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The Earle family : Ralph Earle and his descendants

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Gen.] GENEALOGY. 167<br />

part of the route. <strong>The</strong> tariff' amounted to two dollars <strong>and</strong> forty-five<br />

cents for one hundred pounds, from Boston to St. Louis. <strong>The</strong><br />

through bill-of-lading system now in general use is but the develop-<br />

ment of t<strong>his</strong> original arrangement.<br />

In 1858 he was called into the employ of the Michigan Central<br />

Railroad Company where he remained sixteen years,—the first half<br />

of the period as general freight agent <strong>and</strong> general agent at Chicago,<br />

<strong>and</strong> the last half as general superintendent <strong>and</strong> general manager.<br />

During t<strong>his</strong> period he became one of the incorporators, <strong>and</strong> for<br />

several years a director of the Pullman Palace Car Company ; <strong>and</strong><br />

was largely instrumental in securing the first Pullman sleeping-car<br />

service eastward, from Chicago to Rochester, New York.<br />

i<br />

"<strong>The</strong> friends of Mr. Sargent," says the History of Chicago,<br />

("count among the many prominent efforts of <strong>his</strong> life none greater<br />

than the organization of the Union Stock Yards of t<strong>his</strong> city, the success<br />

of which was mainly due to <strong>his</strong> initial labor."<br />

he first indicated the most suitable place for the<br />

It appears that<br />

yards. He was<br />

chairman of the committee which purchased the l<strong>and</strong>—320 acres for<br />

$100,000— "it is now worth a score of millions"—a director of <strong>The</strong><br />

[Union Stock Yards <strong>and</strong> Transit Company, <strong>and</strong> a " prime mover in<br />

the management of the Stock Yards until a few years ago, when he<br />

gave way to younger men."<br />

i "After leaving the Michigan Central Mr. Sargent was offered the<br />

general management of the Northern Pacific Railroad, in 1877- ^ e<br />

at first declined, but, later in the year, was prevailed upon to accept<br />

the position, which he held until 1881, when he tendered <strong>his</strong> resigna-<br />

1<br />

tion."<br />

<strong>The</strong> Fargo <strong>and</strong> Southern Railroad, between Fargo, Dakota, <strong>and</strong><br />

Ortonville, Minnesota, a distance of 120 miles, had been begun, but<br />

only thirty-five miles of it graded, when, in 1883, he became inter-<br />

ested in the company <strong>and</strong> was elected as its president. He prose-<br />

cuted the work with such energy that in less than ten months the<br />

entire line was finished <strong>and</strong> ready for operation. T<strong>his</strong> road has<br />

been of great benefit to Fargo. <strong>The</strong> Argus, a newspaper of that<br />

city, says: "<strong>The</strong> people of North Dakota know Mr. Sargent well.<br />

<strong>The</strong> people of Fargo have a right to claim him one of her greatest<br />

benefactors. * * * <strong>The</strong> Fargo & Southern owes its great success<br />

to <strong>his</strong> taking hold <strong>and</strong> engineering its financial operations <strong>and</strong> secur-<br />

ing its completion."<br />

In February, 1861, he was appointed a trustee of Farwell Hall, in<br />

Chicago ; in April of the same year, a member of the first war

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