FOXY WIS-57 Bridge


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Name FOXY WIS-57 Bridge
Chicago & North Western Railway Bridge #U-103 1/2
Built By Chicago & North Western Railway
Currently Owned By Fox Valley & Lake Superior Rail System
Superstructure Contractor American Bridge Company of New York
Substructure Contractor Grieling Brothers of Green Bay, Wisconsin (East Abutment and Piers)
Adolph Green Construction Company of Green Bay, Wisconsin (West Abutment)
Length 190 Feet Total, 80 Foot Largest Span
Width 1 Track
Height Above Ground 20 Feet (Estimated)
Superstructure Design Through Plate Girder and Deck Plate Girder
Substructure Design Stone Masonry and Concrete
Date Built 1906, West Approach Added 1915
Traffic Count 1 Train/Day (Estimated)
Current Status In Use
Chicago & North Western Railway Bridge Number U-103 1/2
Fox Valley & Lake Superior Rail System Bridge Number U-103 1/2
Significance Local Significance
Documentation Date 9/27/2014

In 1872, the Milwaukee, Manitowoc and Green Bay Railroad (MM&GB) constructed 49 miles of new railroad, extending from Lake Shore Junction on the north side of Milwaukee, Wisconsin to Sheboygan, Wisconsin.  The MM&GB changed its name to the Milwaukee, Lake Shore and Western Railroad (MLS&W) after completion of the line.  The following year, the MLS&W resumed construction, completing an additional 32 miles to Two Rivers, Wisconsin, via Manitowoc, Wisconsin.  The MLS&W was reorganized as the Milwaukee, Lake Shore and Western Railway (MLS&W) in 1885, which again was reorganized with the same name in 1883.  The MLS&W had constructed a handful of lines in northeast Wisconsin during the late 19th Century, primarily to connect Lake Michigan and Lake Superior.  This line initially provided the MLS&W with a connection to the Chicago & North Western Railway (C&NW) at Milwaukee, which allowed the MLS&W to access Chicago. Due to the success of the MLS&W, the railroad was purchased by the Chicago & North Western Railway in 1893.  The C&NW had acquired and constructed a vast network of railroad lines throughout the Midwest during the late 19th Century, and the MLS&W system provided more opportunities for expansion.  

During the early 20th Century, the C&NW sought to improve operations by constructing new lines and improving existing lines.  The C&NW had become one of the premiere Midwest railroads, and sought to stay profitable and competitive.  The Manitowoc, Green Bay and North Western Railway (MGB&NW) was incorporated as a subsidiary of the C&NW in 1904 to construct a new connection between Manitowoc and Green Bay.  A 36 mile line was completed between the two cities in 1906, and the MGB&NW was sold to the C&NW in 1909.  Also in 1906, a bypass around the west side of Sheboygan was constructed to avoid the congested lakefront line.  These new lines provided the C&NW with a faster route between Chicago and Green Bay, serving Milwaukee and bypassing the industrial areas along Lake Winnebago.  As traffic on the route grew in the 20th Century, the Village of Whitefish Bay became concerned with the growing amount of trains through the Village.  In response, the C&NW constructed a short 4 mile cutoff between the north side of Whitefish Bay and Wiscona, a railroad junction on the north side of Milwaukee in 1929.  The portion of the line between Lake Shore Junction and Whitefish Bay would be removed immediately after completion of the cutoff.  Throughout the 20th Century, this line remained a core mainline for the C&NW, and was known as the Shoreline Subdivision.

By the late 20th Century, the C&NW sought to consolidate operations and abandon or sell unprofitable lines.  In 1988, the C&NW sold the Cleveland, Wisconsin to Green Bay segment and the Two Rivers Branch to the Fox River Valley Railroad, which became the Fox Valley and Western Ltd. (FV&W) in 1993.  The FV&W was a subsidiary of the successful Wisconsin Central Ltd. (WC), which had acquired a large amount of former Milwaukee Road and Soo Line trackage in Wisconsin.  The C&NW was purchased by Union Pacific Railroad (UP) in 1995. In 1996, the segment between Denmark, Wisconsin and Rockwood, Wisconsin was abandoned and acquired for future trail use.  In 2001, WC was purchased by Canadian National Railway (CN), and became the American subsidiary of the railroad. The Two Rivers Branch was abandoned in the 1990s or early 2000s.  Much of the original line through Sheboygan was abandoned in approximately 2005, and CN abandoned the line between Manitowoc and Cleveland in 2013.  In 2021, the Green Bay to Denmark segment was sold to the Fox Valley & Lake Superior Rail System (FOXY).  Today, UP operates the Shoreline Subdivision between Wiscona and Cleveland; and CN operates the Shoreline Subdivision between Manitowoc and Rockwood.  FOXY continues to operate the Denmark Branch between Green Bay and Denmark.  The Rockwood to Denmark segment is known as the Devils River State Trail, and much of the original line through Sheboygan has been reused as a trail.  Much of the UP segment between Sheboygan and Cleveland is out of service, and its future uncertain.


Located in Green Bay, this through and deck plate girder bridge carries the former Chicago & North Western Railway mainline over Riverside Drive (Wisconsin Highway 57) and the Fox River Trail (former Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul & Pacific Railroad). When the C&NW decided to construct a new cutoff between Manitowoc and Green Bay, a large bridge across the Fox River and adjacent Milwaukee Road mainline would be required. It was decided to use one structure to cross both the Fox River and the Milwaukee Road. Construction on the bridge began in May 1905, and was completed in October 1906 after a significant delay due to sinking piers on the Fox River portion of the bridge. Initially, the bridge consisted of two through plate girder spans set onto stone substructures, crossing a roadway and the Milwaukee Road; followed by a lengthy timber pile trestle before reaching the Fox River bridge. The C&NW often used this method to allow approach embankments to settle without damaging permanent bridges. In 1915, it was decided to fill the timber trestle and separate this bridge from the structure across the Fox River. At this time, a new west abutment was constructed and a single deck plate girder span installed, giving the bridge its present configuration. Currently, the bridge consists of a 75-foot through plate girder span, an 80-foot span of the same design and a 35-foot deck plate girder span. The east abutment and both piers are constructed of stone, while the west abutment is constructed of concrete. The through plate girder spans use a standard design, with heavy girders, square girder ends and a traditionally composed floor. This floor system uses four steel stringers and plate girder floorbeams spaced throughout the spans. The deck plate girder approach uses a typical design for shallow girders, with four girders arranged into two sets of two. The piers use a standard rectangular design; the east abutment uses stepped wing walls which extend at an angle from the bridge and the west abutment uses a U-shaped design. American Bridge Company fabricated the through plate girder spans at their Ambridge, Pennsylvania Plant; and the deck plate girder span at the Lassig Plant in Chicago. Local contractor Grieling Brothers constructed the east abutment and piers; and additional local contractor Adolph Green Construction Company constructed the west abutment. Through and deck plate girder spans were often used by railroads, as they were durable and easy to construct. Since the 1915 reconstruction, the bridge has seen no significant alterations, and remains in use. The former Milwaukee Road tracks were abandoned in the late 1980s or early 1990s, and are now used as part of the Fox River Trail. Overall, the bridge appears to be in fair to good condition, with no significant deterioration noted. The author has ranked this bridge as being locally significant, due to the common design.


Citations

Build dates and builder (superstructure) Chicago & North Western Railway Valuation Notes at the Chicago & North Western Historical Society Archives
Builder (east abutment and piers) The Chronicle (Two Rivers, Wisconsin); October 23, 1906
Builder (west abutment) Green Bay Press-Gazette; May 26, 1915
Railroad History Citation ICC Valuation Information, Compiled by Richard S. Steele

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