The
Detroit, Toledo and Ironton Railroad was a
railroad that operated between its namesake cities of
Detroit, Michigan and
Ironton, Ohio via
Toledo between 1905 and 1983.
Early history
The Detroit, Toledo and Ironton
Railway was organized in 1905 through the merger of the
Detroit and Lima Northern Railway and the
Ohio Southern Railway. The line went
bankrupt in 1908, but remained solvent until it was purchased by
Henry Ford in 1920. Ford recognized the strategic importance of the line to his
automobile business as the line left
Dearborn, Michigan and connected with all of the major east-west rail lines in the
Midwest. This gave Ford direct control over shipments of raw
materials and finished
goods to and from his
factories in Dearborn. The line thrived and saw numerous improvements under Ford's management. However, Ford sold the line in 1929 to the
Pennsylvania Railroad after becoming disgusted with interference from the
Interstate Commerce Commission.
The Pennsylvania years
The line operated as an independent subsidiary of the
Pennsylvania Railroad from 1929 until 1970. In 1955, the line replaced its
steam locomotives with
diesel locomotives. It did however, have a short-lived operation using heavy-electric boxcab locomotives. The catenary masts of which survived for decades after de-electrification, as it was deemed too expensive to demolish them. The DT&I relied exclusively on diesel locomotives built by
General Motors Electro-Motive Division. The new diesel locomotives were painted bright orange throughout this period, though the specific design and placement of the railroad's logo varied with time.
The later years
In 1968, the DT&I's parent company, the Pennsylvania Railroad, merged with its longtime rival, the New York Central Railroad, to become the Penn Central, which declared bankruptcy two years later and sold off the DT&I to private investors. In 1980, the DT&I was acquired by the Grand Trunk Western Railroad (GTW). Under the GTW, the DT&I locomotives were painted in the red and blue livery of the GTW, but retained the DT&I logo. In December 1983, the DT&I was completely assimilated into the GTW and the track south of Washington Court House, Ohio was abandoned. In 1997, much of the remaining trackage of the DT&I was sold to Railtex who operates it under their Indiana and Ohio Railway division.
Cities and towns along the Detroit, Toledo and Ironton
The following is a list of the major cities and towns along the DT&I
- Detroit, Michigan
- Dearborn, Michigan
- Allen Park, Michigan
- Flat Rock, Michigan
- Toledo, Ohio
- Lima, Ohio
- Springfield, Ohio
- Washington Court House, Ohio
- Waverly, Ohio
- Ironton, Ohio
Also, DT&I trains served Cincinnati, Ohio over trackage owned by the Pennsylvania Railroad.
External links