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Central Railway of Arkansas: Central Railway of Arkansas: COA 1906 1932 N/A Central Arkansas and Eastern Railroad: SSW: 1901 1937 N/A Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad: RI, ROCK RI 1947 1980 Fordyce and Princeton Railroad, Little Rock and Western Railway, Missouri Pacific Railroad, St. Louis Southwestern Railway, South Central Arkansas ...
Arkansas and Oklahoma Railroad; Arkansas, Louisiana and Mississippi Railroad; Arkansas and Memphis Railway Bridge and Terminal Company; Arkansas Midland Railroad; Arkansas Midland Railroad (1992) Arkansas and Missouri Railroad; Arkansas Southern Railroad; Arkansas Western Railway; Augusta Railroad
This is a map of the Arkansas Midland Railroad as of 2009, with trackage rights in purple, affiliated companies in pink, and other railroads in gray (Class I railroads in orange). Email me if you would like a copy of the GIS data I created (modified from Bureau of Transportation Statistics North American Transportation Atlas Data) or if you see ...
Railroad AAR rep. mark Arkansas Southern Railroad: ARS Blackwell Northern Gateway Railroad: BNG Farmrail: FMRC Kiamichi Railroad: KRR Northwestern Oklahoma Railroad: NOKR Sand Springs Railway: SS Stillwater Central Railroad: SLWC Texas, Oklahoma and Eastern Railroad: TOE Wichita, Tillman and Jackson Railway: WTJR
The Arkansas, Louisiana and Mississippi Railroad (reporting mark ALM) is a 52.9-mile (85.1 km) short-line railroad in northern Louisiana and southern Arkansas. Opened in 1908, it has undergone several corporate reorganizations , but has remained independent of larger carriers.
The Arkansas and Missouri Railroad (reporting mark AM) is a Class III short-line railroad headquartered in Springdale, Arkansas. The A&M, as it is known, operates 139.5 miles (224.5 km) of line from Fort Smith, Arkansas to Monett, Missouri .
The Arkansas Southern Railroad (reporting mark ARS) is a short-line railroad which started service in October 2005. [1] ARS operates two disconnected lines consisting of Heavener, Oklahoma to Waldron, Arkansas (32 miles), and Ashdown to Nashville, Arkansas (29 miles), plus a switch track at Ashdown, [1] for a total of 63 miles. [2]
In 1889 the railroad constructed another 79.2 miles from Wagoner through Inola, Claremore, Oologah and Lenapah to the Kansas state line south of Coffeyville. [1] [5] A separate company called the Kansas and Arkansas Valley Railroad, controlled by Iron Mountain (also a Missouri Pacific affiliate), built 2.41 miles of trackage in Kansas. [6]