Saturday, July 6, 2024

Cleveland’s lakefront has something no other major Great Lakes city has

 In the late 1800s, railroad tracks were the last things you cross before
getting your feet wet in Lake Erie. That was before hundreds of acres of
new lakefront land near Downtown Cleveland was created with landfill. 
Cleveland was one of the few major Great Lakes cities to have a busy
mainline railroad along its lakefront. Today, it is the only one where freight
trains are the dominant user of those lakefront tracks (Shober &
Carqueville, Library of Congress). CLICK IMAGES TO ENLARGE THEM.

When looking at Chicago’s enviable lakefront, it never had it. Toronto’s did, but not anymore. Same with Milwaukee’s and Hamilton’s but due to different circumstances. Detroit, Buffalo, Toledo and smaller cities like Green Bay and Erie never did. What are we talking about here? A busy mainline freight railroad routed along a major Great Lake city’s downtown waterfront.

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