Misplaced Pages

Detroit, Howell and Lansing Railroad

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Not to be confused with the Detroit, Howell and Lansing Railway.

The Detroit, Howell and Lansing Railroad is a defunct railroad which operated in central and southeast Michigan during the early 1870s. The company formed on March 29, 1870 through the consolidation of the Detroit and Howell and the Howell and Lansing. From the two companies the DH&L gained a partially graded right-of-way 84 miles (135 km) long, with track laid on perhaps half of it, stretching from Lansing southeast to Detroit.

On March 16, 1871 the company consolidated with the Ionia and Lansing to form the Detroit, Lansing & Lake Michigan. The company had existed as an independent entity for less than a year.

Notes

  1. ^ Meints (1992), 64.
  2. Michigan Legislature (1871), 31-32.

References

Constituent companies of the Detroit, Lansing and Northern Railroad
1871
1872
1897
Categories: