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The stockyards were established in 1871 on the Kansas side of the Kansas River along the Kansas Pacific and Missouri Pacific railroad tracks. In 1878 it expanded from its original 13 acres (53,000 m 2 ) to 55, added loading docks on both the Kansas and Missouri Pacific tracks, new sheds for hogs and sheep, and developed one of the largest horse ...
Name Image Built Listed Location County Type Amelia Park Bridge: 1914 2004-01-21 Antelope: Marion: Concrete Bridge Asylum Bridge: 1905 1990-01-04 Osawatomie
Kansas City, Fort Scott and Memphis Railway: Kansas City, Fort Scott and Memphis Railway: SLSF: 1901 1928 St. Louis – San Francisco Railway: Kansas City, Fort Scott and Springfield Railroad: SLSF: 1888 1888 Kansas City, Fort Scott and Memphis Railroad: Kansas City, Lawrence and Southern Railroad: ATSF: 1879 1880 Kansas City, Lawrence and ...
Bridges in Kansas City, Kansas (23 P) B. Bridges on the National Register of Historic Places in Kansas (2 C, 22 P) R. Railroad bridges in Kansas (1 C, 8 P)
Kansas City Union Station. The railway was created after a series of floods in 1903, 1904, and 1908 inundated the West Bottoms each time and temporarily closed the Union Depot there. The 12 original trunk railways of the city at the time joined to build the new Kansas City Union Station and to coordinate the bridges and switches that serve the ...
The Port of Kansas City Kansas City, the second-largest rail hub and third-largest trucking hub in the country, is on marine highway M-70, which extends as far as Pittsburgh and intersects M-55 at St. Louis, allowing shipping to New Orleans , Chicago , Minneapolis and connections to major cities all over the eastern United States. [ 1 ]
Moline is a city in Elk County, Kansas, United States. [1] As of the 2020 census, the population of the city was 345. [4] Moline is located in south central Elk County at the intersection of U.S. Highway 160 and K-99. Moline is known for being the home of Kansas' oldest swinging (suspension-type) bridge, built in 1904. [5]
The Armour-Swift-Burlington (ASB) Bridge, also known as the North Kansas City Bridge and the LRC Bridge, is a rail crossing over the Missouri River in Kansas City, Missouri, that formerly also had an upper deck for automobile traffic.