-
January 5: The
Jennings and Northeastern RR discontinues service in Jennings. [IT-4/80/MRC-9/88]
-
January: An international union
of railroad policemen of the Unites States and Canada, under the
name of the Brotherhood of Railroad Patrolmen, has been formed
in Chicago. The Chicago local is No. 1 and its territory covers
the Chicago District. The enrollment is composed of 900 railroad
patrolmen and watchman. [RA-1/1920]
-
March 1: The
USRA returns Michigan railroads to private ownership following the
World War. [MDOT]
-
March: H. K. McHarg, Jr.,
the son of the principal stockholder of the D&M, arrives from
out east to work on the road. Following disagreements with
McHarg, J. D. Hawks resigns his position on May 16th.
McHarg Jr. was appointed Vice President and General Manager.
One of his forst acts was to order the removal of the long
famous turtle trade-mark from cars, locomotives, advertising and
stationary. Hawks sied in September, 1921. [GW}
-
April 5: Detroit voters
approve a $15 million bond issue to build a street railway system,
referred to as the Municipal Operation. [DWSS]
-
April 5: A Pere
Marquette ferry becomes stuck in the ice off Point Sauble, after
leaving Ludingston. Eleven passengers try to walk to
shore. Suddenly the ice flow breaks up, and the winds
carry the piece holding the group out into Lake Michigan.
Hundreds of spectators line the shore and watch as the Coast
Guard, with great difficulty, rescues the group. [MT]
-
April: Railroad strike
worsens economic situation in Detroit; many factories
close due to general downturn. [DWS]
-
May 4: The new Michigan
Central/New York Central bridge over the Rouge River was placed
in service. It is a Strauss single leaf bascule bridge of 125
feet clear span with a square crossing. It provides two tracks
and is designed for Cooper’s E-70 loading with full impact
allowance. It replaced a jointly owned swing bridge which was
erected in 1887. The project was paid for by a 1917
appropriation of Congress in the sum of $490,000 to improve the
Rouge river to permit the use of this stream by large lake
freighters at the Ford Motor Company. Total cost of the project
is $541,000. Channel depth is 21 feet below normal water level.
[RA-9/17/1920]
-
May 19: Pennsylvania
Railroad begins passenger service from Detroit to eastern cities.
[MDOT]
-
May 26: A Michigan Central
locomotive blows up three miles south of Bay City. On
train 202, enroute from Mackinaw City to Detroit, with two
sleepers, two day coaches, mail and baggage cars, the
locomotive's boiler exploded at 6:30 a.m. The train had
two engineers, who were killed. The fireman was badly
injured and hospitalized. The boiler blew clear of the
trucks, turned three somersaults and landed on the right of way
500' from the explosion. The trucks of the engine and
tender remained on the track. The train was stopped by
automatic breaks. While the tracks are being cleared, MC
trains north to Bay City are using the short line from Vasser to
Bay City. [MusC-5/26/20]
-
May: Gala
party opens unusual two-story Pennsylvania freight house in Detroit. [MDOT]
-
June 13: First
Baltimore & Ohio RR passenger train leaves Detroit's Fort Street
Union Depot for Washington. [MDOT]
-
Summer: Work begins on the
Michigan Central, New York Central and Wabash track elevation at
Livernois Avenue, Dix Avenue and Waterman Avenue in Detroit. As
a part of this work, the City of Detroit is to extend Military
Avenue across the right of way of these railways and will
construct a subway at its own expense. [RA-7/23/1920]
-
July 10: Henry
and Edsel Ford purchase the Detroit, Toledo & Ironton RR and
immediately begin modernization of property and rolling stock.
Also noted as July 9th. [MDOT/EMR4]
-
December 31: Michigan
Railroad Mileage Totaled 8,734 miles. [MDOT/STOV]
-
The
Pennsylvania RR begins serving Detroit over its new line from
Carleton, the last main line trackage laid by a major railroad in
Michigan. [MDOT]
-
Port
Huron & Detroit RR takes over the Port Huron Southern.
[IT-4/81]
-
Soo Line builds a new, larger
brick station at Manistique, to replace a wooden structure which
was built around 1887. [MRC-6/1984]
-
A new stone depot is built on the
M&NE in Northport. It is used until the C&O ceased
operations in 1970. [BWC-2/1990
-
Pere Marquette installs new
augomatic block signals between Grand Ledge and Elmdale (26
miles of single track, 34 signals), and between Wyoming and
Grand Rapids (3 miles of double track, 8 signals). They
are of the Union-motor type, using polarized line overlap.
[RA/1-1920]
-
The Pennsylvania Railroad (GR&I)
builds a new red brick depot at Kalkaska. [BOM]
-
Toledo, Ohio is considered to be
the third largest railroad center in the United States, largely
due to the amount of coal traffic handled. [COHS-10/98]
-
Michigan Central constructs a new
brick depot at Constantine, after its other depot was destroyed
by fire. The brick depot lasted until the early 1980's.
[MRC-9/1985]
-
The Pere Marquette builds a new
eight stall round house with a 90 foot turntable in New Buffalo,
MI. [PM45]
-
Pere Marquette builds a new
500-ton capacity coal dock in Saginaw. [PM45]
-
Pere Marquette completes
yard construction in New Buffalo and Plymouth. [PMHS]
-
The E&LS extends its Hendricks
branch to Boney Falls dam. [EDP-12/27/1950]
-
Detroit's population hits
993,678. [BOM]
-
The Fruit Growers Express Company
is formed, owned by the ACL, PRR, B&O, Southern, N&W, NH, C&EI
and others. [SAM]
-
Trial radio communications is
tried on the VGN, NYNH&H, PRR, C&O and others but not adopted at
that time due to technology limitations and government
regulations. [SAM]