Fox River Valley Railroad
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Fox River Valley Railroad | |
---|---|
Reporting marks | FRV |
Locale | Wisconsin |
Dates of operation | December 9, 1988–August 28, 1993 |
Successor line | Wisconsin Central |
Track gauge | 4 ft 8½ in (1435 mm) (standard gauge) |
Headquarters | Green Bay, WI |
The Fox River Valley Railroad (AAR reporting marks FRV) was a short-lived railroad in eastern Wisconsin from 1988 to 1993 with about 214 miles of track, all of which was former Chicago and North Western Railway trackage. The line ran from Green Bay, Wisconsin to the north side of Milwaukee. Owned by the Itel Rail Corporation, FRV had problems already at start-up, plagued with big debt and little revenue. It was eventually absorbed by the Wisconsin Central along with sister railroad Green Bay and Western on August 28, 1993, as a subsidiary, Fox Valley & Western Ltd.
The Fox River Valley Railroad actually began to take shape more than 100 years earlier when the Rock River Valley Union Railroad, a predecessor of the Chicago and North Western Railway (C&NW), reached Fond du Lac from Minnesota Junction in 1854. C&NW continued building north from Fond du Lac and reached Green Bay in 1862. Other lines followed, connecting Fond du Lac with Milwaukee, Milwaukee with Manitowoc, and Manitowoc with Green Bay by 1906.
All these lines operated as part of the C&NW system - until 1988 when C&NW sold most of them for $61 million to the newly formed Fox River Valley Railroad, a unit of Itel Rail Corporation.
Right from the start, FRV struggled under the weight of a heavy debt, continually suffering from cash flow problems. Itel tried to remedy the situation by placing it under common management with the Green Bay and Western Railroad in 1991. Then in 1993 Itel sold both properties to WCTC's new subsidiary, Fox Valley & Western Ltd.