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Everything about The Alton Railroad totally explained

The Alton Railroad was the final name of a railroad linking Chicago to Alton, Illinois, St. Louis, Missouri, and Kansas City, Missouri. Its predecessor, The Chicago & Alton Railroad, was purchased by the Baltimore & Ohio in 1931 and was controlled until 1942 when the Alton was released to the courts. On May 31 1947, the Alton Railroad was merged into the Gulf, Mobile and Ohio Railroad.
   The line to Alton and St. Louis is now mostly part of the Union Pacific Railroad system; the line to Kansas City is part of the Kansas City Southern Railway system. Metra's Heritage Corridor provides commuter rail service on the old main line, now owned by the Canadian National Railway through its Illinois Central Railroad, between Chicago and Joliet, Illinois.

History

The earliest ancestor to the Alton Railroad is the Alton and Sangamon Railroad, chartered February 27, 1847, in Illinois to connect the Mississippi River town of Alton to the state capital at Springfield in Sangamon County. The line was finished in 1852, and as the Chicago & Mississippi Railroad extended to Bloomington in 1854 and Joliet in 1855. Initially, trains ran over the completed Chicago and Rock Island Railroad to Chicago.
   The Joliet and Chicago Railroad was chartered February 15, 1855, and opened in 1856, continuing north and northeast from Joliet to downtown Chicago. It was leased by the Chicago & Mississippi providing a continuous railroad from Alton to Chicago. In 1857 the C&M was reorganized as the St. Louis, Alton and Chicago Railroad, and another reorganization on October 10, 1862, produced the Chicago and Alton Railroad. The C&A chartered the Alton and St. Louis Railroad to extend the line to East St. Louis, opened in 1864 giving it a line from Chicago to East St. Louis.

Railroad family tree

Kansas City line

Springfield-Kansas City and Godfrey-Roodhouse

Chicago-St. Louis line

  • Union Pacific Railroad 1996-Present Chicago-St. Louis line

    Early years of Alton

  • Chicago, Missouri and Western Railway 1987-1989

    Notable passenger trains

  • The Alton Limited
  • Abraham Lincoln
  • Ann Rutledge
  • The Hummer
  • The Midnight Special

    Stations in Chicago

    First entry of C&A passenger trains from Joliet into Chicago was over the Chicago & Rock Island to that railroad's depot (later La Salle Street Station). Briefly, passenger trains were moved over to the Illinois Central depot. On December 28, 1863, the leased J&C and Pittsburgh, Fort Wayne and Chicago Railway came to an agreement where the J&C would use the PFW&C's terminal at Madison Street, later becoming a tenant of Union Station, which opened in 1881. In 1924, with the completion of a new Union Station between Adams and Jackson streets, C&A became a tenant and its successors used Union Station up until the takeover by Amtrak.

    Company officers

    Presidents of the Alton Railroad have included:
  • Timothy Blackstone 1864–1899.
  • Samuel Morse Felton, Jr. 1899–1908.

    Further Information

    Get more info on 'Alton Railroad'.


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