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Flint and Pere Marquette Railroad

The Flint and Pere Marquette Railroad (F&PM) is a defunct railroad which operated in the U.S. state of Michigan between 1857 and 1899.[1] It was one of the three companies which merged to become the Pere Marquette Railway.

Early history

The F&PM was chartered on January 22, 1857 as the Flint and Pere Marquette Railway for the purpose of constructing an east-west railway line on a route, for which a federal land grant was offered, from Flint, Michigan to Lake Michigan at Pere Marquette (now Ludington, Michigan).[2] The early promoters of the road were George M. Dewey and E.H. Hazelton of Flint, with Dewey serving as the first president of the F&PM.[3] Construction started in 1859 in East Saginaw. A more energetic management took charge in 1860 when Captain Eber Brock Ward of Detroit, a prominent lumberman, vessel owner, and steel manufacturer, was elected to the presidency of the F&PM.[4][5] Service began on January 20, 1862, on the 26.1-mile (42.0 km) section from East Saginaw south to Mount Morris. In December 1864 the F&PM gained access to Detroit via trackage rights over the Flint and Holly Railroad and the Detroit and Milwaukee Railroad.[6]

Construction westward from Saginaw commenced in 1866 with the first section of 20 miles (32 km), to Midland, opened December 1, 1867. In the Annual Report to the Stockholders of December 31, 1867, the secretary of the F&PM, Henry C. Potter, called for the continued building of the line toward Lake Michigan: "The importance and magnitude of the lumber traffic on the Muskegon and Manistee Rivers urge this company to speedy construction on its road west."

On September 2, 1868, the F&PM was consolidated with the Flint and Holly Railroad. Besides adding a key segment of trackage to the growing F&PM system, the merger brought into the F&PM the Crapo family - Henry H. Crapo, Governor of Michigan in 1865-69, and his son, William W. Crapo, later president of the F&PM. An extension of 6.5 miles (10.5 km) from Midland to Averill was completed on October 25, 1868, giving the F&PM 60 miles (97 km) of route west from Flint and entitling the company to 76,300 acres (309 km2) in land grants; since 1862 the company had received a total of 307,200 acres (1,243 km2).[7]

Slowly the railroad snaked its way through the forests of central Michigan. It was completed to Clare, 24.4 miles (39.3 km) west of Averill, in November 1870; another 15.6 miles (25.1 km) was finished in March 1871. With the completion of 22 miles (35 km) to Reed City in December 1871, the F&PM made a connection with the north-south main line of the Grand Rapids and Indiana Railway.[8] The line was now 48.4 miles (77.9 km) from its goal of Ludington.

On June 4, 1872, the F&PM was consolidated with the Holly, Wayne and Monroe Railroad (opened for service the same day); the Bay City and East Saginaw Railroad (a feeder line leased since 1867); the Flint River Railroad (Flint to Otter Lake); and the Cass River Railroad (East Saginaw to Vassar).[9]

The Ludington terminal

In 1868 President Ward of the F&PM opened negotiations with James Ludington for a terminal site at his namesake town with frontage of Pere Marquette Lake. James Ludington was the owner of the only mill then at Ludington. He attempted to spin out the talks; though he favored completion of the F&PM, Ludington knew Ward intended to build mills to tap the timber along the Pere Marquette River. Fearing this would make Ward too big, Ludington refused to sell a terminal site or mill sites at any price, hoping to squeeze Ward into selling some of his 70,000 acres (28,000 ha) of timber at a bargain price. Ludington found that Ward would not sell and, more importantly, that Ward was not a man to be trifled with.[10]

Ward learned early in 1869 that Ludington's logging crews had, accidentally or otherwise, cut pine from part of his land. He kept quiet until Ludington went to Detroit on business, then had him arrested and lodged in the Wayne County Jail on charges of trespassing and timber theft. He secured a court judgment of $650,000 against Ludington, who was ruined; he suffered a stroke and was forced to quit business. His successor in business, the Pere Marquette Lumber Company, reached an amicable agreement with Ward in August 1869 for both the railway terminal and the mill sites.[11]

"In November 1874," recalled editor Charles G. Wing of the Ludington Daily News in 1920, "when the F&PM railroad was nearly completed to Ludington, Governor John J. Bagley came over the line on a tour of inspection ... [and] received the most distinguished mark of attention Ludington could show. He rode to and from his railroad car in the only covered carriage up to that time ever owned within the borders of Mason County."[12]

The road was completed to Ludington on December 1, 1874, giving the F&PM 253 miles (407 km) of main line. By 1877 the company had received 511,520.2 acres (207,004.9 ha) of federal land grants, of which over half - 275,741.69 acres (111,588.70 ha) - had been sold, contributing $2,369,729.21 to the railroad's revenues.[13]

Ward died suddenly while walking in Detroit on January 2, 1875. Elected to succeed him as president of the F&PM was Jesse Hoyt of New York, who had extensive lumber and salt interests in East Saginaw.

Cross-lake steamship service between Ludington and Sheboygan, Wisconsin was inaugurated May 31, 1875, with a leased steamer, the sidewheeler SS John Sherman, with John W. Stewart as its captain. At Sheboygan the line interchanged freight with the Sheboygan and Fond du Lac Railway. Quickly outgrowing both the SS John Sherman and the terminal at Sheboygan, the line was shifted to Milwaukee in 1876. The Goodrich Transportation Company provided service under contract to the railroad from 1876 to 1883. Ships assigned to the route by Goodrich included the De Pere, Corona, Oconto, Alpena and, best-known of all, the City of Ludington. The F&PM terminated its contract with Goodrich on April 1, 1883.[14][15]

A grain elevator was built in 1877 on the Ludington waterfront by a group of investors associated with the railroad. In 1879 a freight warehouse was built just south of the grain elevator.[16][17]

Receivership

 
Preferred stock of the Flint and Pere Marquette Railroad Company, issued 1. July 1882

On July 1, 1879, the F&PM went into receivership, owing $1,200,000 in unpaid interest on bonds with bonded interest accumulating at a rate of $385,000 a year. Gross revenues had declined every year since the Panic of 1873, a situation exacerbated by the crash of the lumber market in July 1877. The company remained in receivership until September 30, 1880, when it was reorganized as the Flint and Pere Marquette Railroad. Under the reorganization plan the F&PM issued $6,500,000 in preferred stock. No common stock was to be issued to holders of certificates of old common stock until five consecutive dividends of 7 per cent had been paid on preferred stock. In the event, this never occurred, as there were only two consecutive years (1883 and 1884) in which a 7 per cent dividend was declared on preferred stock.[18]

While in receivership the company built two new lines in 1879: a 3 ft (914 mm) narrow gauge branch from Coleman to Mount Pleasant, 14.5 miles (23.3 km), as the Saginaw and Mount Pleasant Railroad (converted to 4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge in 1884), and a standard gauge branch from Clare to Harrison, 16.8 miles (27.0 km), as the Saginaw and Clare County Railroad.[19]

The Manistee Railroad

For some years, Manistee had boasted of being the largest American city not served by a railroad. This changed after the incorporation on June 19, 1880, of an F&PM subsidiary, the Manistee Railroad, to build a 26.53-mile (42.70 km) branch line from Manistee Junction (today Walhalla), east of Ludington, to Manistee. The villages of Bachelor, Fountain and Free Soil quickly sprang up on this line. Upon its opening on December 5, 1881, the branch gave the F&PM access to Manistee lumbering and salt manufacturing resources.[20]

The Black Boats

In September 1882 the F&PM began operating their own propeller steamers between Ludington and Milwaukee. The first two were the F&PM No. 1 and F&PM No. 2, wooden propellers of 553 and 537 gross tons respectively. Built at Detroit in 1882, they were outfitted to carry passengers, package freight and bulk grain. At a time when most Lake Michigan passenger steamers were painted white, they quickly became known as the "Black Boats" for their black hulls. Each was lengthened 36 feet (11 m) in 1883, and steamship service was extended to Manistee in 1884.[21][22]

As business grew, two similar but larger propellers were built at Detroit, the 924-ton F&PM No. 3 in 1887 and the 941-ton F&PM No. 4 in 1888. The 1,723-ton F&PM No. 5, built at West Bay City in 1890, differed in originally being configured as a straight package freighter with no passenger accommodations.[23] Sailings between Ludington and Manitowoc, Wisconsin, were inaugurated in 1890 by the F&PM No. 1.

Decline of lumbering

Since Jesse Hoyt lived in New York City and did not visit Michigan after 1877, he was represented on the F&PM board by his attorney, William L. Webber of East Saginaw, who also served as the company's general counsel and land commissioner.[24] Upon the death of Hoyt on August 14, 1882, William W. Crapo of New Bedford, Massachusetts, a director since 1868, was elected president of the F&PM. Under his presidency the F&PM was run very much like a New England railroad rather than a Western logging line, as heretofore.

After 1887 the transportation of logs by the F&PM began to fall off rapidly. This was offset somewhat by the growing freight traffic of the company's steamship line. In 1888 the decline in logs transported amounted to 193,790 tons ($153,308 in gross earnings), while earning of the Black Boats totaled $40,556 and rapidly increased as the F&PM attracted movements of wood products, flour, and grain.[25]

On January 31, 1889, the F&PM was consolidated with the East Saginaw and St. Clair Railroad, the Saginaw and Clare County Railroad, the Saginaw and Mount Pleasant Railroad, and the Manistee Railroad. The F&PM bought the Port Huron and Northwestern Railway on April 1, 1889, converted it to standard gauge, and constructed a new line east from Yale to Port Huron. It also converted to standard gauge its existing branch line between East Saginaw and Yale. This gave the F&PM a standard gauge line across the breadth of Michigan, from Lake Michigan to Lake Huron.

The F&PM was a part-owner of the Fort Street Union Depot Company in association with the Wabash Railway, Canadian Pacific Railway, and Detroit, Lansing and Northern Railroad. Construction of this Detroit station commenced in 1890 and it was opened for service on January 22, 1893.

Until 1897 the F&PM reached the important railroad center of Toledo, Ohio, over the rails of the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway. An extension of the F&PM, 15.2 miles (24.5 km) from Monroe to Alexis (an unincorporated place just across the state line in Ohio and just outside the city limits of Toledo), was constructed by the Monroe and Toledo Railway. Soon after the line's completion, the M&T was purchased outright by the F&PM on August 27, 1897. Entry into Toledo from Alexis, 6.6 miles (10.6 km), was secured in 1897 through a 99-year lease of trackage from the Ann Arbor Railroad.

Movements of grain in bulk had become so important to the economics of the railroad that when the elevator at Ludington was destroyed by fire on July 7, 1899, it was immediately rebuilt. The new, larger grain elevator was ready for operation by November 20, 1899.[26]

Car ferry service

In 1895 the F&PM reached an agreement with the Wisconsin Central Railway to establish a cross-lake railway car ferry line between Ludington and Manitowoc. A steel car ferry designed by Robert Logan of 2,443 tons, the Pere Marquette, was built at West Bay City, where she was launched on December 30, 1896. With Joseph Russell as master, the Pere Marquette arrived at Manitowoc on her maiden voyage from Ludington on the morning of February 17, 1897, interchanging freight with both the Wisconsin Central and the Chicago and North Western Railway. The car ferry operation was so successful that it soon became obvious that service would have to be expanded; in 1900 the Pere Marquette transported 27,000 railroad cars across Lake Michigan.[27][28][29][30]

Consolidation

As early as 1886 the Chicago and West Michigan Railway shared common directors with the Detroit, Lansing and Northern Railroad, which was reorganized a decade later, in 1896, as the Detroit, Grand Rapids and Western Railroad. On December 27, 1897, the DGR&W inaugurated car ferry service between Muskegon and Milwaukee with the wooden car ferry Muskegon (later renamed Pere Marquette 16).[31]

By January 1, 1899, the F&PM had sold 468,690 acres (1,896.7 km2) of the 513,000 acres (2,080 km2) granted the company by the federal government. Sales amounted to $4,847,007 - an average of $10.34 an acres.[32]

An agreement was reached in 1899 for the consolidation of the F&PM with the Chicago and West Michigan and the Detroit, Grand Rapids and Western with securities of the newly organized exchanged for those of the constituent companies. The F&PM declared a special 2% dividend out of assets as part of the consolidation plan. The Pere Marquette Railroad was incorporated November 1, 1899, and took over the properties on January 1, 1900.

Charles M. Heald of the C&WM and DGR&W was president of the Pere Marquette with William W. Crapo of the F&PM as chairman of the board of directors. On February 1, 1900, the new company acquired the Saginaw, Tuscola and Huron Railroad, which had been built in 1881-86 by investors associated with the F&PM.

Presidents of the F&PM

Notes

  1. ^ Galbraith's railway mail service maps, Michigan. Library of Congress. Publ. 1897, c1898. Accessed April 2020.
  2. ^ Michigan Railroad Commission (1896). Annual Report.
  3. ^ Michigan Pioneer and Historical Collections XXI (1894), p. 414.
  4. ^ Michigan Pioneer and Historical Collections XXI (1894), p. 341.
  5. ^ Michigan Pioneer and Historical Collections, XXII (1894), p. 289.
  6. ^ Ivey 1919, pp. 215–216
  7. ^ Ivey 1919, pp. 218–219
  8. ^ Ivey 1919, p. 219
  9. ^ Ivey 1919, p. 220
  10. ^ Cabot 2005, p. 16
  11. ^ Cabot 2005, p. 17
  12. ^ Cabot 2005, p. 46
  13. ^ Ivey 1919, p. 221
  14. ^ Cabot 2005, pp. 46–47
  15. ^ Hilton 2002, pp. 297–298
  16. ^ Ivey 1919, pp. 221–222
  17. ^ Cabot 2005, p. 60
  18. ^ Ivey 1919, pp. 223, 233n
  19. ^ Ivey 1919, p. 223
  20. ^ Ivey 1919, pp. 223–224
  21. ^ Cabot 2005, p. 60
  22. ^ Hilton 2002, pp. 298, 346
  23. ^ Hilton 2002, pp. 298, 346–347
  24. ^ Kirkpatrick 1968, p. 203
  25. ^ Ivey 1919, pp. 226–227
  26. ^ Ludington Record, November 23, 1899.
  27. ^ Cabot 2005, p. 77
  28. ^ Hilton 1962, pp. 114–115, 117–118
  29. ^ Hilton 2002, pp. 298–299
  30. ^ Ivey 1919, p. 229
  31. ^ Hilton 1962, p. 118
  32. ^ Ivey 1919, p. 230

References

  • Cabot, James L. (2005). Ludington: 1830-1930. Images of America. Charleston, SC: Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 0738539511. OCLC 62380346.
  • Hilton, George W. (1962). The Great Lakes Car Ferries. Berkeley, CA: Howell-North Books. OCLC 564138.
  • Hilton, George W. (2002). Lake Michigan Passenger Steamers. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press. ISBN 0-8047-4240-5. OCLC 49942913.
  • Ivey, Paul (1919). The Pere Marquette Railroad Company. Lansing, MI: Michigan Historical Commission. OCLC 66109442.
  • Kirkpatrick, Frank A. (Fall 1968). "The Saginaw, Tuscola & Huron: An Early Railroad of Michigan's Thumb". Michigan History. LII (3): 197–217.
  • Michigan Pioneer and Historical Collections, Vol. XXI (1894). Lansing: Michigan Pioneer and Historical Society.
  • Michigan Pioneer and Historical Collections, Vol. XXII (1894). Lansing: Michigan Pioneer and Historical Society.

flint, pere, marquette, railroad, defunct, railroad, which, operated, state, michigan, between, 1857, 1899, three, companies, which, merged, become, pere, marquette, railway, contents, early, history, ludington, terminal, receivership, manistee, railroad, blac. The Flint and Pere Marquette Railroad F amp PM is a defunct railroad which operated in the U S state of Michigan between 1857 and 1899 1 It was one of the three companies which merged to become the Pere Marquette Railway Contents 1 Early history 2 The Ludington terminal 3 Receivership 4 The Manistee Railroad 5 The Black Boats 6 Decline of lumbering 7 Car ferry service 8 Consolidation 9 Presidents of the F amp PM 10 Notes 11 ReferencesEarly history EditThe F amp PM was chartered on January 22 1857 as the Flint and Pere Marquette Railway for the purpose of constructing an east west railway line on a route for which a federal land grant was offered from Flint Michigan to Lake Michigan at Pere Marquette now Ludington Michigan 2 The early promoters of the road were George M Dewey and E H Hazelton of Flint with Dewey serving as the first president of the F amp PM 3 Construction started in 1859 in East Saginaw A more energetic management took charge in 1860 when Captain Eber Brock Ward of Detroit a prominent lumberman vessel owner and steel manufacturer was elected to the presidency of the F amp PM 4 5 Service began on January 20 1862 on the 26 1 mile 42 0 km section from East Saginaw south to Mount Morris In December 1864 the F amp PM gained access to Detroit via trackage rights over the Flint and Holly Railroad and the Detroit and Milwaukee Railroad 6 Construction westward from Saginaw commenced in 1866 with the first section of 20 miles 32 km to Midland opened December 1 1867 In the Annual Report to the Stockholders of December 31 1867 the secretary of the F amp PM Henry C Potter called for the continued building of the line toward Lake Michigan The importance and magnitude of the lumber traffic on the Muskegon and Manistee Rivers urge this company to speedy construction on its road west On September 2 1868 the F amp PM was consolidated with the Flint and Holly Railroad Besides adding a key segment of trackage to the growing F amp PM system the merger brought into the F amp PM the Crapo family Henry H Crapo Governor of Michigan in 1865 69 and his son William W Crapo later president of the F amp PM An extension of 6 5 miles 10 5 km from Midland to Averill was completed on October 25 1868 giving the F amp PM 60 miles 97 km of route west from Flint and entitling the company to 76 300 acres 309 km2 in land grants since 1862 the company had received a total of 307 200 acres 1 243 km2 7 Slowly the railroad snaked its way through the forests of central Michigan It was completed to Clare 24 4 miles 39 3 km west of Averill in November 1870 another 15 6 miles 25 1 km was finished in March 1871 With the completion of 22 miles 35 km to Reed City in December 1871 the F amp PM made a connection with the north south main line of the Grand Rapids and Indiana Railway 8 The line was now 48 4 miles 77 9 km from its goal of Ludington On June 4 1872 the F amp PM was consolidated with the Holly Wayne and Monroe Railroad opened for service the same day the Bay City and East Saginaw Railroad a feeder line leased since 1867 the Flint River Railroad Flint to Otter Lake and the Cass River Railroad East Saginaw to Vassar 9 The Ludington terminal EditIn 1868 President Ward of the F amp PM opened negotiations with James Ludington for a terminal site at his namesake town with frontage of Pere Marquette Lake James Ludington was the owner of the only mill then at Ludington He attempted to spin out the talks though he favored completion of the F amp PM Ludington knew Ward intended to build mills to tap the timber along the Pere Marquette River Fearing this would make Ward too big Ludington refused to sell a terminal site or mill sites at any price hoping to squeeze Ward into selling some of his 70 000 acres 28 000 ha of timber at a bargain price Ludington found that Ward would not sell and more importantly that Ward was not a man to be trifled with 10 Ward learned early in 1869 that Ludington s logging crews had accidentally or otherwise cut pine from part of his land He kept quiet until Ludington went to Detroit on business then had him arrested and lodged in the Wayne County Jail on charges of trespassing and timber theft He secured a court judgment of 650 000 against Ludington who was ruined he suffered a stroke and was forced to quit business His successor in business the Pere Marquette Lumber Company reached an amicable agreement with Ward in August 1869 for both the railway terminal and the mill sites 11 In November 1874 recalled editor Charles G Wing of the Ludington Daily News in 1920 when the F amp PM railroad was nearly completed to Ludington Governor John J Bagley came over the line on a tour of inspection and received the most distinguished mark of attention Ludington could show He rode to and from his railroad car in the only covered carriage up to that time ever owned within the borders of Mason County 12 The road was completed to Ludington on December 1 1874 giving the F amp PM 253 miles 407 km of main line By 1877 the company had received 511 520 2 acres 207 004 9 ha of federal land grants of which over half 275 741 69 acres 111 588 70 ha had been sold contributing 2 369 729 21 to the railroad s revenues 13 Ward died suddenly while walking in Detroit on January 2 1875 Elected to succeed him as president of the F amp PM was Jesse Hoyt of New York who had extensive lumber and salt interests in East Saginaw Cross lake steamship service between Ludington and Sheboygan Wisconsin was inaugurated May 31 1875 with a leased steamer the sidewheeler SS John Sherman with John W Stewart as its captain At Sheboygan the line interchanged freight with the Sheboygan and Fond du Lac Railway Quickly outgrowing both the SS John Sherman and the terminal at Sheboygan the line was shifted to Milwaukee in 1876 The Goodrich Transportation Company provided service under contract to the railroad from 1876 to 1883 Ships assigned to the route by Goodrich included the De Pere Corona Oconto Alpena and best known of all the City of Ludington The F amp PM terminated its contract with Goodrich on April 1 1883 14 15 A grain elevator was built in 1877 on the Ludington waterfront by a group of investors associated with the railroad In 1879 a freight warehouse was built just south of the grain elevator 16 17 Receivership Edit Preferred stock of the Flint and Pere Marquette Railroad Company issued 1 July 1882 On July 1 1879 the F amp PM went into receivership owing 1 200 000 in unpaid interest on bonds with bonded interest accumulating at a rate of 385 000 a year Gross revenues had declined every year since the Panic of 1873 a situation exacerbated by the crash of the lumber market in July 1877 The company remained in receivership until September 30 1880 when it was reorganized as the Flint and Pere Marquette Railroad Under the reorganization plan the F amp PM issued 6 500 000 in preferred stock No common stock was to be issued to holders of certificates of old common stock until five consecutive dividends of 7 per cent had been paid on preferred stock In the event this never occurred as there were only two consecutive years 1883 and 1884 in which a 7 per cent dividend was declared on preferred stock 18 While in receivership the company built two new lines in 1879 a 3 ft 914 mm narrow gauge branch from Coleman to Mount Pleasant 14 5 miles 23 3 km as the Saginaw and Mount Pleasant Railroad converted to 4 ft 8 1 2 in 1 435 mm standard gauge in 1884 and a standard gauge branch from Clare to Harrison 16 8 miles 27 0 km as the Saginaw and Clare County Railroad 19 The Manistee Railroad EditFor some years Manistee had boasted of being the largest American city not served by a railroad This changed after the incorporation on June 19 1880 of an F amp PM subsidiary the Manistee Railroad to build a 26 53 mile 42 70 km branch line from Manistee Junction today Walhalla east of Ludington to Manistee The villages of Bachelor Fountain and Free Soil quickly sprang up on this line Upon its opening on December 5 1881 the branch gave the F amp PM access to Manistee lumbering and salt manufacturing resources 20 The Black Boats EditIn September 1882 the F amp PM began operating their own propeller steamers between Ludington and Milwaukee The first two were the F amp PM No 1 and F amp PM No 2 wooden propellers of 553 and 537 gross tons respectively Built at Detroit in 1882 they were outfitted to carry passengers package freight and bulk grain At a time when most Lake Michigan passenger steamers were painted white they quickly became known as the Black Boats for their black hulls Each was lengthened 36 feet 11 m in 1883 and steamship service was extended to Manistee in 1884 21 22 As business grew two similar but larger propellers were built at Detroit the 924 ton F amp PM No 3 in 1887 and the 941 ton F amp PM No 4 in 1888 The 1 723 ton F amp PM No 5 built at West Bay City in 1890 differed in originally being configured as a straight package freighter with no passenger accommodations 23 Sailings between Ludington and Manitowoc Wisconsin were inaugurated in 1890 by the F amp PM No 1 Decline of lumbering EditSince Jesse Hoyt lived in New York City and did not visit Michigan after 1877 he was represented on the F amp PM board by his attorney William L Webber of East Saginaw who also served as the company s general counsel and land commissioner 24 Upon the death of Hoyt on August 14 1882 William W Crapo of New Bedford Massachusetts a director since 1868 was elected president of the F amp PM Under his presidency the F amp PM was run very much like a New England railroad rather than a Western logging line as heretofore After 1887 the transportation of logs by the F amp PM began to fall off rapidly This was offset somewhat by the growing freight traffic of the company s steamship line In 1888 the decline in logs transported amounted to 193 790 tons 153 308 in gross earnings while earning of the Black Boats totaled 40 556 and rapidly increased as the F amp PM attracted movements of wood products flour and grain 25 On January 31 1889 the F amp PM was consolidated with the East Saginaw and St Clair Railroad the Saginaw and Clare County Railroad the Saginaw and Mount Pleasant Railroad and the Manistee Railroad The F amp PM bought the Port Huron and Northwestern Railway on April 1 1889 converted it to standard gauge and constructed a new line east from Yale to Port Huron It also converted to standard gauge its existing branch line between East Saginaw and Yale This gave the F amp PM a standard gauge line across the breadth of Michigan from Lake Michigan to Lake Huron The F amp PM was a part owner of the Fort Street Union Depot Company in association with the Wabash Railway Canadian Pacific Railway and Detroit Lansing and Northern Railroad Construction of this Detroit station commenced in 1890 and it was opened for service on January 22 1893 Until 1897 the F amp PM reached the important railroad center of Toledo Ohio over the rails of the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway An extension of the F amp PM 15 2 miles 24 5 km from Monroe to Alexis an unincorporated place just across the state line in Ohio and just outside the city limits of Toledo was constructed by the Monroe and Toledo Railway Soon after the line s completion the M amp T was purchased outright by the F amp PM on August 27 1897 Entry into Toledo from Alexis 6 6 miles 10 6 km was secured in 1897 through a 99 year lease of trackage from the Ann Arbor Railroad Movements of grain in bulk had become so important to the economics of the railroad that when the elevator at Ludington was destroyed by fire on July 7 1899 it was immediately rebuilt The new larger grain elevator was ready for operation by November 20 1899 26 Car ferry service EditMain article SS Pere Marquette In 1895 the F amp PM reached an agreement with the Wisconsin Central Railway to establish a cross lake railway car ferry line between Ludington and Manitowoc A steel car ferry designed by Robert Logan of 2 443 tons the Pere Marquette was built at West Bay City where she was launched on December 30 1896 With Joseph Russell as master the Pere Marquette arrived at Manitowoc on her maiden voyage from Ludington on the morning of February 17 1897 interchanging freight with both the Wisconsin Central and the Chicago and North Western Railway The car ferry operation was so successful that it soon became obvious that service would have to be expanded in 1900 the Pere Marquette transported 27 000 railroad cars across Lake Michigan 27 28 29 30 Consolidation EditAs early as 1886 the Chicago and West Michigan Railway shared common directors with the Detroit Lansing and Northern Railroad which was reorganized a decade later in 1896 as the Detroit Grand Rapids and Western Railroad On December 27 1897 the DGR amp W inaugurated car ferry service between Muskegon and Milwaukee with the wooden car ferry Muskegon later renamed Pere Marquette 16 31 By January 1 1899 the F amp PM had sold 468 690 acres 1 896 7 km2 of the 513 000 acres 2 080 km2 granted the company by the federal government Sales amounted to 4 847 007 an average of 10 34 an acres 32 An agreement was reached in 1899 for the consolidation of the F amp PM with the Chicago and West Michigan and the Detroit Grand Rapids and Western with securities of the newly organized exchanged for those of the constituent companies The F amp PM declared a special 2 dividend out of assets as part of the consolidation plan The Pere Marquette Railroad was incorporated November 1 1899 and took over the properties on January 1 1900 Charles M Heald of the C amp WM and DGR amp W was president of the Pere Marquette with William W Crapo of the F amp PM as chairman of the board of directors On February 1 1900 the new company acquired the Saginaw Tuscola and Huron Railroad which had been built in 1881 86 by investors associated with the F amp PM Presidents of the F amp PM EditGeorge M Dewey 1857 1860 Eber Brock Ward 1860 1875 Jesse Hoyt 1875 1882 William W Crapo 1882 1899Notes Edit Galbraith s railway mail service maps Michigan Library of Congress Publ 1897 c1898 Accessed April 2020 Michigan Railroad Commission 1896 Annual Report Michigan Pioneer and Historical Collections XXI 1894 p 414 Michigan Pioneer and Historical Collections XXI 1894 p 341 Michigan Pioneer and Historical Collections XXII 1894 p 289 Ivey 1919 pp 215 216 Ivey 1919 pp 218 219 Ivey 1919 p 219 Ivey 1919 p 220 Cabot 2005 p 16 Cabot 2005 p 17 Cabot 2005 p 46 Ivey 1919 p 221 Cabot 2005 pp 46 47 Hilton 2002 pp 297 298 Ivey 1919 pp 221 222 Cabot 2005 p 60 Ivey 1919 pp 223 233n Ivey 1919 p 223 Ivey 1919 pp 223 224 Cabot 2005 p 60 Hilton 2002 pp 298 346 Hilton 2002 pp 298 346 347 Kirkpatrick 1968 p 203 Ivey 1919 pp 226 227 Ludington Record November 23 1899 Cabot 2005 p 77 Hilton 1962 pp 114 115 117 118 Hilton 2002 pp 298 299 Ivey 1919 p 229 Hilton 1962 p 118 Ivey 1919 p 230References EditCabot James L 2005 Ludington 1830 1930 Images of America Charleston SC Arcadia Publishing ISBN 0738539511 OCLC 62380346 Hilton George W 1962 The Great Lakes Car Ferries Berkeley CA Howell North Books OCLC 564138 Hilton George W 2002 Lake Michigan Passenger Steamers Stanford CA Stanford University Press ISBN 0 8047 4240 5 OCLC 49942913 Ivey Paul 1919 The Pere Marquette Railroad Company Lansing MI Michigan Historical Commission OCLC 66109442 Kirkpatrick Frank A Fall 1968 The Saginaw Tuscola amp Huron An Early Railroad of Michigan s Thumb Michigan History LII 3 197 217 Michigan Pioneer and Historical Collections Vol XXI 1894 Lansing Michigan Pioneer and Historical Society Michigan Pioneer and Historical Collections Vol XXII 1894 Lansing Michigan Pioneer and Historical Society Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Flint and Pere Marquette Railroad amp oldid 1096634512, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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