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Minnesota and International Railway : ウィキペディア英語版 | Minnesota and International Railway
The ''Minnesota and International Railway'' was a subsidiary of the Northern Pacific Railway , a railway that operated in the west along the Canadian border of the United States. In 1970 the Northern Pacific merged with other lines to form the Burlington Northern Railroad. ==History == This road began as a conglomeration of logging lines in north central Minnesota, along with the Northern Pacific's own nascent Brainerd and Northern, begun circa 1892 to build north to the border with Canada. On July 17, 1900, the Northern Pacific formed the Minnesota and International to control these lines as a through-route between its terminal at Brainerd, Minnesota, and the border with Canada at International Falls, Minnesota. The line formed a 200-mile north-south route via Bemidji, Minnesota. An early 20th century train derailment two miles north of Nisswa Minnesota left multiple box cars sunken in the soil which remain buried today at a depth of approximately 15 feet underneath what is now the Paul Bunyan State Trail. The corporate entity was folded into its parent company on October, 22, 1941, and was operated as the Eighth Sub-division of the Northern Pacific's Lake Superior Division. Division headquarters were in Duluth, Minnesota.
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