Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad
The Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad ( RI ) was an American railroad company based in Chicago . It was also known as the Rock Island Line , in its later years also known as THE ROCK .
Route network
The Rock Island network extended mainly over the states of Colorado , Illinois , Iowa , Kansas , Missouri , Nebraska , New Mexico , Oklahoma, and Texas . The two easternmost points of the route network were Chicago and Memphis (Tennessee) . In the west, the route network extended to Denver and Santa Rosa (New Mexico) , in the south to Galveston in Texas and Eunice in Louisiana and in the north to Minneapolis . The most important routes led from Chicago via Des Moines and Omaha to Denver, from Minneapolis via Des Moines to Kansas City (Missouri) , from St. Louis via Kansas City to Santa Rosa, from Herington in Kansas via Dallas - Fort Worth to Galveston and from Santa Rosa to Memphis, Tennessee. The route network was densest in Iowa and reached most of the cities in a state there.
history
In 1851 , the Chicago & Rock Island Railroad , founded four years earlier, began building a line from Rock Island on the Mississippi River to La Salle , where a connection to the Illinois and Michigan Canal to Chicago was planned. Their first train ran on October 10, 1852 .
The Union Pacific Railroad began merger negotiations with the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad in the mid-1960s. The hearings before the Interstate Commerce Commission dragged on for several years. By the time approval was finally granted in 1975, Union Pacific had already given up its takeover offer. As a result, the company filed for bankruptcy. After the renovation failed, it finally had to be liquidated. Her last train ran on March 31, 1980 . The collapse of Rock Island was the largest in US railroad history. Much of the railway infrastructure has been sold. After successfully completing bankruptcy proceedings in January 1984, the company renamed itself Chicago Pacific Corporation and invested in consumer products. The company was taken over by Maytag Corporation in 1989 .
The trademark rights to the original company name and the last logo used from 1974 to 1980 were acquired by the entrepreneur Robert Riley. He started a new company Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railroad, LLC ( AAR -reporting mark: CRIP). In spring 2019, CRIP took over the Mississippi Delta Railroad ( AAR reporting mark: MSDR) from the previous operator Gulf & Ohio Railways . MSDR operates 60 miles of freight from Swan Lake near Glendora via Tutwiler and Clarksdale to Jonestown , which is owned by Coahoma County . In the spring of 2019, CRIP also leased a 0.4 km (0.25 mile) section of track in Swan Lake directly from Coahoma County. With inclusion of rail freight traffic on this section, the CRIP has also itself to a class-3 local railroad - railway company . MSDR and CRIP operate two EMD GP38 diesel locomotives that are fully painted and lettered in the style of the original Rock Island after 1974.
See also: List of North American Railroad Companies
Corporate management
The list gives an overview of the presidents of the railway company, as well as the Chief Executive Officer (from 1964) and Chairman of the Board (from 1956)
- Rock Island and LaSalle Rail Road / Chicago, Rock Island Rail Road (until August 20, 1866)
- November 27, 1850-22. December 1851: James W. Grant
- December 22, 1851-19. December 1854: John Bloomfield Jervis
- December 19, 1854-11. June 1863: Henry Farnam
- June 11, 1863-21. June 1866: Charles W. Durant
- Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad (August 20, 1866– June 3, 1880)
- June 21, 1866-14. April 1877: John F. Tracy
- April 14, 1877-3. June 1880: Hugh Riddle
- Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railway (June 3, 1880– December 31, 1947)
- June 3, 1880 - 6. June 1883: Hugh Riddle
- June 6, 1883 - 2. June 1898: Ransom Reed Cable
- June 2, 1898-31. December 1901 Warren G. Purdy
- Jan. 1, 1902-26. March 1904: William Bateman Leeds
- March 26, 1904 - 2. December 1909: Benjamin L. Winchell
- December 2, 1909-20. April 1915: Henry U. Mudge
- April 20, 1915-21. June 1917: Jacob M. Dickinson (bankruptcy administrator)
- June 22, 1917 - 7. June 1933: James E. Gorman
- June 7, 1933-31. December 1947: Bankruptcy trustees Joseph B. Fleming , James E. Gorman (until March 25, 1942), Frank Orren Lowden (until March 20, 1943), Aaron Colnon (from April 19, 1943)
- Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad (December 16, 1947– June 1, 1984)
- January 1, 1948-31. December 1955: John D. Farrington (1956–1961 Chairman of the Board)
- Jan. 1, 1956-31. January 1961: Downing B. Jenks
- May 8, 1961-17. May 1965: R. Ellis Johnson
- October 8, 1964-31. July 1970: Jervis Langdon Jr. (Chairman of the Board; Chief Executive Officer; President from May 17, 1965)
- September 14, 1970 - 14. October 1974: William J. Dixon
- September 14, 1970 - 12. September 1972: Peter Kiewit (Chairman of the Board)
- September 14, 1970 - 14. October 1974: Theodore E. Desch (CEO; from September 12, 1972 also Chairman of the Board)
- October 14, 1974-17. March 1975: Lewis B. Harder (Chairman of the Board)
- November 1, 1974-November 1979: John W. Ingram
- March 17, 1975–1. June 1984: William M. Gibbons (court appointed bankruptcy administrator)
Others
The song skirt Iceland Line of Leadbelly is about this railway company. There are various cover versions of the song, including by Johnny Cash and Lonnie Donegan .
In the mid-1930s, the company decommissioned around 200 freight cars and 15 locomotives every month. Their scrapping initially took place at various locations until it was centralized in Silvis , IL , ( ) in 1938 .
See also
Web links
- Historical Overview (Engl.)
Individual evidence
- ↑ Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railroad, LLC - Change of Operators Exemption - Rail line in Coahoma County, Miss. Surface Transportation Board , March 19, 2019, accessed May 28, 2020 .
- ↑ Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railroad, LLC-Lease and Operation Exemption-Rail Line of Coahoma County, Miss., Near Swan Lake, Miss. Surface Transportation Board , June 7, 2019, accessed May 28, 2020 .
- ^ The Rock Island - Chicago Rock Island & Pacific Railroad LLC. In: Company website. Retrieved May 28, 2020 (English).
- ^ Financial (PDF), New York Times. June 4, 1866. Retrieved March 14, 2008.
- ↑ Hofsommer, Don L .: Minneapolis and the Age of Railways . University of Minnesota Press, 2005, ISBN 0-8166-4501-9 , p. 101.
- ↑ 26 Jun 1866, 3 - Chicago Tribune at Newspapers.com. Retrieved April 30, 2019 .
- ↑ In the railroad world: Mr. Riddle says he was not forced out (PDF), New York Times. February 26, 1884. Retrieved March 14, 2008.
- ↑ a b Hannah, Leslie; Faculty of Economics, University of Tokyo: Ownership and Control in the Twentieth Century: Ambiguous Trends in Marriage and Divorce (PDF) 2006. Retrieved March 14, 2008.
- ↑ 9 May 1961, 10 - The Dispatch at Newspapers.com. Retrieved April 29, 2019 .
- ^ 15 Oct 1974, 53 - Chicago Tribune at Newspapers.com. Retrieved April 30, 2019 .
- ^ 12 Sep 1973, 89 - Chicago Tribune at Newspapers.com. Retrieved April 30, 2019 .
- ^ 18 Oct 1974, Page 16 - The Daily Capital News at Newspapers.com. Retrieved April 30, 2019 .
- ^ M .: Little news. (...) scrapping of locomotives in America. In: The Locomotive. Zeitschrift für Lokomotivbau , year 1939, no. 1/1939 (XXXVI. Year), p. 34, bottom left. (Online at ANNO ). .