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Toledo Beach Amusement Park was popular destination


This image shows a postcard of the Toledo, Ottawa Beach and Northern Railway Interurban line, circa 1900.  The railway ran from Summit Street in downtown Toledo through Point Place and along the east side of what is now I-75 into Luna Pier (on present-day Harold Drive) and ended with a turnaround stop at Toledo Beach.

Some time ago, I wrote about the Monroe Piers beach and amusement park that were located near the U.S. Shipping Canal.

As I discussed, the Detroit Monroe & Toledo Short Line Railroad (DM&T) purchased the beach area in 1901 with plans to “make this beach located four miles to the east from Monroe the finest on the lakes,” as reported by Toledo’s Joseph A. Galloway in the publication, “Interurban Trails” (sponsored by the Eastern Ohio Chapter of the National Railway Historical Society) – written in the mid-1940s.  These plans also included creating a trolley park at Monroe Piers.

Another interurban amusement park was the Toledo Beach Amusement Park – owned and developed by the Toledo Rail Light and Power Company on property which was originally the Ottawa Beach Resort – a 400-acre property which today is the site of the Toledo Beach Marina and has a LaSalle Township address.

Local Monroe historian David Eby profiled the Toledo Beach Amusement Park on these pages back in October, 2020 and mentioned that the interurban brought riders from Toledo through Lakeside, Lakewood, Allen’s Cove and the Luna Pier.  He mentioned many riders didn’t even know they traveled across the Ohio state line into Michigan.

The Toledo, Ottawa Beach and Northern Railway Interurban line is shown near its Toledo Beach stop, circa 1900.  According to an October 2020 Monroe News article by Monroe County Historian David Eby, the interurban brought riders from Toledo through Lakeside, Lakewood, Allen’s Cove and the Luna Pier to LaSalle and Toledo Beach.

The Toledo Rail Light and Power Company’s interurban line – the Toledo, Ottawa Beach, and Northern Railway – was said to run from Summit Street in downtown Toledo through Point Place and along the east side of what is now I-75, into Luna Pier (on present-day Harold Drive) and ended with a turnaround stop at Toledo Beach, as described in a blog profiling Southeast Michigan attractions from the past.



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