Grand Rapids, Kalkaska and Southeastern Railroad

Pere Marquette-Kalkaska Branch

Legend
Petoskey Division
0.0 Rapid City
Petoskey Division
1.8 Clearwater
3.4 Ricker
5.5 Rugg
6.9 Leiphardt
9.1 Mahan
Mahan Branch
4.1 Lewis Branch
4.8 Soules
11.1 Kalkaska for GR&I
15.6 Sauders
18 Eastman
18.4 Spencer
19.5 M&NE
22.3 Sands
23.2 Sharon
27.0 Naples
Naples Branch
2.7
29.0 Halsted
30.0 Dempsey
30.8 Butcher
Kalkaska/Missaukee county border
32.8 Stratford
32.9

The Grand Rapids, Kalkaska and Southeastern Railroad is a defunct railroad which operated in Northern Michigan toward the end of the 19th century. The company was founded on August 30, 1897 by William Alden Smith, a Republican politician and former general counsel of both the Chicago and West Michigan Railway and the Detroit, Lansing and Northern Railroad. The GRK&S constructed a 40.73-mile (65.55 km) line from northern Missaukee County through Kalkaska (crossing the Grand Rapids & Indiana) to Rapid City, where it met the C&WM's main line. The C&WM undertook to supply rolling stock and oversee construction in exchange for a 10-year lease of the line.[1]

The C&WM's lease of the GRK&S was continued by the Pere Marquette Railway following the consolidation of 1899. In 1903, however, the PM bought the capital stock of the GRK&S.[2] The line does not appear to have been particularly profitable; it mainly transported lumber, the quantity of which declined over the next decade. In 1915 a Pere Marquette official lamented the poor state of the line:

It is bad. There are 14 miles of the track from Eastman Junction to the end at Stratford that is so bad that we operate it under caution and I am about to ask the railroad commission for the authority to take it up. There is no business on the branch to warrant our continuing in operation and we are now going up there twice a week to bring out what little business there is.[3]

Abandonment followed swiftly. In 1916 the Pere Marquette cut the line back to Spencer, eliminating the 14 miles (23 km) which had so concerned it. In 1918 it pulled back to Kalkaska, another 7 miles (11 km). Finally, in 1921, it abandoned the stretch between Kalkaska and Rapid City, removing the last vestige of the Grand Rapids, Kalkaska and Southeastern.

Notes

  1. The only reported end point is Stratford, which does not appear on modern maps. Given the length of the line, and sources concerning the abandoned grade and line crossings, the most likely location is Norwich. See Ivey (1919), 246; Livingstone (1900), 361-362; Interstate Commerce Commission (1917), 35-37; and "County Map: Kalkaska County - 40". Michiganrailroads.com. Retrieved 2008-01-08.
  2. Michigan Tax Commission (1903), 59; Interstate Commerce Commission (1917), 37; Meints (1992), 185. See however Michigan Railroad Commission (1906), 27, which discusses a possible grade crossing east of Rapid City of the GRK&S, and not the Pere Marquette.
  3. Interstate Commerce Commission (1917), 37.

References

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