Although the Soo, like the Chicago Great Western and the Rock Island. went between Chicago and the Twin Cities, its main value was for service to small cities along the way. For example, the rotogravure supplement that we carried in our high school paper was shipped from Waukesha on the Soo, connecting to the Mainstreeter in St. Paul. There may have been a tariff reason for that, or the printer may have been in Waukesha. It wasn't the fastest way.The Empire Builder was a Great Northern train -
Great Northern merged/bought/consolidated with the Burlington folks - - -
Interesting would be an image of the actual routes of the competing 4 railroads -
The current EB operates from MSP to CHI on mostly CP (old Milwaukee - Soo?) tracks
Minnesota side of the Mississippi river
The Burlington (GN) route would have been on the Wisconsin side ?
Chicago/Northwestern - Hudson WI - Eau Claire Black River Falls Madison (present UP trackage ?
Northern Pacific ?
Interesting enough how some of these trains could travel at triple digit speeds -
BUT THEN THERE WAS NO FREIGHT INTERFERENCE and heavy rail loads tearing the firmament
out from under the railroad bed were nonexistent !
The Burlington leaving the Twin Cities was on the Wisconsin side, the Milwaukee was on the Minnesota side. The North Western's fast trains CHI<>MSP ran via Milwaukee, Wyeville, and Eau Claire. The Milwaukee and the North Western both had alternate routes.
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