CMSP&P Turkey Creek Trestle
USA /
Idaho /
Mullan /
World
/ USA
/ Idaho
/ Mullan
World / United States / Idaho
railway, abandoned / shut down, rail-trail, interesting place, railway bridge
The Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad abandoned this line in 1980.
cs.trains.com//forums/560629/ShowPost.aspx
Turkey Creek Trestle is 494 feet long and 146 feet high.
This portion of the Olympian Hiawatha route has been called one of the most breathtaking scenic stretches of railroad in the country. The "crown jewel" of rail-to-trail mountain bicycle trails is operated by Lookout Pass Ski Area which is located adjacent to I-90 at the Idaho/Montana state line, 12 miles east of historic Wallace, Idaho.
Winding through 10 tunnels and 7 high trestles, this 15-mile route crosses the rugged Bitterroot Mountains between Idaho and Montana. The Route of the Hiawatha is best known for the long, dark St. Paul Pass, or Taft Tunnel, which burrows for 1.66 miles under the Idaho/Montana state line.
With an incredible history beginning in 1906 of construction, hardships and calamities, unprecedented electrification, and of carrying passengers and freight from the Northwest to the Midwest, generations of railroaders kept the Milwaukee Road running until it finally went bankrupt in 1977. The last train west of Butte, Montana passed through in 1980. After that the line was abandoned.
With government funding and private donations, the rails were removed, and the construction of this spectacular wilderness bicycle and hiking trail was undertaken in 1997. The Idaho portion of the trail first opened for public use on May 29, 1998. The St. Paul Pass, or Taft Tunnel, was completed in May of 2001, and is now open for bike riding
cs.trains.com//forums/560629/ShowPost.aspx
Turkey Creek Trestle is 494 feet long and 146 feet high.
This portion of the Olympian Hiawatha route has been called one of the most breathtaking scenic stretches of railroad in the country. The "crown jewel" of rail-to-trail mountain bicycle trails is operated by Lookout Pass Ski Area which is located adjacent to I-90 at the Idaho/Montana state line, 12 miles east of historic Wallace, Idaho.
Winding through 10 tunnels and 7 high trestles, this 15-mile route crosses the rugged Bitterroot Mountains between Idaho and Montana. The Route of the Hiawatha is best known for the long, dark St. Paul Pass, or Taft Tunnel, which burrows for 1.66 miles under the Idaho/Montana state line.
With an incredible history beginning in 1906 of construction, hardships and calamities, unprecedented electrification, and of carrying passengers and freight from the Northwest to the Midwest, generations of railroaders kept the Milwaukee Road running until it finally went bankrupt in 1977. The last train west of Butte, Montana passed through in 1980. After that the line was abandoned.
With government funding and private donations, the rails were removed, and the construction of this spectacular wilderness bicycle and hiking trail was undertaken in 1997. The Idaho portion of the trail first opened for public use on May 29, 1998. The St. Paul Pass, or Taft Tunnel, was completed in May of 2001, and is now open for bike riding
Wikipedia article: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milwaukee_Road
Nearby cities:
Coordinates: 47°20'24"N 115°37'25"W
- CMSP&P St. Paul Pass Tunnel 20 6.4 km
- CMSP&P St Paul Pass Tunnel 20 6.8 km
- Trail of the Hiawatha Bike Trail 11 km
- Hauser Rail Yard 114 km
- BNSF Railway Bridge 124 km
- CMSP&P Rosalia 133 km
- Historic Hillyard train yard 138 km
- BNSF Flathead Tunnel 144 km
- BNSF Whitefish Yard 153 km
- BNSF Stryker Junction 161 km
- Saltese, Montana 12 km
- Lookout Pass Ski and Recreation 14 km
- Haugan, Montana 17 km
- De Borgia, Montana 21 km
- Mammoth Springs Camp Ground 26 km
- Woodland Park 26 km
- Bathtub Mountain 29 km
- Silverton, Idaho 31 km
- Tailings pond 32 km
- Sunnyside 36 km