05/14/2025
The public was in a receptive mood for the Chicago-New York Air Line Railroad.
Alexander C. Miller headed the new company. More than six feet tall, he was heavily built, wore a black felt hat, and smoked fat ci**rs. He was suave and genial in manner - just the kind of front man the promoters needed to inspire confidence. He had a good railroad background, too. As a boy he'd gone braking on the Lake Shore linè, later becoming a telegraph operator on other roads, and then a train dispatcher, and still later chief dispatcher on the Burlington at Aurora, III.
On September 1, 1906, a crowd congregated three miles south of La Porte, Ind., for the official groundbreaking ceremony. Mr. Miller did the honors with a silver spade. People cheered; a brass band played. Then a gang of laborers started to dig in earnest.
The new railroad was beginning to shape up. But slowly. Red tape, winter, and frozen ground delayed the progress. Not until May 1, 1907, did we complete the first stretch of track - a three-mile spur from the groundbreaking scene on the main line to the city of La Porte. The stockholders grinned with joy. Prosperity seemed so very near.
Special trains loaded with stockholders and prospective investors ran from Chicago almost daily. All persons who came along to inspect the new railroad were given free lunches - the only dividend they received from their investment. Meanwhile, a monthly publication known as Air Line News was launched under the editorship of Charles P. Burton to keep up popular enthusiasm with news items, photographs, and maps.
Each step in the progress of building this remarkable railroad was dramatized and triumphantly reported. Stockholders proudly showed the magazine to their friends. The fever spread, money poured in, and the construction work pushed merrily on. Those stockholders were dancing on the edge of a precipice but they didn't know, until it was too late to pull out.
Perhaps the most colorful character in the whole Air Line melodrama was Colonel U. P. Hord. With a broad-brimmed hat, a tight waisted coat, an Ascot tie, and an impeccable white vest spanned by a massive gold watch chain, the Colonel cut an aristocratic figure. His was the task of acquiring for the railroad as much right-of-way as possible for as little cash as necessary. This called for diplomacy.
Probably no right-of-way agent ever undertook a more difficult task, for in the usual process of laying out a railroad, alternate routes are traced on the map and each property-holder is cleverly led into low-bidding against his neighbor in the effort to induce the railroad to select the line through his property. The result is that the railroad benefits from the downward sliding property prices. But not so with the Air Line venture. This was a road with a definitely pre-established course, advertised to be built in a straight line.
But Colonel Hord's affable and winning personality, his convincing oratory and his affluent glow, impressed the owners of farmland to such an extent that many of them surrendered options on their property in exchange for Air Line stock.
At the time of the groundbreaking, the stock was selling for about $40 a share, with a "real value" of $100, which the Air Line guaranteed would be paid to any stockholder who wanted his money as soon as the line reached Gary, Ind. In another two months it sold at $51.
BY THE FALL of 1907 our equipment consisted of 60 mule teams purchased in St. Louis for $22,000 (later sold for $11,000), 42 wheelers, three locomotives with flatcars and self-dumping dirt cars, a Vulcan 24-yard shovel, a steam grader, a warehouse with $10,000 worth of supplies, a powerhouse, a three-car barn complete, and two $11,000 electric passenger cars, built at Niles, Ohio, to carry stockholders over the line free.
The passenger cars, delivered in May, 1907, were big, smart-looking, green, interurban types built to order by the Niles Car Works. They were 50-foot combination baggage-passenger coaches, with steam-type roofs, sturdy wooden pilots, and windows grouped in pairs with stained-glass arches above. Each was equipped with four 75-hp. Westinghouse motors and control equipment, air brakes, and trolley
poles. "These cars are suitable for local service over the first 100-mile division," President Miller announced.
(Blake Mapledoram, Chief Engineer)