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Penetrating The
Pacific Northwest - Page 2 |
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Great Northern Pacific Steamship Company
terminals, Flavel, Oregon, Frank Woodfield, 1915.
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This plan, however, met with too much
opposition and was abandoned. During the following year a new plan, backed
by both the American and the German interests, secured the strong
cooperation and endorsement of J. P. Morgan and Company. This was the first instance of Morgan's entry
into railroad reorganization in the West. During the previous few years he
had been increasing his reputation as a reorganizer of Eastern railroad
properties, and by this time he had successfully organized or was
rehabilitating the Erie, the Reading, the Baltimore and Ohio, the
Southern, and the Hocking Valley systems. But he had kept clear of the far
Western field and had definitely refused to reorganize the
Union Pacific
on the ground that its territory was too sparsely settled and that there
was little hope for its future, especially as its partial control by the
United States Government made any reorganization extremely difficult. The
new plan for the
Northern Pacific was carried out
with no regard to the Hill interests the old stockholders were heavily
assessed; all bondholders were forced to make sacrifices; the Wisconsin
Central lines were entirely eliminated and separately reorganized; and the
Oregon lines were dissociated from the
Northern
Pacific and afterwards returned to the control of the new
Union Pacific.
While the new
Northern
Pacific as
reorganized in 1898 came directly under Morgan's control and was
immediately classed as a Morgan property, it did not remain exclusively
such for very long. In the promotion and development of the Great Northern
system; Hill had hitherto maintained an independent position so far as
banking alliances were concerned, but he now began to develop closer
relations with the Morgans and became heavily interested in the First
National Bank of New York, an institution which for many years had been
more or less directly identified with the Morgan interests. On more than
one occasion thereafter the banking firm of J. P. Morgan and Company acted
as financial agent for the Great Northern.
Soon after the reorganization of the
Northern
Pacific, it became known that Hill had acquired an important
interest in the property, and as time went on this interest was
substantially increased. Within a year or two the
Northern
Pacific began
to be classed as one of the Hill lines. With a substantial Hill
representation on the board of directors and a managerial policy which was
clearly inspired by Hill, the company now entered upon a new stage in its
career.
The outstanding dramatic event in the
story of the modern
Northern
Pacific was the famous corner which occurred
in the spring of 1901 as a result of a contest between the Hill and the
Harriman interests for the control of the property. The details of this
operation, which sent the price of
Northern
Pacific stock up to $1000 a
share and precipitated a stock-market panic, form part of the story of the
Harriman lines. The contest resulted in the formation of the Northern
Securities Company, a corporation of $400,000,000 capital, devised as a
holding company under the joint control of the Hill and Harriman
interests, for the purpose of retaining a majority of the stocks of the
Northern
Pacific and the Great Northern.
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The Hill interests, jointly with the
Morgan control of the
Northern
Pacific, had been quietly accumulating
stock in the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad, and Harriman felt
that there was grave danger to the
Union Pacific in this move, as the
Burlington had already penetrated into the
Union Pacific territory and
might at any time start to build through to the coast its own line
parallel to the
Union Pacific. Harriman consequently began to buy up
Northern
Pacific stock in the open market and thus, together with the
efforts of the Hill and Morgan people to retain and strengthen their
control, brought about the corner.
The Northern Securities Company was
designed to harmonize all interests and to keep the control of the
Burlington property jointly in the hands of Harriman and Hill. But as the
result of a suit under the Sherman Antitrust Act, this combination was
declared illegal, and in 1904 the company was dissolved. The final outcome
of the situation was that the
Northern
Pacific, sharing with the Great
Northern the joint control of the Burlington lines, was left indisputably
in the hands of the Hill-Morgan group, where it has ever since remained.
These three great railroad systems, the
Northern
Pacific, the Great
Northern, and the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy, constituting nearly
twenty thousand miles of railroad, have been known ever since as Hill
lines.
Since the dramatic days of the
Harriman-Hill contest the history of the
Northern
Pacific system has been
simply a striking reflection of the growth in population and wealth of the
great Northwest. The States through which it operates have grown with
astounding rapidity during the past two decades; small cities have spread
into great centers of manufacture and trade; hundreds of smaller towns
have sprung up; natural resources of untold value have been developed. In
the meanwhile the
Northern
Pacific has forged ahead in its earnings and
profits, and the stock of the road has come to be known as one of the
highest class of investment issues. Although new competition appeared, in
both the local and the through business of the company--notably by the
extension of the St. Paul system largely through
Northern
Pacific
territory to the Puget Sound region--the superior modern business
management of James J. Hill, backed by the strong resources of the Morgan
banking interests, made the
Northern
Pacific one of the standard railroad
systems of America.
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Compiled and
edited by
Kathy Weiser/Legends
of America, updated
November, 2010.
About the Author:
John Moody was the author of The Railroad
Builders, A Chronicle of the Welding of the States, written in 1919.
Penetrating the Pacific Northwest is the seventh chapter of the book.
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From the Rocky Mountain General Store
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