Letter concerning the Northern Pacific Railway Company in Morrison County, MN:
November 16, 1936
Mr. Val E. Kasparek,
Your letter of October 28th to Mr. Ruth has been referred to us for reply. We have gone through our records here and are happy to supply such dates and facts as seem pertinent to railroad history in Morrison County.
In 1862, the St. Paul & Pacific Railroad, the first railroad in Minnesota, began construction of the line which eventually was to give Morrison County its railroad connection with the Twin Cities and form a part of the Northern Pacific transcontinental system.
The St. Paul & Pacific completed its line from St. Paul to St. Anthony (now Minneapolis) in July, 1862 and began running trains shortly thereafter. It extended its line from the Twin Cities to Elk River in 1864 and from there westward to Sauk Rapids in 1867.
A further extension of the line from Sauk Rapids through Morrison County to Brainerd was undertaken in 1871 but the company failed to complete this, went into bankruptcy and forfeited its charter March 1, 1877. The Western Railroad of Minnesota, a Northern Pacific subsidiary, then took up the charter on May 2, 1877, and completed the road to Brainerd in October 1877.
At Brainerd this railroad connected with the mainline of the Northern Pacific which extended from Duluth as far west as Bismarck. As soon as the line to Brainerd was completed, Northern Pacific trains from the Twin Cities which had previously been obliged to operate westward via Duluth, began running through Little Falls westward via Brainerd. The new routing saved ten hours between St. Paul and Bismarck, North Dakota. A further shortening of the Northern Pacific main line occurred (sic) when construction of the Little Falls-Staples cutoff was begun in April, 1889, and was completed in September of that year. This cutoff shortened the transcontinental line by 26 miles.
Work on the Little Falls & Dakota branch started in the summer of 1881, the company being known as the Little Falls & Dakota Railroad Company. Track laying began in June, 1882, and was completed to Morris, on October 27, 1882. Operation of trains began on November 1, 1882. The Little Falls & Dakota Railroad Company was organized by local men and was capitalized by county bond issues of the immediate counties. Ortonville is said to have been the objective of this line but the road was never extended west of Morris.
Names of some Northern Pacific stations in Morrison County originated as follows: Randall, for John H. Randall, an official of the St. Paul & Pacific Railroad; Darling, for W. L. Darling, chief engineer of the Northern Pacific, at the time of construction; Cushing, for Caleb Cushing of Massachusetts who was a prominent figure in the early lumber industry in the Upper Mississippi Valley; Royalton, for Royalton in Vermont, birthplace of Frederic Billings, president of the Northern Pacific Railway while the transcontinental main line was nearing completion; Gregory, for J. Gregory Smith, president of the Northern Pacific from1866 to 1872 and at one time governor of Vermont.
Plans for the present Little Falls depot were drafted in 1899 and the building of the station began shortly thereafter.
Building of the Camp Ripley branch line was begun in April, 1930, and was completed on July 13, 1931, to serve the National Guard Encampment there.
The foregoing information is probably not complete in every respect but doubtless you will be able to supplement it locally. I am sure that Mr. Ruth will be glad to work along with you and refer you to possible sources in Little Falls. Some of our older employees there will undoubtedly recall items of interest relative to various phases of construction and development of our line.
Should you wish to work into your Morrison County history some data from the general history of our line, I am glad to advise as follows: The charter for construction of the Northern Pacific was approved by Congress and signed by President Abraham Lincoln on July 2, 1864. Construction of the line was begun at Carlton, Minnesota, in February, 1870, and it was completed at Gold Creek, Montana, on September 8, 1883. Among the prominent builders were W. Milnor Roberts, Edwin Johnson, General Adna Anderson and General T. Rosser.
Roberts built the Lehigh Canal in the east and helped to build the Eads Jetty System on the Lower Mississippi River. After helping construct the Northern Pacific, he became the builder of the Railways of Brazil in South America and died of fever in the South American Jungle. General Adna Anderson was the planner and builder of military railroads for the Union government during the Civil War. He built the Northern Pacific main line from Glendive to Spokane and also built the Stampede Tunnel through the Cascade Mountains in Washington. Rosser was a general in the Confederate army and he built the railroad in the Bismarck locality.
If we can supply further data, please call on us.
L. L. Perrin
Advertising Manager
This letter was published in the Summer 1999 issue of the Morrison County Historical Society’s newsletter.
Hi
My name is David Mach and I grew up 4 miles from Denham Minnesota the Soo Line Railroad ran threw the town. I’m trying to fine out if the town was named after a railroad worker?
Hi, David – I looked up Denham on the Minnesota Historical Society’s geographic place names website and found that it was named after a railroad worker, but there are no other details given. Here’s the link:
http://mnplaces.mnhs.org/upham/city.cfm?PlaceNameID=739&BookCodeID=6&County=58&SendingPage=Results.cfm
As Denham is in Pine County, perhaps the Pine County History Museum would have more details. Here’s a link to their website:
http://www.pinecountyhistorymuseum.org/index.html
Hope this leads you in the right direction.
Mary Warner
Museum Manager
Greetings, I am trying to locate the original address or the Darling (Northern Pacific) railroad station in Morrison County. Could you please send me the address of where that was located?
Shannon, The address for the station was Darling Station, Darling, MN. It was located in Township 130 North, Range 30 West, Section 35. Thanks for asking! MCHS Staff
Darling was mostly just a telegraph office like Gregory south of Little Falls
While interviewing my grandmother, Anna Marie Holz, she mentioned that they had lived in a building that had been a store and that before that it had been a depot stop. 1940-1943 was about the time they lived there. Do you have any confirming information regarding what my grandmother said?
Hi, Edie – Could you provide to location of this depot stop? We had several in Morrison County, so that will help us narrow down where to look in our files. I did check the Holz family file but couldn’t find any info for Anna Marie in it.
Thanks for your question!
Mary Warner
Executive Director
Hello MCHS,
Other than Standard Oil and Hennepin Paper Company, what businesses did the Northern Pacific Railway serve in Little Falls, MN, Randall, MN and Cushing, MN?
Hi, Joe – In Little Falls, the NP Railway served Pine Tree Lumber Company’s 2 mills. In fact, they had a railroad spur dedicated to just the west side mill. As for Randall and Cushing, I’d have to do more digging to figure this out, but I do know there was a pickle factory in one of those communities that the railway would have served. And, of course, there was passenger service on the trains for these communities, as well.
Thanks for your question!
Mary Warner
Executive Director
Thank you Mary.
I think there was a Heinz pickle factory in Philbrook, MN
I also noticed there was a wye towards the north end of the current railyard. The line is heading west out of Little Falls towards Flensburg, MN and appears to have been abandoned for several years. Do you knw who had that rail line? Thanks.
Hi, Joe – I don’t know enough about railroad history to say whose line this was for sure, but I wonder if it was part of the Little Falls & Dakota Railroad that ran from Little Falls to Ortonville. Nathan Richardson authored legislation in 1872 to have this railroad line constructed. I haven’t looked at any maps to see which line this might be, but maybe some astute railroad researcher will read your question and know.
Mary