Mid-Michigan Railroad

Mid-Michigan Railroad
Reporting mark MMRR
Locale Michigan
Dates of operation 1987[1]
Predecessor CSX Transportation
Track gauge 4 ft 8 12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Length 56 miles (90 km)
Headquarters Muskegon, Michigan

The Mid-Michigan Railroad (reporting mark MMRR) is a railroad owned by RailAmerica, having been acquired in 2000.[2] It operates 56 miles (90 km) of track in Michigan.[2]

History

The company incorporated in 1987,[2] for the purpose of acquiring railway lines from the CSX Corporation. The company was owned at inception by RailTex, a Texas-based holding company which owned many short line railroads. The Mid-Michigan bought two lines from CSX:ElmdaleGreenville and PainesElwell.[3] In 1999 it sold the southernmost 5.6 miles (9.0 km) of Elmdale line, ElmdaleMalta, back to CSX.[4]

Routes

Greenville-Lowell

The northern terminus of the Greenville-Lowell line is Greenville, Michigan. After passing through Belding, Michigan, it interchanges with the Grand Rapids Eastern Railroad in Lowell, Michigan. This line was originally built by the Ionia and Lansing Railroad (north of Belding to Greenville), the Patterson Railroad (north of Belding to Belding), and the Grand Rapids, Belding and Saginaw Railroad (Lowell to Belding).[5]

In 1987, 3,500 carloads moved north of Lowell. However, traffic steadily declined after that, especially when the Frigidaire factory in Greenville closed in 2005. By 2007, no traffic was moving at all, and the railroad filed this portion of the line for abandonment. It is planned to be sold to a rail trail.[6][7]

Traffic

The railroad's traffic comes mainly from grain products, such as corn and soybeans. The MMRR hauled around 5,100 carloads in 2008.[2]

Notes

  1. "Mid Michigan Railroad". Retrieved 2007-12-06.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 "RailAmerica's Empire". Trains Magazine (Kalmbach Publishing). June 2010.
  3. Meints (1992), 113.
  4. Meints (2005), 365. Meints gives Elmdale-Ionia as the branch, but this is incorrect and contradicted elsewhere. See Meints (2005), 127.
  5. Branch (1916), 246; Ivey (1919), 250-251; Meints (1992), 124.
  6. "Mid-Michigan Railroad to abandon 26-mile line". Trains News Wire (Kalmbach Publishing). 2007-11-30. Retrieved 2007-12-06.
  7. Request

References

External links