Corporate The Detroit, Lansing and Lake Michigan (DL&LM) was incorporated on April 11, 1871, as a consolidation of the
Detroit, Howell and Lansing Railroad and the
Ionia and Lansing Railroad. In 1872, the
Ionia, Stanton and Northern Rail Road was added. By 1876 the railroad was obliged to pay more than $6 million in mortgages at 8%, much of it owed to men sitting on the Board of Directors, and had an operating deficit of more than $1.8 million, much of it representing unpaid interest. DL&LM's lenders foreclosed in April 1876. George O. Shauttuck and J. Lewis Stackpole of Boston--acting as trustees for the lenders--purchased the railroad for $60,000 at a mortgage sale in Detroit on December 14, 1876. A new corporation was organized on December 27, 1876 under the name Detroit, Lansing and Northern Railroad, with most of its stock going to the lenders in exchange for their forgiving the DL&LM's debts. The only Michigan resident among the eleven directors named to the first board was
James Joy, formerly president of the BL&LM. Declared business objectives of the DL&N were: • to extend the mainline to Pentwater, on Lake Michigan • to extend the Stanton line to join the
Flint and Pere Marquette Railroad at Chippewa • to pay a 7% annual dividend on its preferred stock. In 1882, the principal officers were Alpheus Hardy, president; Thomas Fish, general superintendent; and J.J. McVean, engineer. The DL&N had over 1000 employees in Michigan, but none of its 438 stockholders or eleven directors were Michigan residents. Though profitable, the railroad had taken on debts equivalent to $15,897 for every mile of track over which it operated. The railroad withstood the
Panic of 1893, and as late as 1895 was still profitable, with an expense-to-earnings ratio of 81.78. The principal mortgage of $2.67 million at 7% was payable in 1907. Total debt per mile owned and operated (221.57) had climbed to $19,158. President of the railroad as 1896 began was Nathaniel Thayer, the general superintendent was J.K.V. Agnew, and chief engineer was J.J. McVean. The DL&N went into receivership on April 1, 1896, and was reorganized as the Detroit, Grand Rapids and Western Railroad on January 1, 1897. The DGR&W also consolidated the
Grand Rapids, Lansing & Detroit,
Saginaw Valley & St. Louis,
Saginaw & Grand Rapids, and the
Saginaw & Western. On December 7, 1899, it became part of the new
Pere Marquette Railway.
Operational At its inception in December 1876, the DL&N inherited of track, more than of wooden bridges and trestles, 26 locomotives, and more than 750 railcars of all types. In 1876, its predecessor had carried more than 250,000 passengers and of freight. The tracks over which they ran had become operational as follows: Main Line () • Detroit to Lansing, August 1871 • Lansing to Ionia, December 1869 • Ionia to Greenville, September 1870 • Greenville to Howard City, August 1871 Branch Line () • Ionia to Stanton, February 1873 At Howard City, the main line connected to the
Grand Rapids and Indiana Railroad (GR&I). The DL&N extended the Stanton branch to
McBride in 1877 and the next year to
Blanchard. In July 1880 the branch was completed to
Big Rapids, Michigan, where the DL&N made a second connection to the GR&I. In 1882, the DL&N acquired a lease in perpetuity to the assets of the
Saginaw & Western Railroad, which had gone into receivership under the name
Chicago, Saginaw and Canada Railroad. By this time, DL&N trains were logging more than a year over of track, carrying more than 635,000 passengers and of freight. The railroad reported (operating miles) in 1886, with the most significant addition being the Saginaw & Western's branch from Howard City to
Alma, which provided an interchange with the
Toledo, Ann Arbor and North Michigan Railroad. The freight traffic was overwhelmingly (62%) lumber and forest products, as the logging off of Michigan's
old-growth forest continued to accelerate thanks to mechanization. A conversion to
automatic couplers, mandated by an 1885 state law, was underway, and
Westinghouse air brakes had appeared. In August, 1888, two new rail segments built by the
Grand Rapids, Lansing and Detroit Railroad and immediately leased by the DL&N went into service. The first was a line from Grand Ledge to Grand Rapids. The second was the
Ramona Branch, a short extension from Oakdale Park Station to
Reeds Lake, later
East Grand Rapids, Michigan to serve the resorts there.{{cite book |last1= Baxter |first1= Albert |author-link1= Albert Baxter |title= History of the city of Grand Rapids, Michigan : with an appendix--History of Lowell, Michigan |type= Google Books |access-date= 24 October 2009 |year= 1974 |orig-year= 1891 |publisher= Grand Rapids Historical Society |location= Grand Rapids, Michigan |oclc= 2841595 |page= 522 |chapter= CHAPTER XLV: NAVIGATION |chapter-url= https://books.google.com/books?id=DWN5AAAAMAAJ&q=%22grand+rapids+and+reeds+lake+street+railway%22&pg=PA162 In the railroad's last full year of operation, it carried nearly 643,000 passengers, with the average trip . Freight traffic had fallen to , with 36% of it lumber and forest products, and another 13% coal. == Timetable ==