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Name CPKC Soo Avenue Bridge
Minneapolis, St. Paul & Sault Ste. Marie Railway Bridge #77
Built By Minneapolis, St. Paul & Sault Ste. Marie Railroad
Currently Owned By Canadian Pacific Kansas City Limited
Superstructure Contractor Unknown
Length 30 Feet Total
Width 4 Tracks (2 In Use)
Height Above Ground 12 Feet 2 Inches
Superstructure Design Deck plate girder (west tracks)
Steel stringer (east tracks)
Substructure Design Stone Masonry
Date Built 1894, east tracks replaced 1980
Traffic Count 20 Trains/Day (Estimated)
Current Status In Use
Minneapolis, St. Paul & Sault Ste. Marie Railway Bridge Number 77
Significance Local Significance
Documentation Date 3/26/2014

In 1886, the Minneapolis and Pacific Railway (M&P) began construction on a new 216-mile railroad extending from Minneapolis, Minnesota to Lidgerwood, North Dakota, completing it the same year.  The following year, 70 additional miles would be constructed to Boynton.  The M&P was consolidated into the Minneapolis, St. Paul & Sault Ste. Marie Railway (Soo Line) in 1888.  The Soo Line continued construction on the route in 1891, completing 81 miles from Hankinson, North Dakota to Valley City, North Dakota.  An additional 80 miles to Cathay were completed in 1892, and an additional 183 miles to the Canadian Border and Canadian Pacific Railway connection at Portal, North Dakota was completed in 1893.  The route was constructed primarily to serve as a connection for wheat from Canada and North Dakota to reach the mills at Minneapolis, and became a backbone for the Soo Line.  The Soo Line was a smaller railroad in the Midwest, with routes extending through Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan and North Dakota, with subsidiary routes extending to Chicago.  It was operated as a subsidiary of Canadian Pacific Railway (CP).  By 1937, the Soo Line had entered bankruptcy, and it would be reorganized as the Minneapolis, St. Paul & Sault Ste. Marie Railroad in 1944.

By 1961, the Soo Line would be merged with other CP subsidiaries Duluth, South Shore & Atlantic Railroad and Wisconsin Central Railroad to form Soo Line Railroad, a company controlled by CP.  In 1984, the Soo Line would be reorganized as the Soo Line Corporation, and the railroad would be fully merged into CP in 1990.  In 1990, the line between Hankinson and Moffit, North Dakota was sold to the Dakota, Missouri Valley and Western Railroad (DMVW).  In 2023, CP would merge with Kansas City Southern Railway to form CPKC, which currently operates the Paynesville Subdivision between Minneapolis and Glenwood; the Elbow Lake Subdivision between Glenwood and Enderlin, North Dakota; the Carrington Subdivision between Enderlin and Harvey, North Dakota; and the Portal Subdivision between Harvey and Portal.  The DMVW continues to operate the Dakota Subdivision over the Hankinson to Mottit segment.  The CPKC segment of this line is expected to grow in significance after the CPKC merger was finalized. 


Located near 42nd Avenue and I-94, this small deck plate girder bridge crosses Soo Avenue. Originally built in 1894, the bridge first consisted of four tracks of 30-foot deck plate girder, set onto stone abutments. In 1980, the eastern tracks were replaced with steel stringer spans. In addition, the western tracks feature a twinned design, where additional girder lines are added to the span for strength. It is unknown if this strengthening occurred in 1980 using girders of the east track spans, or if the girders were reused from elsewhere. This type of bridge was commonly used along railroads in the United States, due to the durability. Twinning girder spans was a common technique used to strengthen light spans and lengthen the life of the spans. Overall, the bridge appears to be in fair to good condition, with no significant deterioration noted. The author has ranked the bridge as being locally significant, due to the common design.


Citations

Build Date National Bridge Inventory (NBI)
Railroad History Citation ICC Valuation Information, Compiled by Richard S. Steele

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