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Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railroad

Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul
and Pacific Railroad
Chicago Milwaukee St. Paul and Pacific Herald.png
MILW Map Updated.png
Milwaukee Road system map
Hiawatha Milwaukee Road Postkarte 1935.jpg
Hiawatha postcard from 1935
Reporting mark MILW
Locale Midwestern and western United States
Dates of operation 1847 (1847)–1986 (1986)
Successor Soo Line Railroad
Most trackage in South Dakota and Montana are now operated by BNSF Railway
Some trackage in Washington is now operated by Union Pacific Some trackage in the Midwest are now operated by the Canadian Pacific Railway
Track gauge 4 ft 8 12 in (1,435 mm)
Length
  • 11,248 mi (18,102 km) (1929)
  • 3,023 mi (4,865 km) (1984)
Headquarters Chicago, IL

The Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad (often referred to as the Milwaukee Road) (reporting mark MILW), was a Class I railroad that operated in the Midwest and Northwest of the United States from 1847 until 1980, when its Pacific Extension (Montana, Idaho, and Washington) was abandoned following a bankruptcy. Around this time, the company went through several official names and faced bankruptcy on multiple occasions. The eastern half of the system merged into the Soo Line Railroad thirty-two years ago on January 1, 1986, a subisiary of Canadian Pacific Railway (reporting mark CP). Although the "Milwaukee Road" as such ceased to exist, much of its trackage continues to be used by multiple railroads. It is also commemorated in buildings like the historic Milwaukee Road Depot in Minneapolis and in railroad hardware still maintained by railfans, such as the Milwaukee Road 261 steam locomotive.

The railroad that became the Milwaukee Road began as the Milwaukee and Waukesha Railroad in Wisconsin, whose goal was to link the developing Lake Michigan port city of Milwaukee with the Mississippi River. The company incorporated in 1847, but changed its name to the Milwaukee and Mississippi Railroad in 1850 before construction began. Its first line, all of 5 miles (8.0 km), opened between Milwaukee and Wauwatosa, on November 20, 1850. Extensions followed to Waukesha in February 1851, Madison, and finally the Mississippi River at Prairie du Chien in 1857.


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