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The railroad transformed the Elk River economy. In the 1860s, <br /> • <br /> outgoing freight included lumber and lumber products such as <br /> shingles,chairs,and wooden shoes,and flour exported to <br /> customers as far as Boston. <br /> The St.Paul and Pacific was sold to the St.Paul,Minneapolis <br /> and Manitoba line in 1879.In 1884 this company built its own <br /> line parallel to the St.Paul and Pacific.Subsequently,the <br /> company was purchased by the Great Northern Railway <br /> Company.37 A spur served the starch factory on Main Street. <br /> The Great Northern operated the parallel tracks as a single <br /> railroad.These lines merged into the Burlington Northern in <br /> 1970,now the Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railway. <br /> In 1886 the St.Paul,Minneapolis and Manitoba(Great <br /> Northern)built a line to Princeton connecting to the <br /> Minneapolis and St.Cloud Railway to Duluth and Superior. <br /> This line included in Houlton Siding,a small station three <br /> miles north of Elk River and on the 3,000-acre property of <br /> William H.Houlton(1840-1915),one of the area's leading <br /> businessmen and political leaders. <br /> By 1890,there were ten daily passenger trains stopping at Elk <br /> River,in addition to freight and logging trains.Travelers were <br /> greeted by a second hotel,the Sherburne House(later known <br /> as the Merchant's and the Blanchett).By 1908,this well- <br /> advertised hostelry featured thirty rooms,steam heat,and gas <br /> • lighting,since electrification had not yet reached the town. <br /> Both hotels looked like New England boarding houses,with <br /> gable roofs,clapboard exteriors,and long porches. <br /> Good Roads and Charles M. Babcock <br /> The territorial road that connected Minneapolis and St.Paul <br /> with St.Cloud passed through Elk River,and was one of the <br /> most heavily traveled routes in the state.By 1860,a system of <br /> rough township and county roads linked Elk River to <br /> Princeton to the north,to Big Lake at the west,and to Anoka <br /> and points south. <br /> Over the next decades,villages,townships and counties <br /> labored to improve roads between farms and trade centers. <br /> Before a system of state and federally funded roads,much <br /> planning for community infrastructure was done by local <br /> business leaders. Around the turn of the century,however, <br /> electrification and other municipal utilities and road <br /> construction were primary topics and the capital and energy <br /> once available for road building waned.By the 1890s—on the <br /> eve of the introduction of the mass-produced <br /> automobile—business leaders and other groups campaigned <br /> for better roads under the umbrella of the Minnesota Good <br /> Roads Association,founded in 1893.39 <br /> In 1898 the Good Roads Act was passed by the state legislature. <br /> In 1905,the Minnesota Highway Commission was created to <br /> plan local highway improvements and approve the <br /> Elk River Historic Contexts and Phase II Downtown Commercial Area Study <br /> 19 <br />