Title 43 › Chapter CHAPTER 22— - RIGHTS-OF-WAY AND OTHER EASEMENTS IN PUBLIC LANDS › § 942–1
Lets railroad companies that are properly formed under a State, Territory, or Congress and that file their articles and proof with the Secretary of the Interior on or after May 14, 1898, take a right of way across U.S. lands in Alaska. The right of way is 100 feet on each side of the track center. The company may take nearby earth, stone, timber, and public land needed to build and run the road. It may use up to 20 acres for each station (one station for each 10 miles of track), and terminals or junctions may add 40 more acres. On navigable shorelines the limit is eighty rods. The company does not get ownership of minerals or coal under these lands. Mining inside the right of way must follow Interior Department rules and must not harm the railroad. If the railroad reaches a navigable stream or tide water, it may build piers and wharves under Treasury Department supervision. These rules do not reduce any future State’s title to tide lands or its right to control them if Alaska or part of it becomes a State after May 14, 1898. The United States may resume possession of such lands as trustee for the people of that State. “Navigable waters” means tidal waters up to the ordinary high tide line and non‑tidal waters navigable in fact up to the ordinary high‑water mark. Rail freight and passenger charges must be printed and posted as federal law requires, and the Secretary of the Interior can change those rates.
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Public Lands — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Reference
Citation
43 U.S.C. § 942–1
Title 43 — Public Lands
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73