Boyne City Railroad

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The Boyne City Railroad was a Class III railroad that operated between 1893 and 1978 in Northern Michigan.

It offered service between Lake Charlevoix, a navigable lake in northern Michigan, and a north-south trunk railroad that neared but did not touch the lake. The Boyne City Railroad's operating life passed through three distinct stages:

  • Boyne City Railroad, a short line operating on the railroad's original 7 miles of roadbed in 1935-78. The Boyne City Railroad resumed its predecessor's primary function of providing freight service from Boyne City to the Boyne Falls north-south trunk line, operated successively by the Pennsylvania Railroad, the Penn Central, and the Michigan Northern. During the final two years of its operating life (1976-78), the short line was known as the Boyne Valley Railroad, and offered excursion passenger service only. Passenger service ended after the summer of 1978, and the railroad was formally abandoned in 1982.

[edit] Remains

None of the trackage formerly operated by the Boyne City Railroad remains in use to this day. However, eight miles (13 km) of the former Boyne City, Gaylord & Alpena roadbed remain traceable, parallelling the Thunder Bay River east of Hillman, Michigan. The abandoned roadbed passes through a section of the Mackinaw State Forest in Alpena County, Michigan. In addition, the BCG&A main line right of way can still be seen near the former town of Hallock, Michigan. This town was located at the corner of Parmeter Road and Hallock Road about a mile north of W-M32. The remnants of the BCG&A still visible are a built up right of way and a rail road cut through sand hills. Power lines follow the old right of way.