The railroad's primary businesses are coal and steel. The coal is delivered to the Michigan City generating station owned by Northern Indiana Public Service Company. The railroad also serves steel mills along the line.
History
The South Shore Line is the last remaining of the once numerous electric interurban trains in the United States. At its formation on November30, 1901, the corporate title was the Chicago & Indiana Air Line Railway (Air Line). The Air Line was controlled by Frank and James Seagrave, brothers from Toledo, Ohio, who had envisioned an electrically operated freight and passenger railroad from Toledo to Chicago, Illinois. The Seagrave brothers had completed their Toledo and Western Railroad mainline across the former Great Black Swamp from Toledo to Pioneer, Ohio, in an area that otherwise had no direct rail service to Toledo. A branch was constructed from Sylvania, Ohio, to Adrian, Michigan.[2] The Seagraves’ anticipated that they would build west to Goshen, Indiana, where they would obtain trackage rights from the Indiana Electric Railroad Company (later the Chicago, South Bend and Northern Indiana; successor company to the first commercial electric trolley line in North America) to South Bend where it would connect with the Air Line for Chicago.[3]
Financing to complete the railroad was announced on January17, 1903.[3] Property acquisition and engineering from South Bend west to the St.Joseph— LaPorte county line was completed within the year.[4][non-primary source needed] The Seagraves’ also obtained franchises for operation in the streets of South Bend, New Carlisle, and Michigan City. The Seagraves’ began streetcar operations on a route between East Chicago and Indiana Harbor in September 1903.[5] Grading for the railroad was begun in St.Joseph County during 1903, but the Rich Man's Panic put an end to the work and apparently the Seagraves’ interest in the company.[6]
The historical significance of the Seagraves’ effort in developing what would become the South Shore Line was that in 1903 there was no business model for a short line regional high-speed electrified railroad handling freight and passengers. Economic historians George Hilton and John Due noted in their history of the interurbans that the Seagraves’ effort was probably the first.[7] But for the Panic of 1903, the Seagraves’ would have likely completed what is recognized today as a regional high-speed electrified railroad from Toledo to Chicago.
The directors of the Air Line voted for a corporate name change on July30, 1904: The Chicago, Lake Shore and South Bend Railway Company.[8] In 1907, with the easing of monetary pressures, property acquisition, engineering, and construction began again under the direction of a new promoter, James B.Hanna.[9] Although the scope of the project was then limited to a rail line from Chicago to South Bend, the business model posited by the Seagraves’ remained.
The first phase of construction from South Bend to Michigan City was completed and in scheduled service on July1, 1908. The remainder of the line from Michigan City to Hammond was in service on September6,[10] only twenty-one days before the first Ford Model T automobile left the Piquette Avenue Plant in Detroit.[relevant?] In December, the company officially rebranded its operation as the South Shore Line.[11]
Not only was the South Shore Lines embroiled in a transportation war with the automobile, but it was also unwittingly embroiled in the war of the Currents waged by Thomas Edison and George Westinghouse. Edison famously clung to his original direct current system, while Westinghouse embraced the alternating current system developed by Nikola Tesla.[12] While alternating current proved to be superior to direct current for municipal power grids, the technology to precisely control the speed of an AC motor was still being developed, while control technology for DC motors was well-established. Some twenty other interurbans adopted the Westinghouse system, most between 1904 and 1908. The alternating current system was not perfected however, and nearly all the lines operating with it were quickly converted to direct current, some in as little as three years. Despite the high expense of maintaining the alternating current system, the South Shore Lines would not find itself in a financial position to convert to direct current until taken over in the 1920s.[13][14] (The line utilized streetcar voltages in Gary, Michigan City, and South Bend.[15])
The South Shore Lines found itself in financial difficulty from the start as passenger revenues were insufficient to cover the railway's bonded indebtedness. This was exacerbated by claims resulting from two head-on wrecks in 1909 that resulted in an unfunded legislative mandate to install a costly block signal system.[16][17][18] Despite these setbacks, service had been extended to Pullman on Chicago's South Side on April4, 1909.[19] An agreement with the Illinois Central Railroad dated May25, 1912, called for non-motorized trail coaches to be attached to trains originating in Gary to be hauled by steam locomotives for the run to Randolph Street near Chicago's Loop via the Kensington and Eastern Railroad.[20]
Attempting to overcome inadequate earnings, the South Shore Lines made every effort to develop freight service in 1916,[21][22] and an excursion business to bring Chicagoans to the Indiana Dunes, the amusement park at Michigan City, and the Casino at Hudson Lake. The most significant of the rail excursions to the development of Northwest Indiana were the regular outings of the Prairie Club of Chicago on the South Shore Lines that began in 1909.[23] The access to the Dunes that the South Shore Lines provided to the Prairie Club led the members to erect cabins in the Dunes. With assistance from Stephen Mather, the first director of the National Park Service, The Prairie Club soon waged a lobbying campaign for the creation of a Sand Dunes National Park that for a time was unsuccessful, but did culminate in the opening of the Indiana Dunes State Park in 1925. Congressional authorization of a National Park Service unit in the Dunes in 1966 resulted in the Indiana Dunes National Lakeshore (now Indiana Dunes National Park).[24]
In 1925, the Cleveland Trust Company still held the original construction bonds of the South Shore Lines in the amount of $9,500,000 ($165 million in 2023 adjusted for inflation).[25] The prior year, Samuel Insull, a utilities developer who had electric and gas utility investments throughout much of the United States, sought a means of developing a new customer base with a balanced electrical load in the Indiana Dunes country.[26] After investigating both the South Shore Lines and the Chicago, South Bend and Northern Indiana, Insull had the South Shore Lines appraised. Based upon the depreciated appraised value of $6,463,076,[27] and with a commitment to invest $2,500,000 in the property, Insull purchased the original construction debt from Cleveland Trust in exchange for 6% noncumulative debentures. Insull controlled a 60% majority stock interest in the new company. The closing of the transaction took place on June29, 1925, six days after Insull reorganized it as the Chicago South Shore and South Bend Railroad, which it remains today. Plans were promptly put in place to remove their 6,600 Volt AC system and replace it with a more conventional 1,500 Volt DC system.[14]
One wooden passenger car has survived from the South Shore Lines. Combination coach-baggage car #73 was built by the Niles Car and Manufacturing Company in 1908. It was wrecked in a crash on June 19, 1909, though was rebuilt for service. #73 is currently undergoing restoration.[32]
^Profile - Chicago, Lake Shore & South Bend Railway – South Bend to Hammond. Chicago, Lake Shore & South Bend Railway.[non-primary source needed] (showing dates of engineering and grading, but the overall date of this antique document is not legible)
^Jay Samuel Hartt, Central Electric Railfan’s Association Address (1962).
^"Contracts and Contracts". Electric Traction Weekly. Vol. 2. 1906. pp. 44, 47. "An Important Road Contemplated for Indiana"(PDF). Street Railway Journal. XXVIII (4): 151. July 28, 1906.
Carlson, Norman (1985). Chicago South Shore & South Bend Railroad: How the Medal Was Won. Central Electric Railfans Association. p. 10. ISBN978-0915348244.
Middleton, William D. (1970). South Shore: The Last Interurban (1st ed.). Golden West Books. ISBN978-0870950032.
Middleton, William D. (1998). "Insull's Super-Interurban". In Cohen, Ronald D.; McShane, Stephen G. (eds.). Moonlight in Duneland: The Illustrated Story of the Chicago South Shore and South Bend Railroad. Indiana University Press. ISBN0-253-33418-7. OCLC38862554.
Walker, James (1925). Cost of Reproduction and Cost of Reproduction Less Accrued Depreciation as of May 1, 1925 Based on Prices Prevailing at Time of Appraisal of the Property of The Chicago, Lake Shore and South Bend Railway Company in Indiana. Cover Letter.