Terminal Railroad Association of St. Louis explained

Railroad Name:Terminal Railroad Association of St. Louis
Marks:TRRA
Locale:Illinois and Missouri
Start Year:1889
End Year:present
Hq City:St. Louis

The Terminal Railroad Association of St. Louis is a Class III switching and terminal railroad that handles traffic in the St. Louis metropolitan area. It is co-owned by five of the six Class I railroads that reach the city.[1]

Present operation

The Terminal Railroad Association is owned by[2] BNSF Railway, Canadian National Railway (Illinois Central Railroad until 1999), CSX Transportation, Norfolk Southern Railway, and Union Pacific Railroad. All own one-seventh of the railroad except UP, which owns three-sevenths.

The Terminal Railroad also connects with the Canadian Pacific Kansas City.

The TRRA owns and operates the MacArthur and Merchants bridges, the two Mississippi River railroad crossings in the St. Louis metropolitan area. In 2022, the TRRA completed a $222 million rebuild of the 1889 Merchants Bridge.[3] In the same year, the TRRA began a $57.3 million renovation of the MacArthur Bridge that includes replacing the 1912 main span girders and rebuilding the Broadway truss in downtown St. Louis.[4]

The Association also owns and operates Madison Yard, the largest classification yard in the St. Louis region. The switching yard consists of 80 inbound, outbound, and holding tracks with a capacity of 2,200 cars.[5] The company is planning to expand Madison Yard to hold another 1,500 railcars, for a yard total of 4,000.[6]

The railroad operates 30 locomotives to move cars around the yard, deliver cars to local industries, and ready trains for departure.

History

Wiggins Ferry Company

See also: Wiggins Ferry Company. The railroad's predecessor companies in St. Louis date to 1797, when the town was still part of Spanish Upper Louisiana. James Piggott was granted a license to operate a ferry between St. Louis and Illinoistown (now East St. Louis, Illinois). In 1819, Piggott's heirs sold the ferry to Samuel Wiggins, who operated the service with eight horses until a steam-powered ferry took over in 1828.

In 1832, Wiggins sold the Wiggins Ferry Service and 800acres of land in East St. Louis, including Bloody Island, to new owners, who began developing a rail yard on the Illinois property. In 1870, the ferry began porting rail cars across the river one car at a time until the 1874 completion of the Eads Bridge.

When the Terminal Railroad was incorporated in 1889, railroads owned most of the Wiggins Ferry property. In 1902 when the Rock Island Line joined the Terminal Railroad, the ownership of the Wiggins Illinois property was complete.

Terminal Railroad Association

The formation of the Terminal Railroad Association of St. Louis grew out of an agreement orchestrated by Jay Gould in 1889 between predecessor entities of the Terminal Railroad Association of St. Louis and six proprietary railroads. Those original railroads were:

The Association built Union Station, opening it in 1894. The station would close in 1978 when Amtrak moved to a temporary facility several hundred yards to the east.

In its early years, the Association was at odds with the St. Louis Merchants Exchange. The Exchange built the Eads Bridge but lost control to the Terminal Railroad. The Exchange then built the Merchants Bridge to keep the Terminal Railroad from having a monopoly. The Exchange then lost control of that bridge also to the Terminal Railroad.

The railroad's practice of charging a tariff to coal trains crossing the Mississippi River persuaded several industries to set up shop in Illinois rather than Missouri. The steelmaking town of Granite City, Illinois, was founded in 1896 to avoid the tariffs.[7]

In 1989, the TRRA traded the Eads Bridge to the City of St. Louis in exchange for the MacArthur Bridge.

Lines

The TRRA operates the following lines:

Awards and recognition

For four years beginning in 2001, TRRA received the Gold E. H. Harriman Award for safety in the Switching and Terminal railroad class.[9] In 2015, 2017, and 2021 the TRRA was awarded American Short Line and Regional Railroad Association's Presidential Award for safety (most man hours of injury free operation). In 2020 the TRRA received the American Short Line and Regional Railroad Association's Veteran Engagement Award.[10]

Short Line Railroad of the Year

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Frequently Asked Questions . 2022-11-01 . www.terminalrailroad.com.
  2. Web site: TRRA Owner Lines . 2022-11-01 . www.terminalrailroad.com.
  3. Web site: 2022-09-15 . Merchants Bridge reopens after four-year $222M project . 2022-11-01 . FOX 2 . en-US.
  4. Web site: Hibbard . Matthew . 2019-06-12 . TRRA Awarded $28.8 Million for MacArthur Bridge Rehabilitation . 2022-11-01 . St. Louis Regional Freightway . en-US.
  5. Web site: TRRA History . 2022-11-01 . www.terminalrailroad.com.
  6. Web site: Priority Infrastructure Projects . 2022-11-01 . St. Louis Regional Freightway . en-US.
  7. https://books.google.com/books?id=eVVWdDcWkkwC&dq=Frederick+and+William+Niedringhaus+granite&pg=PA105 Made in USA: East St. Louis by Andrew J. Theising - Virginia Publishing (June 2003)
  8. This line passes through a tunnel between the Gateway Arch and the river.
  9. Web site: Association of American Railroads (reprinted by Norfolk Southern Railway) . 2006-05-16 . Railroads Set Another Employee Safety Record in 2005 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20070213232521/http://www.nscorp.com/nscorp/application;JSESSIONID_nscorp=E0D2wDZLZ8t844Gn6WZDlSVqmCEM2UEJtEicpNZ1tBcpy4wFlISk!-1862265230?origin=content.jsp&event=bea.portal.framework.internal.refresh&pageid=NS+News&contentId=english%2Fnscorp%2Fnews%2Fwhats_new%2Fwhats_new%2Fnews051606.html . February 13, 2007 . 2006-05-24.
  10. Web site: Veterans Award .