Ann Arbor Railroad main line

Ann Arbor Railroad main line
Two locomotives, one yellow and one blue, leading hoppers on a single track
A Great Lakes Central Railroad freight train north of Alma in 2009
Overview
Owner
LocaleMichigan and Ohio
History
OpenedJune 21, 1878 (1878-06-21)
Technical
Line length292.2 mi (470.3 km)
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
Route map

mi
291.8
Car ferry dock
290.7
Elberta
292.2
Frankfort
290.3
282.8
Beulah
276.6
Welden
270.4
Thompsonville
267.6
Copemish
261.6
Harlan
254.1
Mesick
249.1
Yuma
237.7
Boon
235.3
Millersville
228.0
227.1
Cadillac
227.0
220.4
Lucas
216.4
McBain
208.6
Marion
200.7
Temple
194.2
Lake George
183.7
Farwell
178.8
Clare
170.5
Rosebush
163.8
Mount Pleasant
156.2
Shepherd
149.8
Forest Hill
146.3
12.6
Original route (1887–1897)
12.3
Alma
145.9
145.4
Alma
9.8
St. Louis
9.0
St. Louis Branch (1884–1897)
138.3
Ithaca
0.9
Ithaca
137.0
0.0
Original route (1887–1897)
133.7
North Star
128.3
Ashley
123.8
Bannister
120.3
Elsie
115.7
Carland
107.9
State ownership
HEBR ownership
107.8
107.1
Owosso
HEBR ownership
Parallel ex-Grand Trunk
104.0
Corunna
103.5
Kerby mine
98.7
Vernon
95.5
Durand Union Station
93.9
Parallel ex-Grand Trunk
State ownership
88.9
Byron
84.5
Cohoctah
80.2
Oak Grove
73.9
Howell
72.0
66.9
Chilson
62.2
Hamburg Junction
61.8
Lakeland
61.7
59.4
Hamburg
56.9
Whitmore Lake
54.5
56.9
Original route
52.2
Leland
Original route
State ownership
AA ownership
46.2
45.2
Ann Arbor
40.4
Pittsfield
36.5
Urania
30.9
Milan
26.8
Azalia
22.8
Dundee
20.5
18.6
Federman
16.7
Lulu
11.5
Samaria
9.3
Temperance
5.7
to Temperance Yard
0.0
Toledo (Cherry Street)

The main line of Ann Arbor Railroad is a partially-abandoned railway line in the states of Michigan and Ohio. It was constructed between 1874 and 1897 by the Ann Arbor Railroad and its predecessors, and constituted that company's main line. At its fullest extent it ran 292 miles (470 km) from Toledo, Ohio, on Lake Erie, to Frankfort, Michigan, on Lake Michigan. A train ferry service operated across Lake Michigan to Wisconsin. The original Ann Arbor Railroad went bankrupt in 1976, and ownership of the line is now split between the state of Michigan and two short-line railroads: the Ann Arbor Railroad (founded in 1988) and the Huron and Eastern Railway. The northern end of the line is now near Yuma, Michigan.