Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The station was one of two train stations serving Columbia in the 20th century, the other being the Wabash Railroad Station and Freight House constructed the same year. [2] [3] The building is the terminus of the MKT Trail, a rails-to-trails project that was built on the former spur of the railroad. Having housed a popular local restaurant ...
The Columbia Terminal Railroad (reporting mark CT) [1] is a local, short-line, freight railroad in Boone County, Missouri, owned by and serving the city of Columbia, Missouri. The railroad runs from Columbia to the Norfolk Southern Railway mainline in Centralia , using the former Columbia Branch of the Wabash Railroad .
Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, Chicago and St. Louis Railroad: PRR: 1917 1921 Pennsylvania Railroad: Platte City and Fort Des Moines Railroad: RI: 1864 1867 Leavenworth and Des Moines Railway: Platte Country Railroad: CB&Q: 1863 1864 Atchison and St. Joseph Railroad, Weston and Atchison Railroad: Platte County Railroad: CB&Q: 1853 1863 Platte Country ...
The Terminal Railroad Association is owned by [2] BNSF Railway, Canadian National Railway (Illinois Central Railroad until 1999), CSX Transportation, Norfolk Southern Railway, and Union Pacific Railroad. All own one-seventh of the railroad except UP, which owns three-sevenths. The Terminal Railroad also connects with the Canadian Pacific Kansas ...
Luther Yard is a rail yard operated by the Norfolk Southern Railway in St. Louis, Missouri. It is located at 333 East Carrie Avenue, several miles north of downtown. The yard was built in 1890 by the Wabash Railroad, a precursor line to the Norfolk Southern, which used it as its central classification yard. [1]
The St. Louis Southwestern Railway (reporting mark SSW), known by its nickname of "The Cotton Belt Route" or simply Cotton Belt, was a U.S. Class I railroad that operated between St. Louis and various points in the states of Arkansas and Texas from 1891 to 1992. The railroad began building the five-story freight depot in 1911 to help move freight.
The original station building in 2017. The brick station was designed for the Missouri Pacific Railroad by the railroad's Chief Engineer E. M. Tucker and built in 1923. [2] The wooden depot built in 1865 which it replaced was moved and became the Missouri Pacific freight station.
St. Louis, Iron Mountain and Southern Railroad Depot is a historic train station located at Fredericktown, Madison County, Missouri. It was built in 1869 and expanded about 1908 by the St. Louis, Iron Mountain and Southern Railway. It is a one-story, rectangular wood-frame building with a gable roof on short wood piers.