• January 10, 1986: The Soo Line, nine days after purchasing the
Milwaukee Road, creates the
Lake States Transportation Division to operate its mainline between
Forest Park, Illinois and
Minneapolis, Minnesota. • April 3, 1987: The
Soo Line Railroad announces the sale of its
Lake States Transportation Division to private investors, forming the new Wisconsin Central Transportation Corporation • October 11, 1987: The first WC train runs, from
Stevens Point to
North Fond du Lac, Wisconsin • May 1991: WC shares begin trading under the ticker symbol WCTC, raising $36.2 million • 1992:
Railway Age names Wisconsin Central the
Regional Railroad of the Year • 1993: WC acquires the
Fox River Valley Railroad and
Green Bay & Western railroads • 1993: A Wisconsin Central-led consortium acquires
New Zealand Rail through a new subsidiary, Wisconsin Central International, and renames it
Tranz Rail in 1995 • 1995: WC acquires the
Algoma Central Railway through a new subsidiary, Wisconsin Central Canada Holdings • 1995: A WC-led consortium acquires
Rail Express Systems in the United Kingdom from the
British Railways Board • 1996: WC partners with
Canadian National (CN) and
CSX, inaugurating a new intermodal shipping corridor between the west and east coasts of
North America • 1996: The
Loadhaul,
Mainline Freight and
Transrail Freight freight operators in the UK are purchased from the British Railways Board and merged as
English Welsh & Scottish (EWS) • March 4, 1996: A Wisconsin Central freight train derails in
Weyauwega, Wisconsin; the
derailment results in a 16-day evacuation • August 19, 1996:
Metra, a commuter railroad agency based in
Chicago, inaugurates its North Central Service route on the WC's
Waukesha Subdivision. • 1997: EWS acquires
Railfreight Distribution in the UK from the British Railways Board and merges it into EWS • 1997: Another WC subsidiary, the
Sault Ste. Marie Bridge Company, acquires of track from
Union Pacific Railroad forming a WC connection between
Green Bay, Wisconsin, and
Ishpeming, Michigan • 1997:
Australian Transport Network (ATN), in which Wisconsin Central owned a one-third stake, purchased
Tasrail in
Tasmania, six months later ATN acquired the
Emu Bay Railway in Tasmania • 1999:
Railway Age names Wisconsin Central president
Edward Burkhardt its
Railroader of the Year • January 30, 2001: Wisconsin Central and
Canadian National announce plans for CN to purchase the former for
$800 million and the assumption of $400 million of WC's debt, it is completed on October 9, 2001 • June 28, 2007:
Deutsche Bahn announced it had agreed with CN/WC to purchase EWS, subject to receiving regulatory approval, in exchange for £309 million. At the time of the acquisition, EWS had a market share of around 70% in the United Kingdom rail freight sector and had around 5,000 employees. After the transaction was approved by the
European Commissioner for Competition, the transaction was completed on 13 November 2007. • December 21, 2011:
Duluth, Winnipeg & Pacific Railway and
Duluth, Missabe & Iron Range Railway, also owned by CN, are merged into Wisconsin Central • January 1, 2013:
Elgin, Joliet and Eastern Railway is merged into Wisconsin Central Ltd indirectly as parent company CN made the acquisition ==References==