Northern Pacific Railway Company

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Information for Authority record
Name (Latin)
Northern Pacific Railway Company
Other forms of name
N.P. (Northern Pacific)
NP (Northern Pacific Railway Company)
Northern Pacific
Northern Pacific Railway Co
Start period
1896
End period
1970
MARC
MARC
Other Identifiers
VIAF: 150718211
Wikidata: Q1135434
Library of congress: n 80081555
HAI10: 000457212
Sources of Information
  • NUCMC data from U. of Wash. Lib. for Nordlund, C. Charles and Enid Nordlund Collection, 1880-1950(Everett and Monte Cristo Railway)
  • Gross, J. Railroads of NA, 1977(Everett and Monte Cristo Railway became Monte Cristo Railway in 1900; later merged into Northern Pacific Railway Company)
  • Northern Pacific Railway Co. papers. Part I, 1864-1922, c1984-
  • NP color guide to freight and passenger equipment, c1995:t.p. (Northern Pacific; NP)
  • Moody's analyses of railroad investments, 1909:p. 428 (Northern Pacific Railway Company; successor in 1896 of old Northern Pacific Railroad Company)
  • Park Genealogical Books web site, 2 June 2004:Research Notes/Minnesota by rail (Northern Pacific, Fergus & Black Hills R.R. Co.; began 1881, ended 1899; absorbed by Northern Pacific Railway Company)
  • NUCMC data from University of Montana, K. Ross Toole Archives for Northern Pacific Railway Company records, 1870-1968(Camp Creek Railway Company; inc. 1911; built from Manhattan to Anceny, Mont.; opened its line in 1912; sold to Northern Pacific in 1914)
  • NUCMC data from University of Montana, K. Ross Toole Archives for Northern Pacific Railway Company records, 1870-1968(Clearwater Short Line Railway Company; inc. 1898; sold to Northern Pacific in 1914; main lines were from Riparia, Wash., to Grangeville, Stites, and Headquarters, Idaho)
  • NUCMC data from University of Montana, K. Ross Toole Archives for Northern Pacific Railway Company records, 1870-1968(Coeur d'Alene Railway and Navigation Company; inc. 1886; leased to Northern Pacific in 1888; main line ran from Cataldo, Idaho, to the Montana state line near Mullan; sold in foreclosure to Northern Pacific in 1897)
  • NUCMC data from University of Montana, K. Ross Toole Archives for Northern Pacific Railway Company records, 1870-1968(Connell Northern Railway Company; inc. 1909; operated between Connell and Adco, Wash., between 1910 and 1914; sold to Northern Pacific in 1914)
  • NUCMC data from University of Montana, K. Ross Toole Archives for Northern Pacific Railway Company records, 1870-1968(Gaylord and Ruby Valley Railway Company; inc. 1897; sold to Northern Pacific in 1899; started a line from Renovo to Twin Bridges, Mont.; construction completed by Northern Pacific)
  • NUCMC data from University of Montana, K. Ross Toole Archives for Northern Pacific Railway Company records, 1870-1968(Green River and Northern Railroad Company; inc. 1890 and sold to Northern Pacific in 1898; branch line that joined the Northern Pacific system at Palmer Junction in western Washington)
  • NUCMC data from University of Montana, K. Ross Toole Archives for Northern Pacific Railway Company records, 1870-1968(Missouri River Railway Company; inc. 1906 in N.D.; built track from Glendive to Sidney, Mont., and from Cannon Ball to Stanton, N.D.; sold to Northern Pacific in 1914)
  • NUCMC data from University of Montana, K. Ross Toole Archives for Northern Pacific Railway Company records, 1870-1968(Puget Sound Shore Railroad; inc. 1882; operated a line between Stuck Junction and Seattle; sold to Northern Pacific and Puget Sound Shore Railroad Company in 1889; that company sold to Northern Pacific Railway Company in 1898)
  • NUCMC data from University of Montana, K. Ross Toole Archives for Northern Pacific Railway Company records, 1870-1968(Shields River Valley Railway Company; inc. 1908; built a line from Mission to Wilsall, Mont.; sold to and merged into Northern Pacific in 1914)
  • NUCMC data from University of Montana, K. Ross Toole Archives for Northern Pacific Railway Company records, 1870-1968(St. Paul and Duluth Railroad Company; inc. 1877; sold to Northern Pacific in 1900)
  • NUCMC data from University of Montana, K. Ross Toole Archives for Northern Pacific Railway Company records, 1870-1968(St. Paul and Northern Pacific Railroad Company; sold to Northern Pacific in 1896)
  • NUCMC data from University of Montana, K. Ross Toole Archives for Northern Pacific Railway Company records, 1870-1968(Washington and Columbia River Railway Company; inc. 1892; main line ran from Pendleton, Or., to Dayton, Wash.; operated from 1892 to 1907 when it was sold to Northern Pacific)
  • NUCMC data from University of Montana, K. Ross Toole Archives for Northern Pacific Railway Company records, 1870-1968(Western Dakota Railway Company; formed 1906; sold to Northern Pacific in 1914)
  • NUCMC data from University of Montana, K. Ross Toole Archives for Northern Pacific Railway Company records, 1870-1968(Yakima and Pacific Coast Railroad Company; formed 1890; operated line from Chehalis to South Bend, Wash.; sold in 1892 to United Railroads of Washington which was in turn sold to Northern Pacific in 1898)
  • NUCMC data from University of Montana, K. Ross Toole Archives for Northern Pacific Railway Company records, 1870-1968(Seattle, Lake Shore and Eastern Railway Company; inc. 1885; two main lines ran from Seattle to Sumas on the Washington-B.C. border and from Spokane Falls to Davenport, Wash.; sold in foreclosure in 1896--the eastern portion to the Spokane and Seattle Railway Company, the western portion to the Seattle and International Railway Company; these were in turn sold to the Northern Pacific in 1900 and 1901)
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Wikipedia description:

The Northern Pacific Railway (reporting mark NP) was an important American transcontinental railroad that operated across the northern tier of the Western United States, from Minnesota to the Pacific Northwest between 1864 and 1970. It was approved and chartered by the 38th Congress of the United States in the national / federal capital of Washington, D.C., during the last years of the American Civil War (1861–1865), and received nearly 40 million acres (62,000 sq mi; 160,000 km2) of adjacent land grants, which it used to raise additional money in Europe (especially in President Henry Villard's home country of the new German Empire), for construction funding. Construction began in 1870, and the main line had opened all the way from the Great Lakes to the Pacific Ocean, just south of the United States-Canada border, when Ulysses S. Grant drove in the final "golden spike" completing the line in western Montana Territory, on September 8, 1883. The railroad had about 6,800 miles (10,900 km) of track and served a large area, including extensive trackage in the western Federal territories and later states of Idaho, Minnesota, Montana, North Dakota, Oregon, Washington, and Wisconsin. In addition, the N.P. had an international branch, Northern Pacific and Manitoba Railway (formed 1888), running north to Winnipeg, capital of the province of Manitoba, in the newly organized Canada. The main activities were shipping wheat and other farm products, cattle, timber, and minerals; bringing in consumer goods, transporting passengers; and selling land. This joint venture ended in 1899 and remaining Canadian trackage and Winnipeg East Yard acquired by the Canadian Northern Railway in 1901. The Northern Pacific was headquartered in Minnesota, first in Brainerd, then in the state capital of Saint Paul. It had a tumultuous financial history; the N.P. merged with other lines over a century later in 1970 to form the modern Burlington Northern Railroad, which in turn merged with the famous Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway to become the renamed BNSF Railway in 1996, operating in the western U.S.

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