Source: The Mining Journal Marquette, Mi. December rales 1886 The South Shore Road The Duluth News gives this interesting history of the project to connect Duluth with Sault Ste. Marie by a railroad running along the south shore of Lake Superior, in its issue of Monday last. Being written by a Duluth editor, and from a Duluth standpoint, it, as a matter of course, gives all the credit for the conception of the enterprise and its development to the point which it has now reach- ed to Duluth parties, but it deals truthfully enough with the im- portance of the road, which is destined to handle an immense traffic, from the day it is open for business: In 1879 W. W. Spaulding was president and We Van Brunt secretary of the Duluth chamber of commerce. In those early days they were interested in several new railway schemes for Duluth, and in relation to The DSS&A the following facts were then laid before the Montreal chamber of commerce by these gentlemen, substantially as follows: The route proposed and advocated by St. Paul and Minneapolis passes through a wilderness and where not an acre of land grant to aid in the construction. The distance is 425 miles by an air line, but in reality it would be much greater in order to avoid the lakes and difficult portions of the upper peninsula of Mi. The other route, or what is called the South Shore line from Dul- uth to Sault Ste. Marie, has a land grant almost its entire length with part of the road already completed and running and other points under contract. The -distance from Sault Ste. Marie to Marquette is 144 miles, most of which is covered by a land grant to the Marquette & Mackinaw railroad, twenty miles of which, east from Marquette, is under construction, and the whole contract to be finished by 1881. From Marquette to L'Anse is sixty miles, already completed, and pass- ing through the richest iron district on the continent, giving it an immense local traffic. From L'Anse to Ontonagon river, forty-two miles is covered by a land grant to the Marquette & Ontonagon railroad, the line passing through forests of pine and hard woods, within easy reach of the most extensive and valuable copper mines already known. The output of the iron mines exceeds one million tons per annum, which will be largely increased as railroad facilities are added, and the value of the copper produced reaches nearly ten millions of dollars per year. The business of the mines alone would support the whole thro line, while the prapo: line from St. Paul would pass so far south be unavailable for their use. From Ontonagon to the Montreal river, sixty miles, the li pass along the south side of the copper range, not only accoi the mines, but favorably located for the lumbering interest. vast pine country tributary to the three great branches of the Onto- nagon river. From Montreal river to Duluth, eighty miles, is covered by to the NP, through a country rich in undeveloped minerals and f lands. ne distance from Duluth to the Sault was stated to ve 386. A map th nd that it formed an al- he Sault. was subi Bete enous proposed a2u ’ to oce O3N VWelssH Wah = WeKd Wasa yass@* *woT}oNA1s -u02 Jepun MOU ST pue Joel © ST Peo Sf} ST }[Nser ey4 pue ‘4no0 pe =yI0M pue dn yoo) puowmey *usay ieyy ‘yintng YBnosygi apes, Sactuuty ay} 2uUTsuraqe 03 META © 44TH psy4om Buteq usu Svapt Sstyy St 47. Au4ny “nq pus Jotuedng exe] Jo eicys yynos ey *‘staey "sig 4[Tneg 9uy eTA sem 9semyyt0u aif} UL SpTSatTy aTtytagy qsea sayy 0} [eSrqQUO_ ye 137,em -O8pt} Worl S]MoI [TeI-[Le sTatssod jsequ0ys sy} 1ey Oe ey. sem O41 [Teerjuey FO UCT4IMe41e Bui peTTeo Aey. YqoTYM quted uTew ou4 yng *SSMU1IOU UETPEUeO PUR UBOTIemy leets ey] jo sortewmmoD ey] pueMuOD NOM 3T SUT enp UT EUR pue ‘emo eRe Teunjeu agi Sem 4T 184 DaWTeTo SBM jt pue ‘etTodesuutp pue [med °49 [Oo eptTsyne eyes eToum 9yq go qieduss ayy pey uNTNg 14y} 41OBy ayi 04 PeT[ eo osTe sem UOTQUaI4y 9991 ‘IL *08q - peOoYy sfoug yynog oy, 2 "d