Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Arkansas and Ozarks Railway: Missouri Central Railroad: Missouri Central Railway: RI: 1871 1881 Central Railway of Missouri: Missouri–Illinois Railroad: MI MP: 1921 1978 Missouri Pacific Railroad: Missouri and Illinois Bridge and Belt Railroad: CB&Q: 1904 1966 Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad: Missouri, Iowa and Nebraska Railway: CB&Q ...
Decatur to St.Louis–13th District (or St.Louis to Decatur–13th District)- a former Wabash Railroad rail line [44] Decatur–Outer Depot–10th District- a former Wabash Railroad rail line [44] Keokuk Branch–11th District (or Keokuk Branch)- a former Wabash Railroad rail line [44] Outer Depot-Moberly-12th District
Railway stations in Missouri at university and college campuses (4 P) This page was last edited on 24 December 2023, at 10:55 (UTC). Text ...
The city of Moberly was born of a railroad auction on September 27, 1866. The county incorporated the town in 1868 with a board of trustees. The same year that the Wabash Railroad, St. Louis & Pacific Railway shops were finished in Moberly, [11] [12] the city entered a charter into state record and incorporated. [13]
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 ...
Eighteen train cars fell into the river resulting in five deaths. At 5:30pm on December 8, 1881, [1] the bridge failed again during a train crossing resulting in freight cars falling into the river. An engineer, John Kirksby of Moberly, Missouri, [1] died along with thirty-one cattle
The railroad runs from Columbia to the Norfolk Southern Railway mainline in Centralia, using the former Columbia Branch of the Wabash Railroad. Formerly, the line carried passengers to the Wabash Railroad Station and Freight House in Downtown Columbia, Missouri. The line was created by the Boone County and Jefferson City Railroad Company ...
The North Missouri Railroad entered bankruptcy in 1871 and was sold to Morris Ketchum Jesup, who reorganized it as the St. Louis, Kansas City and Northern Railway in 1872. [19] At the time of reorganization the company owned 353 miles (568 km) of track and leased a further 143 miles (230 km).