953 in gray, Milwaukee Road (Milwaukee District West Line) in orange, C&NW (Union Pacific West Line) in pink, and the Burlington Route (BNSF Line) in green, showing the intense competition between the CA&E and steam/diesel railroads even before the Congress Line began construction.

The loss of one-seat commuter service to the Loop devastated the interurban. The railroad's financial condition was already shaky, and schemes to restore downtown service faced various legal or operational obstacles. As early as 1952, the railroad had sought to substitute buses for trains,[36] and after years of financial losses, in April 1957 the Illinois Commerce Commission authorized the railroad to discontinue passenger service.[37] Passenger groups and affected municipalities sought injunctions that forced the railroad to temporarily continue service, but as soon as court rulings cleared the way, management abruptly ended passenger service, at noon on July 3, 1957. Commuters who had ridden the CA&E into the city found themselves stranded when they returned to take the train home. Freight operations continued for two more years until June 10, 1959. No trains ran after this point, but the right-of-way and rolling stock were preserved in the event that a party stepped forward to purchase the property. The official abandonment of CA&E came at 5:00pm on July 6, 1961, four years after the final passenger trains had run. The real estate became part of the Aurora Corporation of Illinois, a small conglomerate, which slowly sold off the right-of-way and other properties.[38] Portions of the right-of-way are now operated as a multi-use trail called the Illinois Prairie Path.[39]

Preservation edit

 
Car 308 in operation at the Illinois Railway Museum

Besides the right-of-way, most of which has been retained as the Illinois Prairie Path, there are two depots, two combination depot/substations, and 19 pieces of rolling stock from the CA&E that still exist.[40]

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Plachno (1989), p. 169.
  2. ^ Plachno (1989), p. 171.
  3. ^ Plachno (1989), p. 175.
  4. ^ Plachno (1989), p. 177.
  5. ^ Plachno (1989), pp. 179–189.
  6. ^ Peffers, Hopkins Stolp (1993). Aurora-Elgin Area Street Cars and Interurbans V. 3 The Third Rail Line. American Slide-Chart Corp. pp. 164–174. ISBN 1-883461-03-0.
  7. ^ Plachno (1989), pp. 189–191.
  8. ^ Peffers (1993), p. 175-183.
  9. ^ Plachno (1989).
  10. ^ Plachno (1989), p. 187.
  11. ^ Plachno (1989), p. 193.
  12. ^ Peffers (1993), pp. 21–24.
  13. ^ Plachno (1989), pp. IV-16, 195.
  14. ^ Plachno (1989), p. 197.
  15. ^ C.E.R.A. (1961). Bulletin 105: The Great Third Rail. Central Electric Railfans' Association. pp. iv–v.
  16. ^ Peffers (1993), p. 17, 216-219.
  17. ^ C.E.R.A. (1961), p. IV-12.
  18. ^ Plachno (1989), p. 203.
  19. ^ Plachno (1989), p. 205.
  20. ^ Plachno (1989), pp. 207–209.
  21. ^ "GreatThirdRail.org: Chronology".
  22. ^ "History".
  23. ^ Plachno (1989), pp. 213–215, 233.
  24. ^ "GreatThirdRail.org: Chronology".
  25. ^ a b C.E.R.A. (1961), p. IV-16.
  26. ^ Plachno (1986), p. 33–35.
  27. ^ C.E.R.A. (1976). Chicago's Rapid Transit v. 2: Rolling Stock/1947-1976. Central Electric Railfans' Association. pp. 247–248, 255. ISBN 0-915348-15-2.
  28. ^ Peffers (1993), pp. 108–121.
  29. ^ "GreatThirdRail.org: Chronology".
  30. ^ Plachno (1986), pp. 73, 77–79.
  31. ^ "GreatThirdRail.org: Chronology".
  32. ^ C.E.R.A. (1961), p. 61-62.
  33. ^ C.E.R.A. (1961), p. IV-15.
  34. ^ C.E.R.A. (1961), pp. 62–64.
  35. ^ Plachno (1986), pp. 45–49.
  36. ^ "Suburbs Fight to Keep C. A. & E. as Rail Line," Chicago Daily Tribune, February 13, 1952, p. B9
  37. ^ "Aurora & Elgin Gets State's O.K. to Drop Passenger Trains," Chicago Daily Tribune, April 4, 1957, p. 5
  38. ^ C.E.R.A. (1961), pp. 62–69.
  39. ^ . Illinois Prairie Path. Archived from the original on November 29, 2009. Retrieved November 26, 2009.
  40. ^ Bresse-Rodenkirk, Bob. . Shore Line Interurban Historical Society. Archived from the original on October 8, 2009. Retrieved August 20, 2023.

References edit

  • Plachno, Larry (1986). Sunset Lines: The Story of the Chicago Aurora & Elgin Railroad. Vol. 1 - Trackage. Polo, Illinois: Transportation Trails. ISBN 978-0-9334-4902-2. OCLC 14905944.
  • Plachno, Larry (1989). Sunset Lines: The Story of the Chicago Aurora & Elgin Railroad. Vol. 2–History. Polo, Illinois: Transportation Trails. ISBN 978-0-9334-4910-7. OCLC 180587090.

External links edit

  • GreatThirdRail.org
  • The Chicago, Aurora and Elgin Railroad, "The Roarin' Elgin"
  • Interactive map of the Chicago, Aurora and Elgin Railroad

chicago, aurora, elgin, railroad, known, colloquially, roarin, elgin, great, third, rail, interurban, railroad, that, operated, passenger, freight, service, line, between, chicago, aurora, batavia, geneva, charles, elgin, illinois, railroad, also, operated, sm. The Chicago Aurora and Elgin Railroad CA amp E known colloquially as the Roarin Elgin or the Great Third Rail was an interurban railroad that operated passenger and freight service on its line between Chicago and Aurora Batavia Geneva St Charles and Elgin Illinois The railroad also operated a small branch to Mt Carmel Cemetery in Hillside and owned a branch line to Westchester Chicago Aurora and Elgin RailroadMap of the Chicago Aurora and Elgin Railroad from a 1936 public timetable folderOverviewHeadquartersWheaton IllinoisLocaleChicago Illinois and western suburbsDates of operation1902 1959TechnicalTrack gauge4 ft 8 1 2 in 1 435 mm standard gaugeRoute map stations not served by CA amp E Legend Aurora Elgin Illinois Avenue National Street Aurora Avenue Collingbourne Church Road Renwick Poss Road Clintonville Batavia St Charles Road Glenwood Park Wayne Hart Road Smith Road Radant Road St Andrews Wagner Road Prince Crossing State Road Geneva Road Bilter Road St Charles CA amp E Batavia branch Geneva Batavia Junction Good Templar Park Diehl Road Kirk Road Ferry Road Kautz Road Williams Road Kress Road Warrenville West Chicago East Warrenville High Lake Gary Road Fannette Weisbrook Road Winfield Road Plamondon CA amp E Geneva branch Chicago Golf Club Geneva Junction Emory Jewell Road Chicago Avenue Wesley Street CA amp E Aurora branch CA amp E Elgin branch Wheaton College Avenue Glen Ellyn Taylor Avenue Glen Oak Green Valley Lombard Stewart Avenue Westmore Ardmore Avenue Villa Park Spring Road York Street Elmhurst Poplar Avenue Stratford Hills Mount Carmel Berkeley Oak Ridge Wolf Road Harrison Street Garden Home CA amp E Mount Carmel branch Westchester branchto Mannheim 22nd Bellwood 25th Avenue 17th Avenue 11th Avenue 5th Avenue Westchester branchGarfield Park branch Forest Park CA amp E Des Plaines CTA Hannah Harlem Home Oak Park Gunderson Lombard Austin Central Laramie Cicero Kilbourn Tripp Pulaski Garfield Park St Louis Kedzie Sacramento California Western Hoyne Garfield Park branch Ogden Douglas branchto Cicero Berwyn Logan Square branchto Logan Square Metropolitan main line Marshfield Laflin Racine Halsted Canal Metropolitan main lineeast to The Loop Wells Street Terminal Wounded by the increased use of automobiles after World War II the CA amp E abruptly ended passenger service in 1957 Freight service was suspended in 1959 and the railroad was officially abandoned in 1961 Most of the right of way has since been converted to the Illinois Prairie Path rail trail Contents 1 The Aurora Elgin and Chicago Railway 1 1 Origin 1899 1901 1 2 Construction 1901 1902 1 3 Early service 2 The Chicago Aurora and Elgin Railroad 2 1 Postwar years of decline 2 2 Rolling stock 2 3 Final years 3 Preservation 4 Footnotes 5 References 6 External linksThe Aurora Elgin and Chicago Railway editOrigin 1899 1901 edit The first known attempt to create an electric railway between the metropolis of Chicago and the Fox Valley settlement of Aurora was in late 1891 By this time passengers in Aurora and Elgin were served by steam railways Elgin was served by the Milwaukee Road Geneva and West Chicago served by the Chicago and North Western Railway St Charles served by the Chicago Great Western and Aurora was served by the Chicago Burlington and Quincy CB amp Q However it was thought that an electric line would greatly facilitate interurban travel as there would be no freight trains to slow passenger trains A group of investors founded the Chicago amp Aurora Interurban Railway with a 1 million investment However the railroad was unable to secure additional funds it failed to meet an 1893 construction deadline and effectively ceased operation thereafter A second attempt came two years later with the Chicago Elgin amp Aurora Electric Railway Plans called for the railroad to run through Turner now West Chicago Wheaton and Glen Ellyn Like its predecessor the railroad failed to acquire the necessary funds for construction Yet another group incorporated the DuPage Interurban Electric Railway in 1897 but was met with a similar fate 1 Small electric lines opened in the 1890s that connected the municipalities of the Fox River Valley A profitable streetcar railway stretched from Aurora north to Carpentersville The success of this railway inspired investors to again attempt an electric connection to Chicago A group led by F Mahler E W Moore Henry A Everett Edward Dickinson and Elmer Barrett formed independent railway lines that were projected to stretch from Aurora and Elgin to Chicago These two companies were incorporated on February 24 1899 The Everett Moore group was Ohio s largest interurban railroad company and had experience administrating several lines around Cleveland most notably the Lake Shore Electric Railway These two companies the Aurora Wheaton amp Chicago Railway and Elgin amp Chicago Railway were incorporated on February 24 1899 2 Only one day after their founding a second group of Cleveland based investors led by the Pomeroy Mandelbaum group incorporated the Aurora Wheaton amp Chicago Railroad Company Pomeroy Mandelbaum was the second largest interurban railway company in Ohio and intended to compete against the Everett Moore group A meeting between the Everett Moore syndicate and Pomeroy Mandelbaum group occurred in either 1900 or 1901 to discuss the future of the two companies They came to an agreement Everett Moore would build and maintain the railways connecting Aurora to Chicago while the Pomeroy Mandelbaum group would control railways linking cities in the Fox River Valley eventually consolidating as the Aurora Elgin and Fox River Electric Company AE amp FRE 3 A third railway the Batavia amp Eastern Railway Company was incorporated by the Everett Moore group in 1901 to link the town of Batavia to the Aurora line On March 12 1901 all of the previously incorporated Everett Moore companies were merged into one renamed the Aurora Elgin amp Chicago Railway Company AE amp C Three million dollars worth of bonds were issued in 1901 to support track construction 4 Construction 1901 1902 edit Construction commenced on September 18 1900 when the AE amp C started to grade its right of way The AE amp C received permission to cross existing track lines in February 1902 alleviating one of the largest obstacles in the railway s construction Construction escalated following the winter months by April the third rail had been completed between Aurora and Wheaton Later that month the railway connected to the Metropolitan West Side Elevated Railroad at 52nd Avenue modern day Laramie Avenue in Chicago The company operated steam locomotives on completed portions to deliver construction goods to where they were needed Wheaton was selected as the site of the railroad s headquarters car barn and machine shop 1 5 million in preferred stock was issued in April 1902 to cover unexpected costs 5 nbsp The AE amp C station at Lombard left pictured in 1902 The station doubled as an electrical substation AE amp C purchased a 28 acre 11 ha lot south of Batavia and constructed a power station to provide electricity Commercial electric power was not yet available at the time so the railroad needed to provide its own power for the third rail Steam boilers were fed with coal provided by the Chicago Burlington amp Quincy Railroad On April 11 1902 they signed a contract with General Electric to provide electrical generators transformers and converters for the powerhouse The line completed a network of utility poles through the right of way allowing communication and power exchange between electrical substations along the track in Aurora Warrenville and Lombard A fifth station was built southeast of Wayne for the Elgin branch The substations converted the alternating current in the power lines to a lower voltage direct current for use in the third rail After its completion the power station also provided power for at least three small trolley lines and several Fox Valley communities 6 7 The Cleveland Construction Company was hired to build the line All three rails were traditional T design rails laid on stone ballast Wooden railroad ties were laid 2 816 ties to the mile and separated at standard gauge Every fifth tie was 9 feet 2 7 m long to support the third rail The majority of the line was a double track with a single track running from the Chicago Golf Club to Aurora Roadbeds for the double track were 30 feet 9 1 m wide and were surrounded by woven wire fencing The third rail was usually placed on the inner sides of the double track providing safety for residents and employees The third rail was interrupted at railroad crossings where a cable was placed underground to carry the current across the 75 foot 23 m gap 8 9 The first inspection trip of the 34 5 mile 55 5 km line was held on May 16 1902 the train departed from 52nd Avenue to Aurora then traversed the AE amp FRE south to Yorkville then north to Dundee AE amp C management announced later that evening that they planned on opening the line on July 1 The AE amp FRE announced soon afterward that it would offer express transfer service from Fox Valley communities to the AE amp C On May 17 the AE amp C tested the powerhouse in Batavia and found several problems with its performance Heavy rains in June stalled construction and washed out some completed roadbed The opening date was pushed to July 12 but delays in rolling stock production further stalled it to August 10 Poor investments forced the Everett Moore syndicate to sell its shares in the AE amp C in mid 1902 The company had formed a telephone company but struggled to compete with the Bell Telephone Company In addition one of their construction companies went bankrupt spurring a credit crisis in Cleveland Creditors demanded pay and the Everett Moore group sold off several assets including their shares of the railroad company totaling 200 000 The Pomeroy Mandelbaum group still held a large share in the company and became leaders in its operation 11 The G C Kuhlman Car Company was tasked with providing thirty passenger cars but for unknown reasons the deal fell through An order was placed with the Niles Car and Manufacturing Company in March 1902 for ten cars Niles Cars were in such high demand that the company was unable to fulfill the full order but did deliver the AE amp C s first six cars on July 29 1902 The cars were 74 325 pounds 33 713 kg with four 125 horsepower 93 kW motors and 36 inch 910 mm wheels They were described as miniature Pullmans and could seat forty six or fifty two passengers Another twenty cars were ordered from the John Stephenson Car Company and would arrive after the railway was opened 12 13 nbsp Car 10 during an inspection on August 4 1902 The first ten cars were assigned even numbers from 10 to 28 One final problem for the AE amp C was finding enough qualified motormen to run the trains The company found none in the immediate area and had to recruit sixteen men from Dayton Ohio Another inspection tour occurred on August 4 from Wheaton to 52nd Avenue A Niles Car was pulled by a steam locomotive along the track to ensure that none of the curves were too sharp for the intended rolling stock Original plans called for the third rail to guide the car but the company experienced many electrical problems along its power lines By the time the third rail was functioning properly two hundred and fifty utility poles had burned to the ground due to faulty insulators A final inspection took place on August 21 from Wheaton to Elmhurst Although problems with the utility poles were noted the inspection was otherwise considered a success For the next three days engineers tested the line from Aurora to Wheaton so that they would have a familiarity with the track 14 Early service edit nbsp Map of the Aurora Elgin and Chicago RR c 1912 Despite a malfunctioning power system a group of nearly untrained motormen and only six pieces of operational rolling stock the Aurora branch of the Chicago Aurora and Elgin Railroad opened on August 25 1902 Fares were 25 cents one way and 45 cents round trip Passengers who wanted to enter The Loop had to transfer to the Metropolitan West Side Elevated at 52nd Avenue for an additional five cents Service began at 5 33am and concluded at 11 33pm with trains running every thirty minutes Terminals were opened to the public at 52nd Avenue Austin Avenue in Chicago Oak Park Harlem Avenue in Forest Park Maywood Bellwood Wolf Road in Hillside South Elmhurst Secker Road in Villa Park Lombard Glen Ellyn College Avenue in Wheaton Wheaton Gary Road in Wheaton Chicago Golf Grounds Warrenville Ferry Road in Warrenville Eola Junction in Aurora and Aurora 15 16 A one way trip from Aurora to Chicago was seventy five minutes The final four cars from the Niles Car Company arrived on September 5 and were put into service seven days later The original train schedules posted at stations showed service on the Batavia branch However actual service did not begin until the last week of September 1902 The Batavia branch met the Aurora branch at Eola Junction Even when opened the Batavia branch experienced little traffic and may have been primarily used as convenient transport for railroad officials to the Batavia powerhouse 17 18 nbsp Car 12 pictured southwest of Wheaton on October 22 1902 Note that the trains ran on a single track on this portion of the line The AE amp C issued promotional leaflets to citizens of Fox Valley cities and towns They also sent these pamphlets to settlements west of Aurora hoping that people would take a steam train to Aurora and then transfer to the electric line They boasted that the AE amp C was the finest electric railroad in the world By the end of the year the AE amp C was seeing monthly earnings in excess of 16 500 In addition the nearby Chicago Burlington and Quincy Railroad had a dramatic decrease of passengers between Aurora and Chicago 19 The twenty cars from Stephenson arrived in December 1902 Fifteen cars were equipped with motors even numbers 30 58 and five did not odd numbers 101 109 these latter five cars were intended to only be used as trailing cars Trailing cars would often be added or removed at Wheaton depending on the number of passengers The Stephenson cars were almost identical in every respect to the Niles cars These new cars reduced the travel time between Aurora and Chicago to one hour The new cars also allowed the railroad to operate at faster speeds one run from 52nd Avenue to Aurora averaged 65 miles per hour 105 km h 20 Service to Elgin began on May 29 1903 21 22 The 17 5 mile 28 2 km branch split off from the main line at Wheaton and allowed trains from Chicago to reach the Fox Valley city in sixty five minutes When opened the AE amp C was able to change its schedules to allow trains to leave 52nd Avenue every fifteen minutes alternating between Aurora and Elgin All trains at this point ran locally stopping at every station The AE amp C briefly considered expanding to Mendota in late 1903 but determined that it was not worth the financial risk Though cars primarily carried passengers some early morning cars carried light freight Notably the AE amp C reached a deal with the Chicago Record Herald in October 1903 to distribute the paper to the suburbs along the line 23 On December 1 1909 24 the railroad added a branch from near Wheaton to Geneva This was extended to St Charles August 25 1910 Most of the interurban s lines used a third rail for power collection which was relatively unusual for interurban railroads While third rail had become the standard for urban elevated railroad and subway systems most interurban railroads used trolley poles to pick up power from overhead wire the AE amp C only used trolley wire where necessary such as in the few locations where the interurban had street running Originally the railroad s Chicago terminus was the 52nd Avenue station that it shared with the Garfield Park elevated railroad line of the Metropolitan West Side Elevated Railroad and where passengers transferred between interurban and elevated trains 25 Beginning on March 11 1905 the interurban began operating over the Metropolitan s L tracks allowing AE amp C trains to directly serve downtown Chicago At the same time the Metropolitan s Garfield Park service was extended west of 52nd Avenue replacing the AE amp C as the provider of local service over the interurban s surface level trackage as far west as Desplaines Avenue in Forest Park The interurban s trains terminated at the stub ended Wells Street Terminal adjacent to the Loop elevated 25 The interurban continued to use the L tracks through the years of Chicago Rapid Transit Company CRT ownership and into the Chicago Transit Authority CTA era 26 27 28 The Chicago Aurora and Elgin Railroad editWorld War I was tough for the AE amp C and the railroad entered bankruptcy in 1919 Having shed the Fox River Lines an interurban which paralleled the Fox River the reorganized company emerged from bankruptcy as the Chicago Aurora and Elgin Railroad on July 1 1922 under the management of Dr Thomas Conway Jr A branch from Bellwood to Westchester opened October 1 1926 29 CRT s elevated train service was extended onto the branch the L company was the sole provider of passenger service on the branch and this new service replaced the CA amp E s own local service on its main line east of Bellwood 30 nbsp CA amp E public timetable dated February 2 1936 The railroad ran enough service to fill most of a 12 page folder with train schedules Utilities magnate Samuel Insull gained control of the CA amp E in 1926 Insull and his corporate interests had already taken over and improved the properties of the North Shore and South Shore Lines Insull s plans to make similar improvements to the CA amp E were scrapped as the result of the Great Depression With the collapse of his utilities empire Insull was forced to sell his interest in the CA amp E and the railroad was once again bankrupt by 1932 The line connecting West Chicago with Geneva and St Charles was abandoned October 31 1937 31 Postwar years of decline edit The railroad was unable to exit from bankruptcy until 1946 Even though the railroad suffered from low revenue high debt and shortage of capital wartime revenues and hopes for a stronger customer base in the growing west suburban region led the railroad to undertake an improvement of its service The railroad made substantial improvements to its physical plant and acquired ten new all steel passenger cars in 1946 and made plans for eight more with the intention of retiring the oldest wooden cars that had been on the railroad s roster from its earliest years citation needed However the postwar years saw increasing shifts of passengers away from rail traffic and into automobiles and then the CA amp E found the rug pulled from beneath the railroad The plans for construction of the Congress Street Expressway now known as the Eisenhower Expressway in the early 1950s not only loomed as a source of further drain on CA amp E traffic but the right of way of the new highway necessitated the demolition of the CTA s Garfield Park elevated line which the CA amp E depended upon to reach its downtown terminus citation needed The expressway s construction plans provided a dedicated right of way for trains in the highway s median strip However during the estimated five years to complete the superhighway both L and interurban trains would need to use a temporary street level right of way When the plans circulated in 1951 CA amp E objected to the arrangement citing the effects on running time and scheduling of its trains as they negotiated the streets of Chicago s busy West Side at rush hour The railroad estimated that the delays would cost the railroad nearly a million dollars a year to say nothing of the long term effects of the new superhighway on the railroad s revenue Another long term concern was the railroad s downtown terminal the new median strip line would have no access to Wells Street Terminal 32 Instead the replacement line would access the Loop through the Milwaukee Dearborn Subway where wood bodied cars which still made up a good portion of CA amp E rolling stock were prohibited As a compromise the railroad gained approval to cut back its service to the Desplaines Avenue station in Forest Park the westernmost terminus of CTA Garfield Park service after the CTA ended its unprofitable elevated train service on the CA amp E s Westchester line in 1951 At the new Forest Park terminal riders would transfer from the CA amp E interurban to a CTA train to complete their commute into the city This terminal consisted of two loop tracks one for CA amp E and one for CTA where passengers could make a cross platform transfer between the interurban and trains of the CTA operating over the temporary street level trackage and presumably the eventual new median strip Congress line 33 Unfortunately with the change being put into effect on September 20 1953 CA amp E riders lost their one seat ride to downtown Chicago Within a few months of the cutback half of the line s passengers abandoned it in favor of the parallel commuter service provided by the Chicago and North Western Railroad today operated by Metra as the Union Pacific West Line 34 35 Rolling stock edit Main article Chicago Aurora and Elgin Railroad rolling stock Final years edit nbsp The CA amp E prior to September 1953 in gray Milwaukee Road Milwaukee District West Line in orange C amp NW Union Pacific West Line in pink and the Burlington Route BNSF Line in green showing the intense competition between the CA amp E and steam diesel railroads even before the Congress Line began construction The loss of one seat commuter service to the Loop devastated the interurban The railroad s financial condition was already shaky and schemes to restore downtown service faced various legal or operational obstacles As early as 1952 the railroad had sought to substitute buses for trains 36 and after years of financial losses in April 1957 the Illinois Commerce Commission authorized the railroad to discontinue passenger service 37 Passenger groups and affected municipalities sought injunctions that forced the railroad to temporarily continue service but as soon as court rulings cleared the way management abruptly ended passenger service at noon on July 3 1957 Commuters who had ridden the CA amp E into the city found themselves stranded when they returned to take the train home Freight operations continued for two more years until June 10 1959 No trains ran after this point but the right of way and rolling stock were preserved in the event that a party stepped forward to purchase the property The official abandonment of CA amp E came at 5 00pm on July 6 1961 four years after the final passenger trains had run The real estate became part of the Aurora Corporation of Illinois a small conglomerate which slowly sold off the right of way and other properties 38 Portions of the right of way are now operated as a multi use trail called the Illinois Prairie Path 39 Preservation edit nbsp Car 308 in operation at the Illinois Railway Museum Besides the right of way most of which has been retained as the Illinois Prairie Path there are two depots two combination depot substations and 19 pieces of rolling stock from the CA amp E that still exist 40 Clintonville substation in South Elgin Illinois is currently the home of the Valley Model Railroad Prince Crossing substation in West Chicago Illinois is currently the home of the Salt Creek Model Railroad Villa Avenue depot in Villa Park Illinois is the home to the Villa Park Historical Society Ardmore depot in Villa Park is the home to the Villa Park Chamber of Commerce Traction Terminal Building in Aurora Terminal Building 2 E Wilson St Batavia The former company headquarters at 400 402 W Liberty St Wheaton is now used for offices Illinois Railway Museum in Union Illinois owns cars 36 308 309 319 321 409 431 451 453 and 460 Fox River Trolley Museum in South Elgin Illinois owns cars 11 20 316 317 and 458 Rockhill Trolley Museum in Rockhill Furnace Pennsylvania owns car 315 Midwest Electric Railway in Mount Pleasant Iowa owns car 320 Seashore Trolley Museum in Kennebunkport Maine owns car 434 Connecticut Trolley Museum in East Windsor Connecticut owns car 303 Footnotes edit Plachno 1989 p 169 Plachno 1989 p 171 Plachno 1989 p 175 Plachno 1989 p 177 Plachno 1989 pp 179 189 Peffers Hopkins Stolp 1993 Aurora Elgin Area Street Cars and Interurbans V 3 The Third Rail Line American Slide Chart Corp pp 164 174 ISBN 1 883461 03 0 Plachno 1989 pp 189 191 Peffers 1993 p 175 183 Plachno 1989 Plachno 1989 p 187 Plachno 1989 p 193 Peffers 1993 pp 21 24 Plachno 1989 pp IV 16 195 Plachno 1989 p 197 C E R A 1961 Bulletin 105 The Great Third Rail Central Electric Railfans Association pp iv v Peffers 1993 p 17 216 219 C E R A 1961 p IV 12 Plachno 1989 p 203 Plachno 1989 p 205 Plachno 1989 pp 207 209 GreatThirdRail org Chronology History Plachno 1989 pp 213 215 233 GreatThirdRail org Chronology a b C E R A 1961 p IV 16 Plachno 1986 p 33 35 C E R A 1976 Chicago s Rapid Transit v 2 Rolling Stock 1947 1976 Central Electric Railfans Association pp 247 248 255 ISBN 0 915348 15 2 Peffers 1993 pp 108 121 GreatThirdRail org Chronology Plachno 1986 pp 73 77 79 GreatThirdRail org Chronology C E R A 1961 p 61 62 C E R A 1961 p IV 15 C E R A 1961 pp 62 64 Plachno 1986 pp 45 49 Suburbs Fight to Keep C A amp E as Rail Line Chicago Daily Tribune February 13 1952 p B9 Aurora amp Elgin Gets State s O K to Drop Passenger Trains Chicago Daily Tribune April 4 1957 p 5 C E R A 1961 pp 62 69 The Illinois Prairie Path Illinois Prairie Path Archived from the original on November 29 2009 Retrieved November 26 2009 Bresse Rodenkirk Bob Lake Shore Electric Railway Auction Updated October 02 2009 Shore Line Interurban Historical Society Archived from the original on October 8 2009 Retrieved August 20 2023 References editPlachno Larry 1986 Sunset Lines The Story of the Chicago Aurora amp Elgin Railroad Vol 1 Trackage Polo Illinois Transportation Trails ISBN 978 0 9334 4902 2 OCLC 14905944 Plachno Larry 1989 Sunset Lines The Story of the Chicago Aurora amp Elgin Railroad Vol 2 History Polo Illinois Transportation Trails ISBN 978 0 9334 4910 7 OCLC 180587090 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Chicago Aurora and Elgin Railroad GreatThirdRail org The Chicago Aurora and Elgin Railroad The Roarin Elgin Interactive map of the Chicago Aurora and Elgin Railroad Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chicago Aurora and Elgin Railroad amp oldid 1191518249, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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