Missouri ~ Kansas ~ Texas Railroad North-South Railway Connection On
December 24, 1872 a Missouri, Kansas & Texas (Katy) railroad train
carrying 100 passengers arrived here in the newly established railroad
town of Denison. Its arrival marked the culmination of years of
effort by the Katy to construct a rail line from the border of Kansas
and the Indian Territory (Oklahoma) south to the Red River and into
Texas. The Katy earned this lucrative right-of-way by being
first in a national competition to construct a rail line from St.
Louis south to the Indian Territory. Several months later the
unheralded connection of the nation's first north-to-south rail service
west of the Mississippi River was established here w hen a Texas
Central Railroad train pulled into Denison from the south on March 10,
1873. In a brief ceremony to commemorate the occasion Denison
Mayor L.S. Owings addressed a small crowd by reading the contents of a
telegram he had dispatched to Galveston, Houston, New York, Boston,
Chicago, St. Louis and San Francisco proclaiming his town's new role as
a key link in the nation's network of rail lines. With this
connection passengers and shippers could depend on continuous rail
passage from the Texas Gulf Coast, where the Texas Central originated,
through Denison to St. Louis where rail linkages extended north to
Chicago, east to New York, and west to San Francisco.
The train cars and historical marker are located just east of the MKT depot in Denison. Missouri~Kansas~Texas Railroad History Copyright © 2024, TXGenWeb. If you find any of Grayson County, TXGenWeb links inoperable, please send me a message. |