fbpx
Wikipedia

Missouri–Kansas–Texas Railroad

The Missouri–Kansas–Texas Railroad (reporting mark MKT) was a Class I railroad company in the United States, with its last headquarters in Dallas, Texas. Established in 1865 under the name Union Pacific Railroad (UP), Southern Branch, it came to serve an extensive rail network in Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, and Missouri. In 1988, it merged with the Missouri Pacific Railroad; today, it is part of UP.

Missouri–Kansas–Texas Railroad
Katy system as of 1918; many of the outlying lines left the system in the 1923 reorganization
Overview
HeadquartersDallas, Texas
Reporting markMKT
LocaleKansas, Missouri, Oklahoma, and Texas
Dates of operation1870–1988
SuccessorUnion Pacific Railroad
Technical
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge

In the 1890s, the MKT was commonly referred to as "the K-T", because for a time it was the Kansas–Texas division of the Missouri Pacific Railroad and "KT" was its abbreviation in timetables as well as its stock exchange symbol. This soon evolved into the nickname "the Katy".[1]

The Katy was the first railroad to enter Texas from the north. Eventually, the Katy's core system linked Parsons, Emporia, Fort Scott, Junction City, Olathe, and Kansas City, Kansas; Kansas City, Joplin, Columbia, McKittrick, Jefferson City, and St. Louis, Missouri; Tulsa, Wagoner;[2] and Oklahoma City, Oklahoma; Dallas, Fort Worth, Waco, Temple, Austin, San Antonio, Houston, and Galveston, Texas. An additional mainline between Fort Worth and Salina, Kansas, was added in the 1980s after the collapse of the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad; this line was operated as the Oklahoma, Kansas and Texas Railroad (OKKT). Former Rock Island trackage rights acquired by the Katy also gave it access to Lincoln and Omaha, Nebraska and Council Bluffs, Iowa.

At the end of 1970, MKT operated 2,623 miles (4,221 km) of road and 3,765 miles (6,059 km) of track.

History edit

Formation and construction edit

 
An 1881 advertisement for the line
 
Share of the Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway, issued 1904

The Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway was incorporated in May 1870 in Junction City, Kansas. The company received government land grants to build a supply railroad connecting the frontier military posts of Fort Riley, Fort Gibson, and Fort Scott; and eventually Fort Worth, as well as establishing connections with other railroads that served Fort Leavenworth, Fort Wallace and Fort Smith — but its broader ambitions were to connect Chicago and New Orleans.[3] Upon its incorporation, the MK&T acquired the Union Pacific Railway, Southern Branch (est. 1865) and its 182 miles (293 km) of track in Kansas.[4]

At the time of its incorporation, consolidations were also made with the Labette & Sedalia Railway Co. and the Neosho Valley & Holden Railway Co.; MK&T also acquired the Tebo and Neosho Railroad, the St. Louis & Santa Fe Railroad Co., and the Hannibal & Central Missouri Railroad Co. Combined with the UP Southern Branch, these small, newly built railroads formed the foundation on which the Katy built. In the late 1890s, a subsidiary once called the Missouri-Kansas-Eastern railroad was established to run from existing MKT rails approaching Kansas City into St Louis via the Missouri River basin.

Congress had passed acts promising land grants to the first railroad to reach the Kansas border via the Neosho Valley. The Katy portion of the former UP Southern Branch, which had begun building from Fort Riley just north of Junction City, Kansas, was in a heated competition for the prize. On June 6, 1870, Katy workers laid the first rails across the Kansas border, winning the race. Congress' promised land grants were never made, as the courts overturned the grants because the land was in Indian Territory and was the property of the Indian tribes.

The Katy continued its push southward, laying track through the territory and reaching Texas in 1872, acquiring other small railroads while extending its reach to Dallas in 1886, Waco in 1888, Houston in April 1893, and to San Antonio in 1901.

 
Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad bridge over Red River (postcard, c. 1911)
 
Sectional Map of Texas Traversed by the Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway, 1904

When the Katy railroad reached Houston, its joint ownership of the Galveston, Houston and Henderson Railroad gave it immediate access to the Port of Galveston and its ocean-going shipping on the Gulf of Mexico.

Operations edit

A Katy train was robbed by the Dalton Gang on July 14, 1892, at Adair, Oklahoma, in what was then Indian Territory.[5] The gang got away after a gun battle.[5]

In 1896, as a publicity stunt set up by William Crush, the Katy crashed two locomotives head-on, pulling loaded trains, at a site that came to be known thereafter as Crush, Texas. The collision occurred before more than 40,000 spectators, three of whom died (and several were injured) by debris from the exploding boilers. Ragtime composer and pianist Scott Joplin, who was performing in the area at the time, commemorated the event in his piano piece, "The Great Crush Collision March" (which he dedicated to the Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railway).[6]

Revenue freight traffic, in millions of net ton-miles[7]
Year Traffic
1925 3317
1933 1827
1944 7256
1960 3980
1970 4999
Source: ICC annual reports

The Katy acquired the Beaver, Meade, and Englewood Railroad in 1931.[8] This trackage, like the length between Altus and Forgan, was abandoned in January 1973.[9][10][11]

From 1915 until January 4, 1959, the Katy, in a joint venture with the St. Louis – San Francisco Railway (popularly known as the Frisco), operated the Texas Special from St. Louis to Dallas, Ft. Worth, and San Antonio. It sported rail cars with names including Sam Houston, Stephen F. Austin, David Crockett, and James Bowie after prominent men of the state.

Merger and legacy edit

 
MKT #1006, a Baldwin DS-4-4-1000, on display in Parsons, Kansas

On August 12, 1988, the Missouri Pacific Railroad (MoPac) and its owner, Union Pacific Corporation, purchased the Katy with approval from the Interstate Commerce Commission. The merging and restructuring of railroads during the 1980s had cost the Katy much overhead traffic, and it had been seeking a merger partner.[citation needed] On December 1, 1989, the Katy was merged into the MoPac, which is now part of the Union Pacific Railroad system.

In the "rails to trails" program, much of the Missouri track line has been adapted for use as the Katy Trail State Park, including a spur to Columbia, a Missouri State Park, which runs along the Missouri River for the major portion of its route. In downtown Dallas, a 3.5-mi-long section called the Katy Trail is being converted into a multiuse trail linking Southern Methodist University to the American Airlines Center.

In 1997, the segment linking Katy, Texas, to downtown Houston was abandoned, and stripped of rails soon after. The section between Katy and Interstate 610 was purchased by the Texas Department of Transportation in 1998 for the expansion of Katy Freeway. The line that went into Houston was purchased by the city's Parks and Recreation Department. In 2009, it was adapted and paved as the Heights Bike Trail.

In Tulsa, Oklahoma, the 8.1 miles (13.0 km) Katy trail follows an old corridor of the railroad between the northwest edge of downtown Tulsa and its suburb of Sand Springs.[12]

As part of a new heritage program, in July 2005, Union Pacific unveiled a new EMD SD70ACe locomotive, Union Pacific 1988, painted in traditional MKT colors.

 
The Katy Limited circa 1910
 
The Katy Flyer in 1911

Passenger trains edit

The Katy operated these named passenger trains: (On its main line routes, trains originated in St. Louis or in Kansas City, linking in Parsons, KS, split in Denison, TX, with sections going via either through Dallas or Fort Worth, linking again in Waco, then heading south to either San Antonio or Houston.)[13]

  • Train numbers 1 and 2: The Texas Special:
    • St. Louis, Missouri - San Antonio, Texas (March 4, 1917 – 1959) jointly with the St. Louis-San Francisco Railway), then
    • Kansas City-San Antonio (1959-July 26, 1964), then
    • Kansas City-Dallas (July 27, 1964 to June 30, 1965)
  • Train numbers 3 and 4: Katy Limited
    • Kansas City-Dallas, with sections to Oklahoma City, Fort Worth and San Antonio[14]
  • Train numbers 5 and 6: Katy Flyer
    • St. Louis and Kansas City originating trains, south to San Antonio[13]
  • Train numbers 7 and 8: Bluebonnet
    • Kansas City to San Antonio via Dallas, and Kansas City to Houston via Fort Worth[13]
  • Train numbers 23 and 28: Sooner
    • Kansas City - Oklahoma City[15]
 
Herald
 
MKT EMD NW2 No. 1029 at the Wichita Falls Railroad Museum

Company officers edit

Presidents of the Missouri–Kansas–Texas Railroad:

  • Judge Levi Parsons, prior to 1878
  • Jay Gould, 1880
  • George J. Gould, 1886–1887
  • Henry C. Rouse, –1904
  • Frederick N. Finney, 1904–1906
  • Adrian H. Joline 1906–
  • Charles E. Schaff, 1912–1926
  • Charles N. Whitehead, 1926
  • Columbus Haile, 1927–1930[16]
  • Michael H. Cahill, 1930–1934
  • Matthew S. Sloan, 1934–1945
  • Donald V. Fraser, 1945–1956
  • William N. Deramus III, 1957–1961
  • Charles T. Williams, 1961–1965
  • John W. Barriger III, 1965–1970
  • Reginald N. Whitman, 1970–1975[17]
  • Harold L. Gastler, 1975-1988

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ John Jared Hawks (May 19, 2017). "Banquet features 'Legend of Hell's Bend'". Parsons Sun.
  2. ^ Oklahoma Historica Society
  3. ^ "MKT Railroad - The Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad". Sedalia Katy Depot. from the original on May 4, 2018. Retrieved May 3, 2018.
  4. ^ Union Pacific Railway was, for a period of several years in the late 19th century, the official name of the unrelated Union Pacific Railroad, which later acquired MKT as part of the Missouri Pacific Railroad.
  5. ^ a b "Historic Dalton Gang Robbery". LSER.net. Retrieved February 24, 2020.
  6. ^ Scott Joplin, "The Great Crush Collision March" sheet music (Temple, TX: John R. Fuller, 1896). See Bill Edwards, Rags and Pieces by Scott Joplin. June 6, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ MKT of Texas is included, and BM&E in 1944 and later
  8. ^ "Faith in Oklahoma Reaps Rich Rewards," The Daily Oklahoman, March 7, 1931
  9. ^ . tshaonline.org. Archived from the original on April 4, 2019. Retrieved April 16, 2013.
  10. ^ Hofsommer, Donovan L. (1976). Katy Northwest: The Story of a Branch Line Railroad. Indiana University Press. ISBN 0253336368.
  11. ^ "Donovan L. Hofsommer, "The Wichita Falls and Northwestern Railway"". tshaonline.org. from the original on August 23, 2018. Retrieved April 21, 2013.
  12. ^ "KATY Trail (Tulsa)". Rails to Trails Conservancy (US). from the original on October 1, 2019. Retrieved October 1, 2019.
  13. ^ a b c "Missouri-Kansas-Texas Lines, Condensed Time-Tables, Tables 1, 2, 3, 4". Official Guide of the Railways. National Railway Publication Company. 86 (7). December 1953.
  14. ^ "Missouri-Kansas-Texas Lines, Condensed Time-Tables, Tables 2, 4". Official Guide of the Railways. National Railway Publication Company. 78 (12). May 1946.
  15. ^ "Missouri-Kansas-Texas Lines, Condensed Time-Tables, Table 12". Official Guide of the Railways. National Railway Publication Company. 78 (12). May 1946.
  16. ^ . Time. October 20, 1930. Archived from the original on September 30, 2007. Retrieved October 25, 2013.
  17. ^ "Whitman takes over as Katy president". Railway Age. 169 (1): 12. July 13, 1970.

Bibliography edit

  • Katy Railroad Historical Society, M-K-T / Katy Frequently Asked Questions June 14, 2007, at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved February 22, 2005.
  • Museum of the American Railroad, . Retrieved January 20, 2008.
  • Katy Railroad Historical Society, Katy Railroad Passenger Service September 13, 2010, at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved January 20, 2008.
  • Kendrick, John William (1917). A Report Upon the Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway System. Chicago. Retrieved October 25, 2013.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • "The Opening of the Great Southwest: A Brief History of the Origin and Development of the Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad Better Known as The Katy" - Published: May 1970 by the M-K-T R.R. Co.
  • "Miss Katy in the Lone Star State", Steve Allen Goen, 2006
  • "The Katy Railroad and the Last Frontier", V. V. Masterson, 1952

Further reading edit

External links edit

  • Katy Railroad Historical Society
  • Map of the Missouri, Kansas and Texas Railway, published 1877, hosted by the Portal to Texas History
  • The "M" in the MKT - A detailed history of the MKT in Missouri.
  • MKT locomotive roster at edisaurus.com.
  • FallenFlags.org's Katy page with links to hundreds of photos of MKT locomotives and a humorous story about a Conrail locomotive leased by the Katy.
  • at the Houston Railroad Museum.
  • Construction and Mergers that Formed M-K-T
  • MKT (Missouri Kansas Texas) Katy Railroad Time Tables, published in 1946, hosted by Texas General Land Office

missouri, kansas, texas, railroad, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar,. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Missouri Kansas Texas Railroad news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Missouri Kansas Texas Railroad reporting mark MKT was a Class I railroad company in the United States with its last headquarters in Dallas Texas Established in 1865 under the name Union Pacific Railroad UP Southern Branch it came to serve an extensive rail network in Texas Oklahoma Kansas and Missouri In 1988 it merged with the Missouri Pacific Railroad today it is part of UP Missouri Kansas Texas RailroadKaty system as of 1918 many of the outlying lines left the system in the 1923 reorganizationOverviewHeadquartersDallas TexasReporting markMKTLocaleKansas Missouri Oklahoma and TexasDates of operation1870 1988SuccessorUnion Pacific RailroadTechnicalTrack gauge4 ft 8 1 2 in 1 435 mm standard gaugeIn the 1890s the MKT was commonly referred to as the K T because for a time it was the Kansas Texas division of the Missouri Pacific Railroad and KT was its abbreviation in timetables as well as its stock exchange symbol This soon evolved into the nickname the Katy 1 The Katy was the first railroad to enter Texas from the north Eventually the Katy s core system linked Parsons Emporia Fort Scott Junction City Olathe and Kansas City Kansas Kansas City Joplin Columbia McKittrick Jefferson City and St Louis Missouri Tulsa Wagoner 2 and Oklahoma City Oklahoma Dallas Fort Worth Waco Temple Austin San Antonio Houston and Galveston Texas An additional mainline between Fort Worth and Salina Kansas was added in the 1980s after the collapse of the Chicago Rock Island and Pacific Railroad this line was operated as the Oklahoma Kansas and Texas Railroad OKKT Former Rock Island trackage rights acquired by the Katy also gave it access to Lincoln and Omaha Nebraska and Council Bluffs Iowa At the end of 1970 MKT operated 2 623 miles 4 221 km of road and 3 765 miles 6 059 km of track Contents 1 History 1 1 Formation and construction 1 2 Operations 1 3 Merger and legacy 1 4 Passenger trains 2 Company officers 3 See also 4 References 4 1 Bibliography 5 Further reading 6 External linksHistory editFormation and construction edit nbsp An 1881 advertisement for the line nbsp Share of the Missouri Kansas amp Texas Railway issued 1904The Missouri Kansas amp Texas Railway was incorporated in May 1870 in Junction City Kansas The company received government land grants to build a supply railroad connecting the frontier military posts of Fort Riley Fort Gibson and Fort Scott and eventually Fort Worth as well as establishing connections with other railroads that served Fort Leavenworth Fort Wallace and Fort Smith but its broader ambitions were to connect Chicago and New Orleans 3 Upon its incorporation the MK amp T acquired the Union Pacific Railway Southern Branch est 1865 and its 182 miles 293 km of track in Kansas 4 At the time of its incorporation consolidations were also made with the Labette amp Sedalia Railway Co and the Neosho Valley amp Holden Railway Co MK amp T also acquired the Tebo and Neosho Railroad the St Louis amp Santa Fe Railroad Co and the Hannibal amp Central Missouri Railroad Co Combined with the UP Southern Branch these small newly built railroads formed the foundation on which the Katy built In the late 1890s a subsidiary once called the Missouri Kansas Eastern railroad was established to run from existing MKT rails approaching Kansas City into St Louis via the Missouri River basin Congress had passed acts promising land grants to the first railroad to reach the Kansas border via the Neosho Valley The Katy portion of the former UP Southern Branch which had begun building from Fort Riley just north of Junction City Kansas was in a heated competition for the prize On June 6 1870 Katy workers laid the first rails across the Kansas border winning the race Congress promised land grants were never made as the courts overturned the grants because the land was in Indian Territory and was the property of the Indian tribes The Katy continued its push southward laying track through the territory and reaching Texas in 1872 acquiring other small railroads while extending its reach to Dallas in 1886 Waco in 1888 Houston in April 1893 and to San Antonio in 1901 nbsp Missouri Kansas Texas Railroad bridge over Red River postcard c 1911 nbsp Sectional Map of Texas Traversed by the Missouri Kansas amp Texas Railway 1904When the Katy railroad reached Houston its joint ownership of the Galveston Houston and Henderson Railroad gave it immediate access to the Port of Galveston and its ocean going shipping on the Gulf of Mexico Operations edit A Katy train was robbed by the Dalton Gang on July 14 1892 at Adair Oklahoma in what was then Indian Territory 5 The gang got away after a gun battle 5 In 1896 as a publicity stunt set up by William Crush the Katy crashed two locomotives head on pulling loaded trains at a site that came to be known thereafter as Crush Texas The collision occurred before more than 40 000 spectators three of whom died and several were injured by debris from the exploding boilers Ragtime composer and pianist Scott Joplin who was performing in the area at the time commemorated the event in his piano piece The Great Crush Collision March which he dedicated to the Missouri Kansas Texas Railway 6 Revenue freight traffic in millions of net ton miles 7 Year Traffic1925 33171933 18271944 72561960 39801970 4999Source ICC annual reports The Katy acquired the Beaver Meade and Englewood Railroad in 1931 8 This trackage like the length between Altus and Forgan was abandoned in January 1973 9 10 11 From 1915 until January 4 1959 the Katy in a joint venture with the St Louis San Francisco Railway popularly known as the Frisco operated the Texas Special from St Louis to Dallas Ft Worth and San Antonio It sported rail cars with names including Sam Houston Stephen F Austin David Crockett and James Bowie after prominent men of the state Merger and legacy edit nbsp MKT 1006 a Baldwin DS 4 4 1000 on display in Parsons KansasOn August 12 1988 the Missouri Pacific Railroad MoPac and its owner Union Pacific Corporation purchased the Katy with approval from the Interstate Commerce Commission The merging and restructuring of railroads during the 1980s had cost the Katy much overhead traffic and it had been seeking a merger partner citation needed On December 1 1989 the Katy was merged into the MoPac which is now part of the Union Pacific Railroad system In the rails to trails program much of the Missouri track line has been adapted for use as the Katy Trail State Park including a spur to Columbia a Missouri State Park which runs along the Missouri River for the major portion of its route In downtown Dallas a 3 5 mi long section called the Katy Trail is being converted into a multiuse trail linking Southern Methodist University to the American Airlines Center In 1997 the segment linking Katy Texas to downtown Houston was abandoned and stripped of rails soon after The section between Katy and Interstate 610 was purchased by the Texas Department of Transportation in 1998 for the expansion of Katy Freeway The line that went into Houston was purchased by the city s Parks and Recreation Department In 2009 it was adapted and paved as the Heights Bike Trail In Tulsa Oklahoma the 8 1 miles 13 0 km Katy trail follows an old corridor of the railroad between the northwest edge of downtown Tulsa and its suburb of Sand Springs 12 As part of a new heritage program in July 2005 Union Pacific unveiled a new EMD SD70ACe locomotive Union Pacific 1988 painted in traditional MKT colors nbsp TheKaty Limited circa 1910 nbsp The Katy Flyer in 1911Passenger trains edit The Katy operated these named passenger trains On its main line routes trains originated in St Louis or in Kansas City linking in Parsons KS split in Denison TX with sections going via either through Dallas or Fort Worth linking again in Waco then heading south to either San Antonio or Houston 13 Train numbers 1 and 2 The Texas Special St Louis Missouri San Antonio Texas March 4 1917 1959 jointly with the St Louis San Francisco Railway then Kansas City San Antonio 1959 July 26 1964 then Kansas City Dallas July 27 1964 to June 30 1965 Train numbers 3 and 4 Katy Limited Kansas City Dallas with sections to Oklahoma City Fort Worth and San Antonio 14 Train numbers 5 and 6 Katy Flyer St Louis and Kansas City originating trains south to San Antonio 13 Train numbers 7 and 8 Bluebonnet Kansas City to San Antonio via Dallas and Kansas City to Houston via Fort Worth 13 Train numbers 23 and 28 Sooner Kansas City Oklahoma City 15 nbsp Herald nbsp MKT EMD NW2 No 1029 at the Wichita Falls Railroad MuseumCompany officers editPresidents of the Missouri Kansas Texas Railroad Judge Levi Parsons prior to 1878 Jay Gould 1880 George J Gould 1886 1887 Henry C Rouse 1904 Frederick N Finney 1904 1906 Adrian H Joline 1906 Charles E Schaff 1912 1926 Charles N Whitehead 1926 Columbus Haile 1927 1930 16 Michael H Cahill 1930 1934 Matthew S Sloan 1934 1945 Donald V Fraser 1945 1956 William N Deramus III 1957 1961 Charles T Williams 1961 1965 John W Barriger III 1965 1970 Reginald N Whitman 1970 1975 17 Harold L Gastler 1975 1988 This list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items August 2008 See also edit nbsp Railways portalDalton Gang Train Robbery She Caught the Katy Katy Trail State ParkReferences edit John Jared Hawks May 19 2017 Banquet features Legend of Hell s Bend Parsons Sun Oklahoma Historica Society MKT Railroad The Missouri Kansas Texas Railroad Sedalia Katy Depot Archived from the original on May 4 2018 Retrieved May 3 2018 Union Pacific Railway was for a period of several years in the late 19th century the official name of the unrelated Union Pacific Railroad which later acquired MKT as part of the Missouri Pacific Railroad a b Historic Dalton Gang Robbery LSER net Retrieved February 24 2020 Scott Joplin The Great Crush Collision March sheet music Temple TX John R Fuller 1896 See Bill Edwards Rags and Pieces by Scott Joplin Archived June 6 2009 at the Wayback Machine MKT of Texas is included and BM amp E in 1944 and later Faith in Oklahoma Reaps Rich Rewards The Daily Oklahoman March 7 1931 Brian Hart Joseph Alexander Kemp tshaonline org Archived from the original on April 4 2019 Retrieved April 16 2013 Hofsommer Donovan L 1976 Katy Northwest The Story of a Branch Line Railroad Indiana University Press ISBN 0253336368 Donovan L Hofsommer The Wichita Falls and Northwestern Railway tshaonline org Archived from the original on August 23 2018 Retrieved April 21 2013 KATY Trail Tulsa Rails to Trails Conservancy US Archived from the original on October 1 2019 Retrieved October 1 2019 a b c Missouri Kansas Texas Lines Condensed Time Tables Tables 1 2 3 4 Official Guide of the Railways National Railway Publication Company 86 7 December 1953 Missouri Kansas Texas Lines Condensed Time Tables Tables 2 4 Official Guide of the Railways National Railway Publication Company 78 12 May 1946 Missouri Kansas Texas Lines Condensed Time Tables Table 12 Official Guide of the Railways National Railway Publication Company 78 12 May 1946 Personnel Time October 20 1930 Archived from the original on September 30 2007 Retrieved October 25 2013 Whitman takes over as Katy president Railway Age 169 1 12 July 13 1970 Bibliography edit Katy Railroad Historical Society M K T Katy Frequently Asked Questions Archived June 14 2007 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved February 22 2005 Museum of the American Railroad A Brief History of Railroads in Dallas Retrieved January 20 2008 Katy Railroad Historical Society Katy Railroad Passenger Service Archived September 13 2010 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved January 20 2008 Kendrick John William 1917 A Report Upon the Missouri Kansas amp Texas Railway System Chicago Retrieved October 25 2013 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link The Opening of the Great Southwest A Brief History of the Origin and Development of the Missouri Kansas Texas Railroad Better Known as The Katy Published May 1970 by the M K T R R Co Miss Katy in the Lone Star State Steve Allen Goen 2006 The Katy Railroad and the Last Frontier V V Masterson 1952Further reading editTriplet William S 2000 Ferrell Robert H ed A Youth in the Meuse Argonne Columbia Mo University of Missouri Press pp 13 265 ISBN 0 8262 1290 5 LCCN 00029921 OCLC 43707198 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Missouri Kansas Texas Railroad Katy Railroad Historical Society Map of the Missouri Kansas and Texas Railway published 1877 hosted by the Portal to Texas History The M in the MKT A detailed history of the MKT in Missouri MKT locomotive roster at edisaurus com FallenFlags org s Katy page with links to hundreds of photos of MKT locomotives and a humorous story about a Conrail locomotive leased by the Katy Texas Special car restoration at the Houston Railroad Museum Construction and Mergers that Formed M K T Oklahoma Digital Maps Digital Collections of Oklahoma and Indian Territory MKT Missouri Kansas Texas Katy Railroad Time Tables published in 1946 hosted by Texas General Land Office Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Missouri Kansas Texas Railroad amp oldid 1193040608, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.