
The Minnehaha Depot is operated by the Minnesota Transportation Museum in
Minneapolis
The 'Minnesota Transportation Museum' ('MTM') is an organization that operates several heritage transportation sites in
Minnesota and just across the border in
Wisconsin. The museum primarily focuses on
preserving and restoring portions of the
railroads and
buses that once traversed the area. The organization was first formed to save a
streetcar that had been built and operated by
Twin City Rapid Transit (TCRT) in the
Minneapolis-St. Paul region of Minnesota. The museum was officially organized in
1962, and followed in the footsteps of the 'Minnesota Railfans Association', which had organized
railfan trips in the
1940s, '
50s, and '
60s.
In
2004–
2005, the organization's streetcar operations were spun off to form the
Minnesota Streetcar Museum. In addition, a
steamboat that was originally built by TCRT in a style similar to its streetcars was split off to start the
Museum of Lake Minnetonka.
Minnehaha Depot
After the first streetcar, TCRT #1300, was successfully restored, other projects were examined in the time before the streetcar could be put on its own set of rails. The 'Minnehaha Depot' was a
Milwaukee Road depot at
Minnehaha Falls. The station, built in
1875, was nicknamed "The Princess" because of its delicate
architecture. Trains running on special routes have sometimes stopped at the station, and it was eventually integrated into the area streetcar system. Tracks owned by the
Canadian Pacific Railway reach the station, though it is at the disused end of a rail spur.
The Depot is owned by the Minnesota Historical Society, and the Minnesota Transportation Museum operates the depot for MHS.
In
1967, this was the first building restored by the museum and outfitted with exhibits inside. Today, the
Hiawatha Line station serving Minnehaha Park is located across the road from the old depot.
Classic buses
A few buses from the 1940s and 1950s are also operated by the museum. Most of the buses in the collection were built by the
GMC division of
General Motors, and represent the vehicles that replaced the streetcars in the Twin Cities. There is also a
Mack-built bus, and a
Yellow Coach dating to
1935 that once operated in
Rochester, Minnesota, but it has not been restored.
As the museum has acquired much of its bus collection from
Metro Transit, the bus company sometimes requests the use of the old buses for special events.
==
Osceola and St Croix Valley Railway==
There were several attempts by the museum to venture into the world of
steam power in the
1970s and
1980s. After several false starts, largely due to community opposition to the idea of noisy
locomotives trundling by, the museum finally managed to start up a train system along with the historical society of
Osceola, Wisconsin. This location is about an hour away from the Twin Cities. Trains operate on track owned by
Wisconsin Central Ltd., currently a subsidiary of
Canadian National.
A number of locomotives and pieces of
rolling stock are in operation. Most of the locomotives that are currently in running condition are
diesel-electric, although steam locomotives have occasionally been used to pull the trains. Many are currently undergoing restoration work.
The train route runs past several train depots that have been restored by MTM. They include stops in
Copas, Minnesota,
Dresser, Wisconsin, and the main station in Osceola. The northern end of the line is in Dresser, and the southern end is in
Marine on St. Croix, Minnesota.
Jackson Street Roundhouse
The main base for the museum is the 'Jackson Street Roundhouse' in St. Paul. It is the site where the large locomotives and rolling stock come for maintenance and restoration. There are currently some small exhibits at the roundhouse. The building was put up by the
Great Northern Railroad in
1907 and is on a site that has been used for rail transportation ever since trains first came to Minnesota. For a time, the building was used as a warehouse, but the
turntable has now been restored and track laid to allow restoration activities to take place.
External link
★
Minnesota Transportation Museum