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Mobile, Jackson and Kansas City Railroad: Mobile, Jackson and Kansas City Railroad: GM&O: 1890 1909 New Orleans, Mobile and Chicago Railroad: Mobile and Northwestern Railroad: IC: 1870 1889 Louisville, New Orleans and Texas Railway, Mississippi Valley Company: Mobile and Ohio Railroad: GM&O: 1848 1940 Gulf, Mobile and Ohio Railroad: Moss Point ...
The Kansas City, Fort Scott and Memphis Railroad (“KCFS&M”) was a railway system which, at its maximum extent, operated across Kansas, Missouri, Arkansas, Tennessee, Mississippi, Alabama and Oklahoma, a total of over 881 miles (1,418 kilometres). Its predecessor company started in 1865, and another railroad assumed ownership in 1928.
The Mobile, Jackson and Kansas City Railroad Company (MJ&KC) was established in 1890 in Mobile, Alabama. By 1898 the line reached the Pascagoula River at Merrill, Mississippi . The railroad had 50 miles of trackage in 1900 and reached Hattiesburg, Mississippi , via the Bonhomie & Hattiesburg Southern Railroad in 1902.
The Mississippi Valley and Western Railway (MV&W) was the name of three different shortline railroads which operated in the U.S. states of Iowa and Missouri.The first company was formed on January 25, 1871, and existed for just five days before merging with a much larger road (itself the product of the merger with three other railroads).
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St. Louis and San Francisco Railroad: Kansas City, Ozark and Southern Railway: 1908 1935 N/A Kansas City, Peoria and Chicago Railway: CB&Q: 1901 1902 Quincy, Omaha and Kansas City Railroad: Kansas City, Pittsburg and Gulf Railroad: KCS: 1893 1900 Kansas City Southern Railway: Kansas City, Rich Hill and Southern Railroad: KCS: 1887 1890
The Yazoo and Mississippi Valley was formed by the consolidation of The Yazoo and Mississippi Valley Railroad Company, a corporation of the same name, hereinafter called The Yazoo and Mississippi Valley Railroad Company (of 1882) and the Louisville, New Orleans & Texas Railway Company, under articles of consolidation, dated October 24, 1892, and filed in the States named as follows ...
Class 1 railroads with intermodal terminals and maritime RoRo ports. In the United States, railroads are designated as Class I, Class II, or Class III, according to size criteria first established by the Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) in 1911, and now governed by the Surface Transportation Board (STB).