- Iron Range and Huron Bay Railroad
The Iron Range & Huron Bay Railroad (IR&HB) is a
defunct railroad constructed to hauliron ore inMichigan 'sUpper Peninsula during the 1890s. Financial and engineering problems prevented the railroad's operation; it remains an unusual example of a railroad which was completed but never used.Background
Rich
iron ore deposits were first discovered in the Upper Peninsula in the 1840s, and remain a significant source of wealth for the state. By the 1890s Michigan was the largest supplier of iron ore in the United States. Railroads would haul ore from the mines to greatore dock s on theGreat Lakes in places such as Escanaba and Marquette, where it would be loaded on ore freighters and transported to the rest of the country. TheHuron Mountains west of Marquette were known to be rich in ore deposits, particularly aroundLake Michigamme (nearMichigamme, Michigan ), and were believed to containmarble ,granite ,silver ,gold ,lead ,graphite ,asbestos , andsilica . [Barnett (2007), 46.]History
ImageStackRight|320
The IR&HB was formed onJune 27 ,1890 by seven businessmen, all from Michigan'sLower Peninsula and all but one from Detroit. Milo H. Davis, also of Detroit, was engaged as chief engineer. The company proposed to construct a line from Champion, near the Lake Michigamme ore fields, to a new ore dock onHuron Bay (in Arvon Township), which connected toLake Superior . From there the ore would be shipped by freighter through theSoo Locks . [Barnett (2007), 47.]Construction
The terrain for the line proved forbidding. The country was hilly and broken; grading the roadbed proved an expensive and intensive activity. By June 1891 an initial workforce of 500 men had swelled to 1,500, which strained the local transportation network. The builder,
Wallace Dingman ofBattle Creek, Michigan , ran out of money in August and abandoned work, leaving the IR&HB with unpaid bills and swamping Marquette County's limited poor relief resources. New contractors were hired and the grading was finally finished in the summer of 1892, reportedly at the cost of $400,000–well above the $265,000 budgeted for the project. One major obstacle was a convert|1000|ft|m|sing=oncut nearMount Arvon , from which convert|40000|cuyd|m3 of rock were removed. The rails were laid between July and November 1892.Barnett (2007), 48–9.]The ore dock was built on the shores of Huron Bay for $170,000 under the supervision of
John Munro, Jr. It measured convert|1000|ft|m in length and required two million feet of lumber. Asawmill was constructed to process the vast amounts of timber necessary for the project. [Barnett (2007), 47–9.]Failure
Although the IR&HB completed the convert|42|mi|km|sing=on line [Barnett implies 35 in his calculates; Dompier claims 42, as does the "Times" article cited below.] between Champion and Huron Bay and purchased two
4-8-0 "Mastodon"steam locomotives from theBrooks Locomotive Works , no trains were ever operated. The completion of the line coincided with thePanic of 1893 , which reduced the demand for iron ore. Additionally, the ore mines around Lake Michigamme–which the IR&HB had intended to serve–began to play out. There were richer mines in Ishpeming to the east, but the IR&HB lacked the wherewithal to construct such a line, which would have spanned 15 to convert|20|mi|km. In places the IR&HB line exceeded a grade of 5%, which would have made the haulage of freight difficult. [For a standard-gauge non-rack rail railroad like the IR&HB, 3% was "excessive" and anything over 4.5% unheard of. Some sources claim the IR&HB exceeded 8% in places. See Barnett (2007), 49–50.]By 1893 the IR&HB found itself in serious financial difficulties. In 1890 it had begun with $1,400,000 in capital through an initial stock issue coupled with the sale of bonds. Additional bonds worth $600,000 were sold to cover construction overruns and keep the railroad afloat, but its debts mounted. Finally, in 1900, the company's owners sold it outright to the
Detroit Construction Company for $110,000. [Barnett (2007), 50.]Legacy
Following the sale the Detroit Construction Company dismantled the entire line. The rails were re-used in various
interurban schemes in the Lower Peninsula, including the Grand Rapids, Holland and Lake Michigan Rapid Railway and theDetroit, Lake Orion and Flint Railway . The two locomotives were sold to theAlgoma Central Railway . The great ore dock was dismantled and shipped to Detroit.Barnett (2007), 51.]Davis, the chief engineer, fled to
Mexico to escape allegations of fraud. [cite web | url=http://www.michigan.gov/hal/0,1607,7-160-15481_19271_19357-56889--,00.html | title=Railroad Fraud | work=Michigan Historical Center, Department of History, Arts and Libraries | accessdate=2007-12-25 | date=2006-05-18] According to the "New York Times ", the state took possession of theright-of-way and other property as compensation for unpaid taxes; Marquette County purchased the section within its borders in 1902 for $1,600 and converted it into a roadway. [cite news | title=News of the Railroads; Passenger Agents of Big Roads Deny that a Fight Is Imminent Against Excess Fares | work=New York Times | date=August 26, 1900 | accessdate=2007-12-25 | url=http://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=9B0DE1D6113BEE33A25755C2A96E9C946197D6CF] In 1905 theLake Superior Southern Railway proposed to construct a new line from Huron Bay toMadison, Wisconsin ; the company failed to attract financing and dissolved in 1908.Notes
References
*cite journal | journal=Michigan History | title=An Upper Peninsula Railroad that failed to make the Grade | first=Le Roy | last=Barnett | pages=44–51 | month=September/October | year=2007
*cite web | url=http://www.baragacountyhistoricalmuseum.com/county_history.html | title=Baraga County History | first=Jim | last=Dompier | work=Baraga County Historical Museum | accessdate=2007-12-25External links
* [http://www.michigan.gov/hal/0,1607,7-160-15481_19271_19357-56889--,00.html Michigan Historical Center, Department of History, Arts and Libraries - Includes photographs of the IR&HB]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.