Milwaukee Road Valuation Department Records, 1914-1964

Biography/History

Commonly referred to as the "Milwaukee Road" (or simply "The Road"), the origins of this railroad began in 1847, when the Milwaukee and Waukesha Railroad was incorporated. Three years later its first train operated between Milwaukee and Wauwatosa, Wisconsin, and by 1857, its track reached Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin. In February 1874, the name changed to the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway as it continued to expand throughout the Midwest. By 1887, it reached into Iowa and South Dakota, as far west as Kansas City, Missouri, and north into the Upper Peninsula of Michigan.

In 1905, the Milwaukee Road decided to expand west again, this time to Puget Sound in Washington. The "Lines West" were built between 1906-1909, from the middle of South Dakota to Seattle and Tacoma in Washington. Even though the lines were technological marvels, they were never successful, and were a major contributor to the bankruptcy in 1925. In 1928 the Road reorganized as the Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul & Pacific Railroad, but went bankrupt again in 1935 and 1945. In 1977, in financial trouble once more, it reorganized and sold off two-thirds of its trackage. It was acquired by the Soo Line Corp. on February 21, 1985, which operated it as the Milwaukee Road, Inc. until merging it with their own lines on January 1, 1986.

The Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) was created in 1887 to regulate railroads, primarily to ensure fair rates and restrict rate discrimination. It later enforced railroad safety as well as having jurisdiction over other entities such as the trucking industry, interstate bus lines, and telephone companies. The ICC underwent a large-scale project from about 1915-1922, to inventory nearly all aspects of the railroads in the United States, detailing land, structures, and equipment, among other things, to determine the value of a carrier. The project continued to be updated through the 1960s. The ICC was abolished in 1995.