St. Paul and Duluth Railroad
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The St. Paul and Duluth Railroad was reorganized from the Lake Superior and Mississippi Railroad in the 1870s. It was bought by the Northern Pacific in 1900. Known to this day as the "Skally Line", it operated from Saint Paul to Duluth, Minnesota, with branches to Minneapolis, Taylors Falls, Kettle River, and Cloquet, in Minnesota, and Grantsburg and Superior in Wisconsin.
[edit] Disposition
The line was purchased by the Northern Pacific Railway, which was succeeded by the Burlington Northern and then the Burlington Northern Santa Fe. Most of the line became redundant with other lines after the Burlington Northern merger, and with the lack of freight traffic, most segments were abandoned and turned into rail trails.
The disposition of the segments is as follows:
- St. Paul, Minnesota to Maplewood, Minnesota - abandoned; now part of the Bruce Vento Regional Trail
- Maplewood, Minnesota to Hugo, Minnesota - now operated by the Minnesota Commercial Railway
- Hugo, Minnesota to North Branch, Minnesota - abandoned; now the Hardwood Creek Regional Trail and Sunrise Prairie Trail
- North Branch, Minnesota to Hinckley, Minnesota - now operated by the St. Croix Valley Railroad
- Hinckley, Minnesota to Duluth, Minnesota - abandoned; now the Willard Munger State Trail