Toledo, Saginaw and Muskegon Railway

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The Toledo, Saginaw and Muskegon Railway is a defunct railroad incorporated in January, 1886. The railroad offered service between Ashley, Michigan and Muskegon, Michigan starting on August 1, 1888. The Grand Trunk Railway of Canada took control the same day, but the company did not merge with the Grand Trunk Western Railway until 1928.[1]

Contents

[edit] Background

The railroad was started by a group of Toledo Ohio investors headed by David Robinson Jr. and John Ashley, who at the time was also building the Toledo, Ann Arbor and Northern Michigan Railroad, which connected Ashley with Owosso, Michigan. The investors spent about $1,560,000 to build the line. Construction started in the spring of 1887 building bridges and grading. Trackwork was started in August of 1887 from Ashley westward. The track crews reached Carson City on September 24th. In October another crew started laying rail from Egelston and Moorland Townships in Muskegon County eastward. The first freight train to Greenville over the new line was on November 12th when eleven cars of wheat from Carson City was delivered to E. Middleton & Sons flour mills. The two track crews met at a location just west of Cedar Springs on Christmas day 1887, finishing the main track the entire 96 miles. The next day a mixed train (carrying freight and passengers) worked the line each way out of Muskegon and Ashley. In the spring of 1888 the TS&M began running a full passenger train from Muskegon to Ashley and back. On August 1st, 1888 the Grand Trunk Railway took control of the TS&M and the trains began using the Toledo, Ann Arbor, & Northern Michigan between Ashley and Owosso Junction. Operations consisted of mail and express trains #1 and 2 and mixed trains #5 and 6. Trains #1 and 5 were eastbound and trains #2 and 4 were westbound. Later these trains were given Grand Trunk numbers 31 and 32 for the mail and express and 71 and 72 for the mixed trains. By 1914 the mail and express trains numbers had changed again to 41 and 42 and the mixed trains to 471 and 472. These trains would continue to operate under these numbers for the next forty years. In 1914 the Grand Trunk experimented with a steam powered motor car between Ashley and Muskegon. The motorcar, numbered 112, started running as trains 43 and 44 from Ashley to Muskegon and back in January of 1914. The motorcar broke down frequently and had to be replaced with a regular steam train. After about a year the motorcar was discontinued. In 1928 the TS&M was merged along with other Michigan Grand Trunk Railway owned rail lines into the Grand Trunk Western Railroad and the TS&M became the Muskegon Subdivision of the GTWRR.[2]

[edit] Operations

The railroad had stops in the following communities:[3]

Information from TS&M timetables The TS&M also had interlocking towers at the following locations:

  • Virgil (Sheridan) - Detroit, Lansing & Northern
  • Greenville - DL&N
  • Cedar Springs - Grand Rapids & Indiana
  • Saxon (Sparta) - Chicago & West Michigan
  • Simpson (Muskegon) - C&WM

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Meints (1992), 146.
 2. TS&M and GT Rwy timetables, Greenville Independent newspaper from 1887 to 1888, The Grand Rapids Press Jan. 21st, 1914, The Owosso Argus-Press May 31st, 1946.
 3. TS&M and GT Rwy timetables.

[edit] References

  • Meints, Graydon M. (1992). Michigan Railroads and Railroad Companies. East Lansing, Michigan: Michigan State University Press. ISBN 0870133187. 
  • Meints, Graydon M. (2005). Michigan Railroad Lines. East Lansing: Michigan State University Press.