The
Great Northern Railway , running from Saint Paul,
Minnesota
to Seattle
, Washington
—more than 1,700 miles (2,736 km)—was the
creation of the 19th century railroad
tycoon James
J. Hill and was
developed from the St. Paul and Pacific Railroad. The Great
Northern's route was the northernmost transcontinental railroad
route in the United States and was north of the
Northern Pacific Railway route. The
Great Northern was a privately funded transcontinental railroad,
though some of its predecessor roads received land grants. It was
one of the few transcontinental railroads to avoid
receivership following the
Panic of 1893.
History
The Great Northern was built slowly to create profitable lines
before extending the road further into undeveloped territory.
Contests were held to promote interest in the railroad.
James J. Hill used early promotional incentives
like feed and seed donations to farmers getting started along the
line. Contests were all-inclusive, from largest farm animals to
largest freight carload capacity.
The earliest predecessor railroad to the GN was the St. Paul &
Pacific Railroad, which Hill purchased in the late 19th century. He
formed the Great Northern Railway in 1889 merging the StP&P
with the St. Paul, Minneapolis & Manitoba Railway and Montana
Central Railroad.
The Great
Northern had branches that ran north to the Canadian border in
Minnesota
, North
Dakota
and Montana
.
It also
had branches that ran to Superior, Wisconsin
and Butte, Montana
. The Great Northern eventually grew to a
system of over 8,000 track miles.
The
mainline crossed the Mississippi
River on the Stone Arch Bridge
in Minneapolis
, near the Saint Anthony Falls
, the only waterfall on the Mississippi. The
bridge ceased to be used as a railroad bridge in 1978 and is now
used as a pedestrian river crossing with excellent views of the
falls and of the lock system used to grant barges access up the
river past the falls.
The mainline reached Seattle,
Washington
in 1893.
The Great
Northern mainline crossed the continental divide through Marias Pass
, the lowest crossing of the Rockies south of the
Canadian border. Here, the rails enter Glacier
National Park
, which the GN promoted heavily as a tourist
attraction.
In 1931
the GN also developed the "Inside Gateway," a route to California
that rivaled Southern
Pacific's route between Oregon
and California
. The GN route was further east than the SP
route and ran south from the Columbia
River in Oregon
.
The GN
connected with the Western
Pacific at Bieber,
California
; the Western Pacific connected with the Atchison, Topeka, and Santa
Fe in Stockton,
California
and together the three railroads (GN, WP, and ATSF)
competed with Southern Pacific for traffic between California
and the Pacific
Northwest. With a terminus at Superior, Wisconsin, the
Great Northern was able to provide transportation from the Pacific
to the Atlantic by taking advantage of the shorter distance to
Duluth from the ocean, as compared to Chicago.
In 1970 the Great Northern, together with the Northern Pacific, the
Chicago,
Burlington and Quincy Railroad and the
Spokane, Portland and
Seattle Railway merged to form the
Burlington Northern Railroad,
today part of the
BNSF Railway.
The Great Northern Railway is considered to have inspired (in broad
outline, not in specific details) the Taggart Transcontinental
railroad in
Ayn Rand's
Atlas Shrugged.
Passenger service
The Great Northern operated various passenger trains but the
Empire Builder was the GN's
premier passenger train. The
Empire Builder was named in
honor of Great Northern's founder James J. Hill, who was known as
the "Empire Builder."
Named trains
Unnamed trains
- Train Nos. 23-30: St. Cloud–Grand Forks via Barnesville and
Crookston local
- Train Nos. 31-32: Sandstone-Willmar via St. Cloud local
- Train Nos. 35-36: Duluth-Grand Forks via Superior and Crookston
local
- Train Nos. 43-42: Billings-Sweetgrass via Great Falls and
Shelby local
- Train Nos. 43-42: Billings-Great Falls local – using GN's only
Budd Rail Diesel Car
- Train Nos. 47-48-49-50: Morris-Browns Valley shuttle
- Train Nos. 53-54: Watertown-Sioux Falls local

- Train Nos. 61-60: Minneapolis-Hutchinson via Wayzata local
- Train Nos. 99-100: Fargo-Minot via Grand Forks local
- Train Nos. 105-106: Sauk Center-Bemidji via Cass Lake
local
- Train Nos. 131-132: Crookston-Noyes local
- Train Nos. 135-136: Crookston-Warroad local
- Train Nos. 161-162: Garretson-Sioux City local
- Train Nos. 185-186: Willmar-Huron via Benson local
- Train Nos. 197-198: Breckenridge-Larimore via Vance local
- Train Nos. 201-202: Grand Forks-Larimore local
- Train Nos. 215-215: Neilhart-Great Falls local
- Train Nos. 221-222: Havre-Great Falls local
- Train Nos. 223-224: Williston-Havre local
- Train Nos. 235-236: Havre-Great Falls Western Star connection – later used
GN's only Budd Rail Diesel
Car
- Train Nos. 237-238: Havre-Great Falls Empire Builder connection
- Train Nos. 243-244-245-246-247-248-249-250: Columbia
Falls-Kalispell shuttle
- Train Nos. 253-254: Oroville-Wenatchee local
- Train Nos. 255-256: Nelson, BC-Spokane local
- Train Nos. 285-286: Snowden-Richey via Fairview local
- Train Nos. 287-288: Watford City-Fairview local
- Train Nos. 291-292: Fairview-Sidney local
- Train Nos. 301-302: Fergus Falls-Pelican Rapids local
- Train Nos. 317-318: Sioux Falls-Yankton local
- Train Nos. 359-358: Vancouver, BC-Seattle local
- Train Nos. 365-366: Great Falls-Augusta local
- Train Nos. 367-368: Lewiston-Moccasin local
- Train Nos. 373-374: Great Falls-Pendroy local
- Train Nos. 401-402: Seattle-Portland (4 months per year) –
joint Coast Pool train with Northern Pacific Railway and
Union Pacific Railroad
- Train Nos. 459-460: Seattle-Portland – joint Coast Pool train
with Northern Pacific
Railway and Union Pacific
Railroad
Amtrak's Empire Builder
Today,
Amtrak's Empire Builder uses the line, running
mostly on ex-GN trackage (between the Twin Cities terminal and St.
Cloud, Minnesota; Moorhead, Minnesota and Sandpoint, Idaho, and
between Spokane, Washington and Seattle).
See also
References
- Ayn Rand, Leonard Peikoff, Peter Schwartz, The voice of reason:
essays in objectivist thought (New American Library, 1989), pg. 92
[1]
- NWDA Washington State University: Wellington
Disaster
Further reading
- Sherman, T. Gary, CONQUEST AND CATASTROPHE (The Triumph and
Tragedy of the Great Northern Railway Through Stevens Pass),
AuthorHouse, Bloomington, Indiana, 2004. ISBN 1-4184-9575-1
External links


A 1909 ad aimed at settlers from a St.
Paul Newspaper (publication name unknown).