Kansas City, Pittsburg and Gulf Railroad explained

Railroad Name:Kansas City, Pittsburg and Gulf Railroad
System Map:1893 Poor's Kansas City, Pittsburg and Gulf Railroad.jpg
Locale:Missouri, Kansas, and Texas
Predecessor Line:Kansas City Suburban Belt Railway
Start Year:1897
End Year:1900
Successor Line:Kansas City Southern Railway
Hq City:Kansas City, Missouri

The Kansas City, Pittsburg and Gulf Railroad was a railway company that began operations in the 1890s and owned a main-line between Kansas City, Missouri, and Port Arthur, Texas. It was led by Arthur Stilwell before being thrown into receivership and eventually being absorbed by the Kansas City Southern Railway in 1900.

Trackage on the KCP&G was complete from Kansas City to Shreveport, Louisiana, as of March 2, 1897. By September 11 of that year, the line ran all the way to Port Arthur, Texas– a town Stilwell essentially created and named after himself.[1] However, the railroad was in financial trouble by 1899. On April 1, 1900, the Kansas City Southern Railway took control of the KCP&G properties after purchasing them at a foreclosure sale in Joplin, Missouri.

The section of the line within the boundaries of Louisiana was chartered as the Kansas City, Shreveport & Gulf Railway Company (KCS&G).[2]

References

  1. Web site: The Completion of the KCP&G – A Centennial History. Lowell G. McManus, The Meridian Speedway. August 19, 2020.
  2. Book: Strouse, L.K. . Interstate Commerce Commission Reports: Reports and Decisions of the Interstate Commerce Commission of the United States. 75 . United States. Interstate Commerce Commission. 275-292 . January 1924. 2021-11-21.