IC 3110         
CN local crosses N. Lake St. as it extracts a string of boxcars from Clearwater Paper Corp. via former SOO rails at Town of Menasha, WI on 23 May ’14. Originally incorporated as Lakeside Paper Co. on 9 Nov. 1910, construction of the mill began in ’11, and paper production commenced on 12 Jun. ‘12. At some point they started to sell a large share of their book paper production to Sears, Roebuck & Co. for their catalogues. The mill was sold and re-incorporated as Lakeview Paper Co. on 9 Aug. ’20. Sears, Roebuck & Co. bought the facility ca. the mid- to late-‘20s. The mill was shut down on 1 Feb. ’29 after a boiler failure and Sears promptly sold it to the Canadian firm of Fraser Paper, Ltd. (which also produced book paper for Sears). Fraser did not hold it long, they sold it to Kimberly-Clark Corp. ca. Mar. ’29. Kimberly-Clark sold the facility to American Tissue Mills ca. Aug. ’96. The mill abruptly shut down on 6 Sep. ’01 due to American Tissue’s significant financial problems. The briefly idled mill was purchased by Cellu Tissue Corp. in ’02 and renamed Cellu Tissue Corp. - Neenah, commonly shortened to Cellu Tissue - Neenah. Cellu Tissue Corp. was acquired by Clearwater Paper Group in ’10. A map from 1955 shows 6 spurs to service this paper mill, now there are 2 and only this 1 appears to get regular use.
Date: 5/23/2014 Location: Town of Menasha, WI Views: 115 Collection Of:   T. P. Bruss
Locomotives: IC 3110(GP40R)   Rolling Stock: BNSF 726579 (Box Car) Author:  T. P. Bruss
IC 3110
Picture Categories: RollingStock,Action This picture is part of album:  Northeast WI, Spring 2014
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User Comments
Name Type Comments Date
Richard Hopfensperger General Nice shot. You positioned yourself well. I think, if I recall correctly the tracks on the south end of the building were in use at least into the early 1980's. 5/24/2014 9:48:06 PM
T. P. Bruss General Thanks for the compliment and comment. It was a good day. I know this scene is repeated several times a week, just never when I am rolling through the area, until this day. I like the fact that the other spur on the south side of the building appears fully functional, even if it hasn’t been used for quite a while. 5/25/2014 3:21:02 AM

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