# St. Croix Subdivision

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Railway line in Wisconsin and Minnesota

This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. Please help improve this article by citing more sources. Find sources: "St. Croix Subdivision" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (September 2020)

v t e BNSF St. Croix Subdivision Legend mi CP Merriam Park Sub 410.5 St. Croix Junction CP River Subdivision 407.8 Burns St. Croix River Minnesota Wisconsin 407.7 Prescott 396.3 Diamond Bluff 391.0 Hager City 386.3 Bay City 378.7 Maiden Rock 372.6 Stockholm 366.2 Pepin 362.9 Mears Chippewa River 362.1 Trevino 358.7 Nelson 351.3 Alma 343.1 Cochrane 333.9 Fountain City 328.2 Winona Junction former Chicago & North Western Ry 325.7 East Winona CN 317.4 Trempealeau 311.2 Lytle 303.1 Sullivan 300.2 North La Crosse 299.9 Grand Crossing CP Tomah Subdivision Aurora Subdivision

The **St. Croix Subdivision** or **St. Croix Sub** is an American [rail line](/source/Rail_line) operated by the [BNSF Railway](/source/BNSF_Railway). It runs approximately 150 miles (240 km) from [La Crosse, Wisconsin](/source/La_Crosse%2C_Wisconsin) to [Saint Paul, Minnesota](/source/Saint_Paul%2C_Minnesota), following the [Mississippi River](/source/Mississippi_River). It runs through the communities of [La Crosse](/source/La_Crosse%2C_Wisconsin), [Onalaska](/source/Onalaska%2C_Wisconsin), [Brice Prairie](/source/Brice_Prairie%2C_Wisconsin), [Trempealeau](/source/Trempealeau%2C_Wisconsin), [East Winona](/source/East_Winona%2C_Wisconsin), [Fountain City](/source/Fountain_City%2C_Wisconsin), [Cochrane](/source/Cochrane%2C_Wisconsin), [Buffalo City](/source/Buffalo_City%2C_WI), [Alma](/source/Alma%2C_Wisconsin), [Nelson](/source/Nelson%2C_Wisconsin), [Pepin](/source/Pepin%2C_Wisconsin), [Stockholm](/source/Stockholm%2C_Wisconsin), [Maiden Rock](/source/Maiden_Rock%2C_Wisconsin), [Bay City](/source/Bay_City%2C_Wisconsin), [Diamond Bluff](/source/Diamond_Bluff%2C_Wisconsin), and [Prescott, Wisconsin](/source/Prescott%2C_Wisconsin).[1] This section of track sees 55-60 trains a day and is double tracked for most of the 150 miles with exceptions of Burns to Prescott, Mears to Trevino, and Winona Jct. to East Winona. The BNSF vertical lift bridge (adjacent to the [Prescott Drawbridge](/source/Prescott_Drawbridge)) over the mouth of the St. Croix river is single-tracked.

This route was built by the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad. Up until 1885, CB&Q only ran from Chicago to Oregon, Illinois. Work began in 1885 to reach the Twin Cities. The line was completed in 1886. The CB&Q operated the line until CB&Q merged with others to become the Burlington Northern Railroad. Two of the Burlington Route's merger partners had used this stretch of track to run their passenger trains between [Chicago, Illinois](/source/Chicago%2C_Illinois) and [Minneapolis–Saint Paul](/source/Minneapolis%E2%80%93Saint_Paul) for many years beforehand: The [Northern Pacific Railway](/source/Northern_Pacific_Railway)'s *[North Coast Limited](/source/North_Coast_Limited)* went on the CB&Q, as did the [Great Northern Railway](/source/Great_Northern_Railway_(U.S.))'s *[Empire Builder](/source/Empire_Builder)*. The Burlington's own *Morning* and *Afternoon [Zephyrs](/source/Twin_Cities_Zephyr)* also used the line. In the late 1970s, these trains were typically running combined between Chicago and the Twin Cities. However, these trains stopped running on the St. Croix Subdivision in 1971 when [Amtrak](/source/Amtrak) took over most passenger train service in the United States. The *Empire Builder* was the only one of these trains to survive, and it was shifted to run on the former route of the [Milwaukee Road](/source/Milwaukee_Road) *[Hiawatha](/source/Twin_Cities_Hiawatha)*.

## References

1. **[^](#cite_ref-1)** Don Winter. ["St. Croix Junction to La Crosse"](https://web.archive.org/web/20110710144418/http://donwinter.com/Railroad%20Infrastructure%20and%20Traffic%20Data/Trunk%20Routes/GN%20Transcon/Route%20Descriptions/St.%20Croix%20Junction%20to%20La%20Crosse.htm). Archived from the original on July 10, 2011. Retrieved June 2, 2010.

## External links

- [BNSF Subdivisions](https://www.bnsf.com/ship-with-bnsf/maps-and-shipping-locations/pdf/subdivisions-map.pdf)

[44°25′41″N 92°4′3″W / 44.42806°N 92.06750°W / 44.42806; -92.06750](https://geohack.toolforge.org/geohack.php?pagename=St._Croix_Subdivision&params=44_25_41_N_92_4_3_W_)

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Adapted from the Wikipedia article [St. Croix Subdivision](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._Croix_Subdivision) by Wikipedia contributors ([contributor history](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._Croix_Subdivision?action=history)). Available under [Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International](https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/). Changes may have been made.
