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In the late 1800’s the Milwaukee Road
was a prosperous railroad out of Chicago that had over 6,000 miles of track in
the upper Midwest. Experiencing competition from other rail lines, the company
decided to expand west to take advantage of the expanding West Coast markets, as
well as the Pacific Rim trade.
The
route proposed for the new line was through the rugged Bitterroot Mountains.
Prior to preparing official plans for the construction, significant exploration
had to be undertaken to select the most feasible route. Various possibilities
existed westward of Butte and up beyond Missoula. The exploration and
reconnaissance crews reportedly covered over 2,000 miles in country that was
wild, uninhabited, with very few trails, and virtually no maps.
The exploration work on the Montana
side began in November, 1904. The exploration on the Idaho side began in May,
1905. In November of 1905, the Milwaukee Railroad Board of Directors formally
approved the lines extension to Seattle-Tacoma, Washington.
Because
time was an enormous factor, the crews worked year round and did not
stop because of winter weather. By the spring of 1906 the choices
were narrowing to the St. Paul Pass and St. Joe River valley.
After the exploration surveys, during most of 1906 engineering survey
crews finally helped select and identify the actual location of where
the tracks would be located.
By
early in 1907 the construction work began. The actual construction of the rail
bed and the track was very difficult due to the forbidding terrain and the
weather conditions. The cost of the project which was originally estimated at
$45 million, ended up exceeding $234 million, (plus another $23 million to
convert to electric locomotives in 1910 to 1911). All in all it took nearly
9,000 men, Italians, Serbs, Montenegrins, Austrians, Belgians, Hungarians,
Japanese, French, Canadians, Spaniards, Irishmen, Swedes, Norwegians, and others
all working together from 1906 to 1911 to construct this Pacific extension.
Intercontinental freight service on
the new line began on July 4, 1909, with passenger service following six days
thereafter.
As
the construction proceeded, numerous settlements sprouted throughout the area.
Avery was the division point on the line and became one of the more substantial
settlements. Others were just very rough construction camps, with evenings full
of riotous gambling, drinking, dancing, and fighting.
In August of 1910 one of the most
devastating forest fires in recorded American history burned much of the natural
forests in Northern Idaho and Western Montana. The fire burned 2½ to 3 million
acres. It was so huge that a massive cloud of smoke spread throughout Southern
Canada and the Northern United States all the way to the St. Lawrence waterway.
The darkness from this smoke was so bad that for 5 days artificial lighting had
to be used from Butte, Montana including Chicago to Watertown, New York. The
fire completely devastated the St. Joe River valley and destroyed all of the
towns except Avery and Marble Creek. Many of these were never rebuilt.
There were numerous stories of very
heroic actions by the railroad employees who drove engines and box cars filled
with people through the flames to the safety of the longer tunnels. Reportedly
over 600 lives were saved in this manner alone.
After this disastrous fire, as well
as for some other operating reasons, the
Milwaukee Road made the decision to electrify the line (use electric
locomotives) between Avery and Harlowton, Montana, a distance of 440 miles.
This innovation by the railroad was the first use of electrification over an
extended distance and was watched over very closely by other railroaders. The
results were astounding both in terms of reliability of operations as well as
profitability. These were the glory days of the railroad, which was then called
the Chicago, Milwaukee and Puget Sound (later to be the Chicago, Milwaukee, St.
Paul and Pacific).
Still, despite its accomplishments,
the railroad had more than its share of hardships. It was forced into
receivership in 1925. It was reorganized 1½ years later. In the years between
1921 and 1940 it only had three years in the black. The road declared another
bankruptcy in 1935. The advent of the speedy 100 m.p.h.
Hiawatha train in the
Midwest, and the Olympian Hiawatha from Chicago to Seattle, returned some degree
of prosperity to the line following World War II. But even that was
short-lived, and gradually through various reductions of
services this once proud railroad gradually deteriorated. The last passenger
train, the Olympian Hiawatha passed through the Bitterroots in 1961, and the
electric locomotives where gradually replaced by diesel engines by 1973. The
final bankruptcy was filed in 1977, and the last train west of Butte passed
through in 1980. After that the line was abandoned.
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