Railroad Name: | Osage Railway |
Locale: | Oklahoma |
Length: | 16miles |
Start Year: | 1922 |
End Year: | 1953 |
The Osage Railway was incorporated in 1921 to accommodate traffic from the oil fields located in the Osage Nation.[1] The first part of its mainline was constructed in 1922 from a connection with the Midland Valley Railroad at Foraker, Oklahoma, to the town of Shidler, Oklahoma, about 10 miles southwest.[2] [3] The line was independently owned from the Midland Valley, but was jointly operated with the Midland Valley and two other lines as part of the Muskogee Roads.[1] Beginning July 2, 1923 and completing in early 1924, the Osage Railway's trackage was extended northwesterly from Shidler through Webb City to Lyman, Oklahoma, about another 6 miles.[4] [5]
Oil production in the area began to decline in the late 1920s and the start of the Great Depression lowered demand and prices.[6] The railroad managed to survive for a time by prudent management, but the entire line was abandoned in 1953.[1] [2]
The Osage Railway should not be confused with the Osage Railroad (ORR). That company, a unit of Watco, bought a 35-mile-long rail line between Tulsa and Barnsdall, Oklahoma from the Union Pacific (UP) in 1990.[7] That trackage had been built as part of the Midland Valley in 1905.[7] [8] It was included when the Midland Valley was acquired by a subsidiary of the Missouri Pacific Railroad in 1967, and became a UP line when the Missouri Pacific was merged into the UP in 1997.[9] [10] But Watco abandoned the line in 2000,[11] and at least part of the route subsequently became a multi-use rail trail.[11] [12]