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Name MTRA 43rd Street Bridge
Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railroad Bridge #42
Built By Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway
Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Railway
Currently Owned By Regional Transportation Authority (Metra)
Superstructure Contractor Chicago Bridge & Iron Works of Chicago, Illinois (Rock Island Tracks)
King Bridge Company of Cleveland, Ohio (LS&MS Tracks)
Length 70 Feet Total
Width 15 Tracks, 3 In Use (Formerly 19 Tracks)
Height Above Ground 12 Feet 2 Inches
Superstructure Design Through Plate Girder and Steel Stringer
Substructure Design Stone Masonry and Steel Bent
Date Built 1897
Date Replaced 2004 (Tracks #5-7)
2022 (Tracks #1-4)
Traffic Count 80 Trains/Day (Estimated)
Current Status In Use
Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railroad Bridge Number 42
Significance Local Significance
Documentation Date 12/16/2018

In 1852, the Chicago and Rock Island Rail Road Company (C&RI) constructed 40 miles of new railroad, extending from Chicago, Illinois to Joliet, Illinois.  The following year, the railroad constructed an additional 119 miles of new railroad to Geneseo, followed by an additional 22 miles to Rock Island, Illinois in 1854.  Work was continued in 1856 by the Mississippi and Missouri Rail Road Company (M&M), which constructed a bridge across the Mississippi River to Davenport, Iowa and continued the line westwards across Iowa. In 1866, the two railroads were consolidated into the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railroad, which was renamed the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway (Rock Island) in 1880.  The line between Chicago and Joliet was double tracked prior to 1874, due to the heavy use.  The Rock Island constructed and acquired a large network of railroads, primarily in Iowa during the late 1880s.  This line served as a principal mainline for the railroad, connecting Chicago to the network of railroad lines west of the Mississippi River. 

In approximately 1892, the remainder of the line would be double tracked, and in the late 1890s, additional tracks were added in Chicago.  Track elevation projects within Chicago were made throughout the late 1890s and early 1900s. Throughout the 20th Century, the line continued to be a critical component of the Rock Island system.  In 1913, the Rock Island elevated the line through Joliet.  The Rock Island was a poor railroad, facing financial trouble regularly and often in bankruptcy.  This route hosted passenger trains known as "Rockets" for many years, and the Rock Island offered a suburban commuter service over the line.  After World War II, the Rock Island struggled to survive, proposing mergers and deferring maintenance on their routes.  By 1964, the Rock Island began attempts to merge with Union Pacific, and restructure railroads west of the Mississippi River.  This merger was eventually denied, and Rock Island turned its last profit in 1965. 

In the mid-1970s, the railroad was in serious decline.  The railroad received loans to attempt to fix slow orders, received new equipment and turn a profit.  By 1978, the railroad came close to profit, but creditors were lobbying for a complete shutdown of the Rock Island.  During the fall of 1979, a strike crippled the railroad, and by January of 1980, the entire system was ordered to be shut down and liquidated.  Many of the lines and equipment were scrapped.  Profitable sections of railroad were prepared for sale.  Between Joliet and Chicago, the line would be sold to the Regional Transportation Authority.  From Joliet to Utica, the line would be sold to the Chessie System, which became part of CSX Transportation in 1986.  The portion from Utica into Iowa would be sold to the Iowa Interstate Railroad (IAIS).  Today, the Chicago to Joliet segment is operated by Metra as the Rock Island District; CSX operates the line between Joliet and Utica as the New Rock Subdivision; and IAIS operates the Rock Island to Utica section as the Blue Island Subdivision.


Located near the Dan Ryan Expressway, this through girder bridge carries the former Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway/Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Railway (LS&MS) across 43rd Street. In the late 19th Century, the numerous grade crossings throughout the City of Chicago posed a serious hazard to the general public. Overpasses, which carried roads over the railroads, were expensive and detrimental to the surrounding properties. By the 1890s, the railroads began to work with the city to elevate segments of track through the city, placing subways at street crossings. An ordinance was passed on July 9, 1894 requiring the elevation of the parallel tracks of the Rock Island and LS&MS between 18th Street and south of 63st Street. Work began that year, and was completed in 1897. The segment between 37th and 47th Streets was the last segment constructed. Typical of early track elevation projects in Chicago, the retaining walls are constructed of stone.

The bridge at 43rd Street consisted of a wide through plate girder bridge, set onto stone abutments. The structure was initially constructed for 21 tracks, although the western two tracks were removed in the 1940s or 1950s. Tracks 1 and 8 through 15 used a single 70-foot through plate girder span. Tracks 2 through 7 and 15 through 19 utilized a three span structure, consisting of a 40-foot through plate girder span, and two 15-foot steel stringer spans. It is unknown what size spans were used on the original western tracks. The piers for the three span tracks consist of steel bents, which are constructed of built up columns and laced bracings. The eastern face and original western face of the bridge run at heavy skews, to account for the yard lead tracks. The girders use a typical design for the era, including a ballast deck and rounded ends. The Rock Island spans were reportedly built by the Chicago Bridge & Iron Works; while the the LS&MS spans were constructed by the King Bridge Company. Since the initial construction, this bridge has seen a number of alterations. Tracks #5 through 7 were replaced by a new through girder span in 2004, and tracks #1-4 were replaced by a new concrete span in 2022. Overall, the bridge appears to be in fair to poor condition, with significant deterioration noted to the superstructure. The author has ranked this bridge as being locally significant, due to the common design.


Citations

Builder and build date (LS&MS Spans) The Iron Age; April 22nd, 1897
Builder and build date (Rock Island Spans) American Engineer and Railroad Journal; Volume 71
Railroad History Citation ICC Valuation Information, Compiled by Richard S. Steele

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