-
Depression continues.
-
Labor violence comes with a
strike which begins in Martinsburg, West Virginia, and spreads after many railroads lower wages 10%.
Railroads nationwide are shut down for a week, until federal
troops restore order after firing on striker and killing
several.
[STOV][SAM]
-
January 1: Chicago
and Northeastern Railroad opens line from Lansing to Flint.
[MRRC]
-
January 28: The
Lake George & Muskegon River Railroad, Michigan's first logging
road, begins operation in Clare County. [MT]
-
May: The
Michigan Railway Guide was established as a monthly
publication by Emil Schober. [HWC]
-
June 9: The
Escanaba Tribune reports that a new water tank has been built at
Powers (also known as Station 42) for use on all C&NW lines
serving that station. [ATDC]
-
June 16: The Menonimee
Range railroad reaches Quinnesec from Powers. [ATDC]
-
July 17: Great
Strike begins when Baltimore & Ohio Railroad workers walk off
the job; sets off series of sympathy strikes and work
stoppages; national crisis. The strike was over by August
5. [DWS/LS]
-
July 23: About 40 Michigan
Central yard men went on strike following a 10% wage reduction.
Fellow-workers left their jobs the next day. The MC
stopped receiving freight but there was no strike by trainmen.
MC workers in Jackson went on strike as well. It is not
clear whether trains actually stopped running. MC
officials met with workers at Windsor and agreed to a compromise
which increased wages. [AAD]
-
July 26: First telephone
conversation in State of Michigan takes place between the office
and a shed in the Detroit freight yard of the Michigan Central
Railroad. [IT-5/81]
-
August 17: The first train
reaches the Breen Mine, near Iron Mountain, on the Menominee
Range RR (C&NW). [ATDC]
October 1: Toledo & South
Haven opens 3' gauge line from Paw Paw to Lawrence. [MRRC]
October: The DL&N depot at
Portland burns, to the delight of some residents who wanted a
new depot built on the east side of the river. Every man,
woman and child carried pails of water in an attempt to
extinguish the blaze and save adjacent buildings. The
telegraph operator attempted to signal Ionia or Lansing for aid,
but the smoke drove her out and the operation had to be
abandoned. The building was insured for $100. A new
depot was completed on January 22, 1878. [I&L]
-
-
Rail
line (eventually the Ann Arbor RR) completed to Cadillac. [MDOT]
-
C&NW opens branch line from
Powers to Vulcan and Quinnesec. [MSL/AAD]
-
In 1877 the Chicago &
North Eastern Railroad reached Durand from the west. [MHM]
-
Russel Alger company builds 3-4
mile long tramway northwesterly from Harrisville. [MRRC]
-
The Michigan Air Line is built
from Port Huron to Romeo. It was slowly extended, reaching
Jackson in 1883. [AAD]
-
The Chicago and Northeastern
Railroad completes a 48 mile line between Flint and Lansing.
[AAD]
-
The Toledo and South Haven, a
narrow gauge line is completed from Paw Paw westward some 9
miles to the town of Lawrence. It is 3' gauge. [AAD]
-
Vanderbilt
interests propose a Detroit River tunnel from Grosse Isle to Canada,
but work is never begun - 1877 - [MDOT]
-
George
S. Sheffield of Three Rivers invests a three-wheel, hand-pumped
"track velocipede" for use by track inspectors; his
company ultimately produced thousands for worldwide use. [MDOT]
-
Paw
Paw RR is converted from standard gauge to 3 ft. gauge after
being merged with the Toledo & South Haven.
-
Toledo
& South Haven begin the experimental use of specially-built
3-foot gauge cars with trucks which could be used to carry
standard gauge cars without removing their standard gauge
trucks. This experiment lasted until 1881. [PMHS]
-
Commodore Vanderbilt passes away.
Son William Henry Vanderbilt expands and solidifies control of
his railroad empire. [MRRC]
-
As of 1877, the Lake Shore &
Michigan Southern continue to use a track gauge of 4' 10".
Adoption of standard gauge was slowed by the Great Strike (see
July 17th, above). [LS]
-
The Great Railroad Strike of 1877
begins.
-
Vanderbilt interests acquire
control of the Michigan Central. James Joy resigns as
President. [AAD]
-
Michigan Central Railroad builds
depot at Indian River. Depot exists as of 1974.
[IT-12/1974]
-
The present day town of
Wequetonsing was founded as a Presbyterian resort by the people
of Allegan. It is on the the GR&I between Petosky and
Harbor Springs along the lake shore. [BOM]
-
First telephones are
installed in Detroit. [DWS]
-
First use of telephones in U.S.
for railroad communications. [STOV]
-
Ephraim Shay, a Cadillac-area
lumberman, invents a novel solution to the problems that
traditional rod-driven locomotives encounter when trying to
negotiate steep grades and tight curves. He built an
experimental locomotive that served as the prototype for the
legendary Shay gear driven steam locomotive. It was more
powerful and less likely to spin its wheels on steep grades.
[MH=11/1993]