Mackinac Transportation Company
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The Mackinac Transportation Company was a train ferry service that shuttled railroad cars across the Straits of Mackinac from 1882 until 1984. It was best known as the owner and operator, from 1911 until 1984, of the SS Chief Wawatam, an icebreaking train ferry.
[edit] History
The Mackinac Transportation Company was a joint venture founded in late 1881 by three separate railroads, the Detroit, Mackinac and Marquette Railroad, the Grand Rapids and Indiana Railroad, and the Michigan Central, to create a twelve-month service to connect their three railheads located in Mackinaw City, Michigan and St. Ignace, Michigan.
These three railroads faced a serious engineering challenge posed by local climate conditions. The Straits of Mackinac is often a region of significant ice buildup in winter. After using several boats unsuccessfully, the joint venture spearheaded the development of an improved icebreaker design. Vessels with a bow propeller, such as the Chief Wawatam, could plow through the ice and connect the two peninsulas of Michigan throughout the year.
With changes in railroad ownership, the names of the partners who owned the Mackinac Transportation Company also changed. The Detroit, Mackinac and Marquette became part of the Duluth, South Shore and Atlantic Railway and then the Soo Line; the Grand Rapids and Indiana became part of the Pennsylvania Railroad and then the Penn Central and finally the Michigan Northern Railway; and the Michigan Central became part of the New York Central, the Penn Central and finally the Detroit and Mackinac Railway.
With completion of the Mackinac Bridge in 1957, however, customers who had used railroads trains to ship goods back and forth between the two halves of Michigan began to shift their usage patterns to heavy trucks. The Mackinac Transportation Company permanently ceased operations in 1984.