1939 (Photo by
Jack Delano) As early as the 1870s, the Milwaukee Road, as it later became, operated a northwest connection from
Chicago to
Elgin. It passed through rural
Bensenville. The first major freight station with an engine shed was built here by 1916, which was continuously expanded in the following years and made a significant contribution to the development of Bensenville. In addition, the
Douglas Aircraft Company (later
McDonnell Douglas) constructed an
airfield and assembly plant north of the Bensenville Yard during the
Second World War, which was subsequently developed into
Chicago O'Hare International Airport. Due to the strong increase in freight traffic during and after World War II, the Milwaukee Road expanded the Bensenville Yard into one of the world's largest
marshaling yards with a total of 70
directional tracks by 1953. Covering an area of over 130
hectares, including the
entry and exit group, it had around 200 km of track with a total capacity of almost 9,000 freight wagons. In 1958, the Milwaukee Road began piggyback transport of
semi-trailers, which meant that the manual reloading of goods could be avoided. A loading station for
flat wagons was built on the east side of Bensenville Yard for this purpose, covering an area of almost 19 hectares by the late 1960s. This type of handling in
intermodal freight transport was later increasingly replaced by the emergence of
ISO containers and the site was developed into a
container terminal. In 1986, the
SOO Line Railroad took over the Milwaukee Road, which in turn was purchased by the
Canadian Pacific Railway in 1990. The Bensenville Yard was rebuilt and modernized in the late 1990s. It is now Canadian Pacific's largest freight and marshaling yard in the USA with over 220,000 containers handled at the CP Rail Chicago Intermodal Terminal in 2016. == Current system ==