UP County CX Bridge


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Name UP County CX Bridge
Chicago & North Western Railway Bridge #2656 1/2
Built By Chicago & North Western Railway
Currently Owned By Union Pacific Railroad
Superstructure Contractor Lakeside Bridge & Steel Company of North Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Substructure Contractor Unknown
Length 55 Feet Total
Width 1 Track
Height Above Ground 15 Feet (Estimated)
Superstructure Design Deck Plate Girder
Substructure Design Concrete
Date Built 1932
Traffic Count 5 Trains/Day (Estimated)
Current Status In Use
Chicago & North Western Railway Bridge Number 2656 1/2
Union Pacific Railroad Bridge Number 225.05
Significance Local Significance
Documentation Date 7/15/2023

In 1884, the Princeton & Western Railway (P&W) constructed a 13 mile branch from the existing Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis & Omaha Railway (Omaha Road) at Wyeville, Wisconsin to Necedah, Wisconsin.  The railroad soon came under lease of the Chicago & North Western Railway (C&NW).  During the early 20th Century, the C&NW began a program of improvements, constructing new cutoffs and significantly increasingly efficiency over the system, particularly in Wisconsin and northern Illinois.  In 1910, the Milwaukee, Sparta & North Western Railway (MS&NW), a subsidiary of the C&NW, began construction a new cutoff across central Wisconsin.  In 1912, the MS&NW completed 23 miles between Sparta, Wisconsin and Wyeville, Wisconsin; as well as 133 miles between Necedah and Wiscona, a railroad junction on the north side of Milwaukee.  The P&W was sold to the MS&NW in 1912, which was promptly consolidated into the C&NW.  This line provided a better connection for the C&NW through Wisconsin, and avoided the steep grades of the previous mainline from Sparta to Madison.  The line also improved the C&NW connection to the Twin Cities of Minneapolis and St. Paul by way of the C&NW controlled Omaha Road.  The line between Butler, Wisconsin and Clyman Junction, Wisconsin would be double tracked; while the remainder between Clyman Junction and Wyeville was built wide enough for a second track, but no second track was installed.

By the 1920s, the C&NW was operating an expansive railroad network throughout the Midwest, radiating north and west from Chicago.  This line served as one of the principal mainlines of the railroad, connecting Milwaukee to the Twin Cities.  In 1959, much of the second track between Butler and Clyman Junction was removed as operations over the line no longer warranted a second track.  The line remained largely unchanged until March 1973, when a tunnel collapsed at Tunnel City, Wisconsin.  This led to the line being abandoned west of Tunnel City, and a new connection track being constructed to the Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul & Pacific Railroad (Milwaukee Road) mainline, which the C&NW would use to reach Winona, Minnesota.  In 1995, the C&NW was purchased by the Union Pacific Railroad, the current owner of this line.  Today, UP operates the Wyeville Subdivision between Wyeville and Adams, Wisconsin; the Adams Subdivision between Adams and Wiscona; and the Winona Subdivision between Wyeville and Tunnel City.  The segment between Tunnel City and Sparta remains abandoned, although much of the infrastructure remains intact.


Located southwest of Packwaukee, this deck plate girder bridge carries the former Chicago & North Western Railway mainline over County Road CX (former US Highway 51). In the late 1920s and early 1930s, the Wisconsin State Highway Commission began working with various railroad companies to construct grade separations at busy grade crossings. One of the priority projects was constructing a grade separation between the heavily used C&NW mainline near Packwaukee and US Highway 51, which was becoming one of the main north-south roadways through Wisconsin. Funding was originally authorized for the "Buffalo Subway" in the late 1920s, but contracts were not awarded until mid-1931. Construction on the bridge was started at the end of 1931, and completed in July 1932. The bridge consists of a 55-foot skewed deck plate girder span, set onto concrete abutments. The girder uses a typical design for the era, with large girders and a ballast deck composed of a steel ballast channel. While the bridge was never double tracked, the abutments on the north side of the bridge were constructed so that a second track could easily be added. Lakeside Bridge & Steel Company fabricated the superstructure, while an unknown contractor constructed the abutments. In the mid-1980s, US Highway 51 was realigned as part of a project to construct Interstate 39, located immediately east of this bridge, and the roadway underneath was turned over to Marquette County. Since the initial construction, the bridge has seen no major alterations, and continues to serve railroad traffic. Overall, the bridge appears to be in good condition, with no major defects noted. The author has ranked this bridge as being locally significant, due to the common design.


Citations

Build date National Bridge Inventory (NBI)
Builder (superstructure) Lakeside Bridge & Steel Company plaque
Railroad History Citation ICC Valuation Information, Compiled by Richard S. Steele

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