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Open: Things to do... Jane
Addams Trail Photo Gallery This trail is part
of Winner of the 2003 Coalition of Recreational Trails Award for construction and design. Photo
Gallery of the |
Trail History Railroads On August 25, 1853, the Galena & Chicago Union Railroad later
to become the Chicago & North Western Railroad entered Freeport.
This company was financed by local sales of stock along its route. John
Addams (father of Jane Addams) and D.A. Knowlton were instrumental in
making sure that enough stock was subscribed to bring the line into Freeport.
The road was to continue to Galena; however, in 1851 the Illinois legislature
enacted a bill providing for construction of the Illinois Central Railroad.
An agreement was entered into under which the Galena and Chicago road
would terminate in Freeport, and the Illinois Central would build the
line westward to Galena. The Galena & Chicago line terminated in Freeport
and never went further west. As long as the Galena & Chicago Road
and the Illinois Central ran, they exchanged business in Freeport and
used the same station. The station was located on the river bank south
of Stephenson Street. The present station house was built in 1890. |
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For more information contact: Freeport/Stephenson
County Convention |
In June, 1854, the Illinois Central Railroad
line was completed from Freeport to Galena. In 1856, the Illinois Central
Railroad line from Freeport to Dixon, LaSalle, Cairo and St. Louis was completed
and eventually continued south to New Orleans.
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From 1886 to 1888 the Illinois Central continued to expand its lines, and by purchasing the Freeport Malleable Iron Works property and buildings, the I.C. was able to expand its shops and yards. These buildings were located southeast of the ticket station. The yard and shop remained in this location until removed in the 1960s. In 1887, the Illinois Central ran a line north from Freeport to Madison,
Wisconsin. The line ran through Scioto Mills and Red Oak. At Red Oak the
Illinois Central built a junction station where the line branched. The
northern branch, running through Buena Vista and Orangeville, became known
as the Madison branch of the Illinois Central Railroad. This branch is
what now constitutes the Jane Addams Trail. The route closely followed Richland Creek, which has its headwaters just
south of Monroe, Wisconsin. The route was chosen for three reasons. First,
building a rail line on level ground made good economic sense. Second,
the route is a fairly straight north-south path between Monroe and Freeport.
And third, the railway was developed to make a profit from transporting
passengers and freight so building the line to connect the municipalities
along the way was a sound economic decision. By 1888 there were three major railroads, with freight houses, shops, yards and station houses, competing in Freeport. The rate wars that occurred in these years resulted in the Illinois Central Railroad building its own line directly from Freeport to Chicago. The Illinois Central now competed directly with the Chicago North Western for the Rockford and Chicago traffic with a shorter and faster line. Illinois Central was one of the largest employers in Freeport, employing 500 men in the shops to repair and build cars and service locomotives. During peak operations there could be as many as 1,200 people on its local payroll. In September, 1859, the Racine & Mississippi Railroad later
to become the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railroad entered
Freeport. This line ran from Racine to Beloit, and then through Durand,
Davis, Rock City and Dakota before entering Freeport. Their final stop
was Savanna. Their station and shops were located east of the river on
the north side of Stephenson Street between Commercial and North Henderson
avenues. This line, with its shops and 24-hour stall roundhouse, helped
make Freeport a railroad center in the 1860s. These shops were moved to
Savanna in 1891. |
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By 1890 most villages in Stephenson County had two or three passenger trains a day in each direction, but by the 1940s most of the locals had been taken off. In the following two decades each road, one by one, ran its last passenger train. |
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The Illinois Central started service reduction with the Dodgeville and
Madison branch passenger trains; in 1939 ended service south to LaSalle
and Clinton on the old charter line, and finally in 1967 discontinued
its prestige train, the Land O Corn. The first non-steam power purchased by the Illinois Central were several
gas powered motor cars for passenger service. The Illinois Central assigned
number 111 and 112 to a pair of gas powered motor cars built by McKeen
Motor Car Company. The first motor car purchased by the Illinois Central
was car 111. It was built in September, 1907, with a length of 55 ft.
and seating for 57 passengers. As built, motor car 111 was painted a dark
green and lettered as Union Pacific 12. At the time McKeen Motor Car Company
was a subsidiary of the Union Pacific. In addition to McKeen Motor Car
Company, the Union Pacific also owned a large block of Illinois Central
stock which most likely played a big part in the Illinois Central purchasing
the car. In January, 1908, Union Pacific 14 was assigned to passenger
service on the branch line between Freeport, Illinois, and Madison, Wisconsin.
This McKeen car was purchased officially in November of that year and
relettered for the Illinois Central as 111. Motor car 111, during the
years it ran between Freeport and Madison, was given the nickname of Maude.
Sometime around World War 1, car 111 was retired. |
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The Irish The Italians African Americans |
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