Michigan Lake Shore Railroad
Overview | |
---|---|
Locale | Michigan, United States |
Dates of operation | 1869–1878 |
Predecessor | Allegan and Holland Railroad, Muskegon and Ferrysburg Railroad |
Successor | Grand Haven Railroad (1878–1881), Chicago and West Michigan Railroad (1881) |
Technical | |
Length | 57.5 miles (92.5 km) |
The Michigan Lake Shore Railroad (MLS) is a defunct railroad company which operated in the state of Michigan between 1869 and 1878 and was known as the Grand Haven Railroad until 1881.
The MLS was formed on October 13, 1869, by the consolidation of the Allegan and Holland Railroad and the Muskegon and Ferrysburg Railroad. The A&H was organized on July 29, 1868; the M&F on January 22, 1869. By July 1, 1870, a 57.5-mile (92.5 km) line which linked Allegan to Muskegon on the coast of Lake Michigan finished construction.
The company carried mostly lumber and had difficulty turning a profit; in 1872 it entered receivership. On October 1, 1878, it was reorganized as the Grand Haven Railroad, which operated the road for another three years until it was consolidated into the Chicago and West Michigan Railroad.[1]
Notes
[edit]- ^ Ivey (1919), 34; Michigan Railroad Commission (1879), 289.
References
[edit]- Ivey, Paul (1919). The Pere Marquette Railroad Company. Lansing, MI: Michigan Historical Commission. OCLC 66109442.
- Michigan Railroad Commission (1879). Annual Report.
- Railway companies established in 1869
- Railway companies disestablished in 1878
- Defunct Michigan railroads
- West Michigan
- Defunct companies based in Michigan
- Predecessors of the Pere Marquette Railway
- 1869 establishments in Michigan
- American companies disestablished in 1878
- American companies established in 1869
- United States rail transportation stubs