In 1862, the state legislature reorganized the bankrupt railroad as the St. Paul and Pacific Railroad. That same year, of track between St. Paul and
St. Anthony finally opened. Only of track had been laid as of 1865. In December 1870, the
Northern Pacific Railway purchased the SP&P. (a
Montreal banker and executive with the
Hudson's Bay Company), and
George Stephen (Smith's cousin and a wealthy railroad executive) to invest $5.5 million (equivalent to $ million in ) in purchasing the railroad. On March 13, 1878, the Dutch formally signed an agreement transferring their bonds to the investors group and giving them control of the railroad. To finance construction of the SP&P, the road issued bonds that allowed the bearer to receive up to $10,000 per mile of track completed (), but only if the line was finished. In February 1879, the group bought out the Litchfields with cash and bonds in the new company. The SP&P showed a $500,000 profit for 1878 (), and in March 1879 two different courts finally approved the company's emergence from bankruptcy. ==Demise and future ownership==