Railroads & Locomotives Twin Cities’ passenger trains through the years

Twin Cities’ passenger trains through the years

By Angela Cotey | June 19, 2014

| Last updated on November 3, 2020


Follow the passenger trains of Minneapolis and St. Paul from the 1940s to today!

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St. Paul Dispatch-Pioneer Press, Minnesota Historical Society Collection
Burlington’s Zephyr‘s gather at St. Paul Union Depot on Sept. 29, 1948.

The Twin Cities are together one of America’s great passenger gateways. There, western roads Great Northern and Northern Pacific met the Midwest Grangers: Chicago, Burlington & Quincy; Chicago & North Western; Chicago Great Western; Milwaukee Road; and Soo Line.

Enjoy this gallery of Twin Cities passenger service, and be sure to check out the August 2014 issue for more on the rebirth of St. Paul Union Depot!

One thought on “Twin Cities’ passenger trains through the years

  1. As you read through old Official Guides and timetables, I find one tidbit very interesting. There were two passenger stations in Minneapolis: The MILW, Soo Line, and Rock Island used the Milwaukee Station; the rest of the railroads used the Great Northern Station. Well, except for the NP. It had such an inferiority complex with regard to the GN it couldn;t stand to admit it used the Great Northern station in its largest online city, so instead it used the misnomer :"Hennepin Avenue Station." (The Great Northern station's address was 2 Hennepin Avenue)

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