Before 1879, the construction program of the Santa
Fe System had been straight forward. The objective was to build
west and southwest. Little construction was accomplished in Kansas
aside from the main line. The little bit that was accomplished was
to secure eastern terminals, protect the cattle trade, and one short
branch to serve an agricultural area. But in 1879, the Santa Fe
began dropping lines southward from several places on the main line,
building a fortress against invasion of south central Kansas by
other railroads. One of the two principal invaders was the Frisco.
Relations between the Santa Fe and the Frisco were semi-friendly
at that time, and soon blossomed into a partnership that pushed
rails to California. The Santa Fe's real concern was the Kansas
City, Lawrence and Southern Railroad. This active competitor would
eventually become a major part of the Santa Fe System. Its history
was convoluted
During the chill winter of 1858, leading citizens of Leavenworth,
Kansas met and debated and schemed. A railroad was in the offing.
The charter obtained on February 12 outlined a railroad down through
Lawrence to the Neosho River. Once in the valley, it would run northwest
to Fort Riley and southeast to Fort Gibson, head of navigation on
the Arkansas River. It was hoped that this railroad would help establish
economic bonds with the South and that it would link the Cotton
Kingdom to the transcontinental railroad then being projected across
Kansas. The name of this ambitious project was the Leavenworth,
Lawrence and Fort Gibson Railroad. As the weather warmed in 1858,
cities in southern Kansas warmed to the project. Prairie City, just
south of Lawrence, became the corporate headquarters in August.
Prairie City lacked a political and economic base and Lawrence took
the headquarters a year later. However, the developing Civil War
delayed further progress.
Ongoing efforts to acquire part of the Osage Indian lands in southeastern
Kansas finally bore fruit. In the fall of 1865, an agreement was
established with the Indians and the resulting treaty was sent to
Congress for approval. That legislative body procrastinated and
debated. During the wait, squatters moved onto the Indian land and
responded with violence when the railroad tried to remove them.
The Osage Lands problem was further complicated in 1868 when the
railroad negotiated a new treaty with the Indians. Congress settled
into gridlock over whether an Indian nation could make a treaty
with a corporation instead of a sovereign government. Controversy
in government and squatter violence snarled the railroad's claim
to the Osage lands for years.
During the final years of the Civil War, the LL&FG had come under
the control of Senator James Lane, but not without difficulties.
Two boards of directors were elected at the same time. Lane was
president of one set of officers while the old president sat on
the other board. Control of the company was in doubt until another
election placed Lane firmly in place. It was Lane's intent to make
Lawrence into an important city by building railroads in all directions
from that place. By his efforts the Union Pacific, Eastern Division,
(Kansas Pacific) was induced to pass through Lawrence instead of
passing a few miles to the north, and also made Lawrence the junction
of the UP,Eastern Division Leavenworth branch. Since operating rights
could be obtained over the Leavenworth-Lawrence line, the LL&FG
would not need to construct its own line between those places. Senator
lane also obtained a Federal land grant for the LL&FG, but it was
not as good a grant as he had planned. The bill he introduced to
Congress granted ten sections of land for every mile constructed
of a railroad south of Lawrence. The bill also provided for a branch
of that railroad to the western boundary of Kansas. However, Senator
Samuel Pomeroy, who was interested in the Atchison and Topeka Rail
Road, amended the bill. As altered, the Leavenworth-Lawrence-south
railroad obtained a grant only for the southward line. A new provision
of the bill allowed a grant to a separate railroad from Atchison
to Topeka and westward. The amended bill reached President Lincoln's
desk and was signed into law on March 3, 1863. The Atchison and
Topeka added "Santa Fe' to its corporate title on November 24. In
February 1866, the LL&FG won a share of federal lands awarded to
the state for internal improvements. Lane then changed the corporate
name to the more ambitious Leavenworth, Lawrence & Galveston Railroad
on February 24.
In July, the residents of Indian Territory agreed to let one and
only one railroad cross the territory. A few days later, the federal
government designated the LL&G to be one of three contending companies
for the prize. It was only necessary to be the first railroad to
reach the designated spot on the border. This good news, however,
was tempered by tragedy: Political reverses caused Lane's suicide.
The senator had been attempting to induce the Hannibal and St. Joseph
Railroad, an affiliate of the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad,
to cross the Missouri River at Leavenworth. This would route H&StJ
traffic through the UP,Eastern Division's Lawrence junction. Also,
Lawrence would become the logical start of an H&StJ branch to the
south if that company agreed to operate to that point over the UP,ED.
Lane's successors failed to prevent the H&StJ from crossing the
Missouri at Kansas City instead. The H&StJ's backers planned a line
south of that city, leaving Lawrence and the LL&G to the side. The
LL&G sought eastern financing and found a group headed by William
Sturges willing to build the railroad. Sturges, soon after becoming
president, demanded ever larger bond issues from the counties along
the proposed route. At one point, he asked Congress for a land grant
if he built in the direction of Guymas, Mexico. He did not get the
grant, but the local bonds were approved and southward construction
began.
The first locomotive crossed the Kansas River at Lawrence on a
temporary bridge November 1, 1867. Trains had to reach Ottawa by
the end of the year in order for the railroad to receive the bonds.
To meet the deadline, the last few miles into Ottawa were hastily
and poorly built, but the train arrived on time. The railroad was
supposed to receive $300,000 in Douglas County bonds with the completion
of the line this far, but the citizens claimed that the railroad
was not complete. The company had not erected a depot at Lawrence
and the bridge and much of the track within town was only temporary.
Heavy grades had been used and the line was generally poorly constructed,
particularly the last few miles. Citizens filed repeated injunctions
against delivering the bonds. Sturges immediately halted construction
south of Ottawa and dismantled the bridge at Lawrence. A noisy stalemate
existed for almost two years. One of the more notorious incidents
of this period occurred when the county commissioners issued a single
$300,000 bond in the dead of night and delivered it to an LL&G representative
who promptly vanished over the state line. The bond was illegally
issued and had no value. The LL&G had been the first railroad south
of the Kansas River, but the long halt in construction while the
bond issue was settled allowed other railroads to claim the LL&G's
intended territory. The Missouri, Fort Scott and Gulf Railroad,
a creature of the CB&Q, built southwards out of Kansas City. To
the west, the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Rail Road built southwestward.
The LL&G had lost its opportunity on both routes, though at the
time it was thought that the company still had a bright future.
Sturges finally stepped aside and James Joy bought the LL&G. The
long delayed bonds were legitimately delivered to the company soon
afterwards. Joy was one of the earliest railroad empire-builders
in the West. His efforts produced such notable properties as the
Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad and the Hannibal and St.
Joseph, and others. He also controlled the Missouri River, Fort
Scott and Gulf Railroad, the railroad south from Kansas City. The
MRFS&G was having considerable trouble with squatters on its own
Indian lands in southeastern Kansas. Violence and destruction eventually
halted construction. Joy's troubles with the MRFS&G were such that
he purchased the LL&G in June of 1869 and threatened to build it
instead. Problems along the Kansas City railroad faded almost immediately
and the road from Kansas City was built as intended.
Joy did not neglect his new property at Lawrence, however, and
he quickly showed what a professional railroad builder could do.
A ferry for rail cars was quickly established on the Kansas River
at Lawrence. Also, Joy pushed the railhead to Richmond before the
end of 1869. Another Joy road, the Kansas City and Santa Fe Railroad
and Telegraph Company, had been formed March 25 of 1868. Although
stated plans were to serve its namesakes, the line only extended
from Olathe on the MRFS&G to just north of Ottawa on the LL&G. The
line opened for business under an LL&G lease August 21, 1870. Trains
ran into Kansas City over the MRFS&G. The LL&G reached the state
line at Coffeyville September 3, 1871. Only one railroad could continue
south across Indian Territory but both Joy properties had lost the
race to the Missouri, Kansas and Texas Railway. New goals had to
be set. The LL&G turned westward. However, in order to obtain the
necessary charter, Joy had to agree to build a permanent bridge
at Lawrence. This was done and a new LL&G subsidiary obtained a
charter on June 26, 1871, to build westward along the southern boundary
of Kansas. This appropriately named company was the Southern Kansas
Rail Road. It stretched the ten miles between Cherryvale and Independence
by New Year's Day and advanced no further.
Joy's star was setting. His railroads were only loosely associated
and in 1871 Jay Gould snatched the valuable Hannibal and St. Joseph,
isolating the Kansas properties from the rest of the Joy system.
Continued trouble over the Indian lands and the financial panic
of 1873 aided his fall. Irregular dealings on a construction project
precipitated Joy's ousting from the Burlington, along with a number
of lesser figures including H. H. Hunnewell. Joy, Hunnewell, and
the others still controlled the Kansas lines, but the vengeful fellow
exiles immediately removed Joy from these companies. Receivership
began March 10, 1875, and both major Kansas properties were foreclosed
in 1878. Hunnewell retained control. Under the reorganization, the
Leavenworth, Lawrence and Galveston Railroad became the Lawrence
and Galveston Railroad March 5, 1879. The companies that had been
operated by the LL&G; the Southern Kansas and the Kansas City and
Santa Fe; consolidated March 29 with the L&G. The result was called
the Kansas City, Lawrence and Southern Railroad. The troublesome
Indian lands and government land grant were voluntarily surrendered
to the state. Congress had never ratified the Osage treaties. The
two parallel railroads from the Kansas River to the Indian Territory
border, although under the same management, remained separate companies
and developed in different directions. The Kansas City, Fort Scott
and Gulf, descendant of the MRFS&G, turned eastward, probing into
Missouri and Arkansas. The Kansas City, Lawrence and Southern faced
westward.
Since the old Southern Kansas company had been eliminated, a new
affiliate would stretch westward from Independence. This child of
February 11, 1879, was named the Southern Kansas and Western Railroad.
The western extension encountered Santa Fe System branches at Winfield
and Wellington in spring of 1880. End of track attained virgin territory
at Harper, September 20. Invasion of the Santa Fe's domain did not
go unchallenged. As work progressed to Harper, Santa Fe-affiliated
Wellington and Western Railroad began constructing along a parallel
path. When citizens of Caldwell, on the state line, attempted to
lure the KCL&S to their burg, the Santa Fe promptly built south
from Wellington to Caldwell. However, the KCL&S had enjoyed a modest
cattle trade at Coffeyville, and was eager to tap the main artery
of this traffic: the Chisholm Trail. The way to do this was to build
a line to where the herds from Texas approached the Kansas border.
Caldwell again tried to woo the company, but was outbid by townships
to the east. A new subsidiary, the Sumner County Railroad, obtained
a charter on April 5, and track reached the state line June 16,
1880. The new town of Hunnewell became the railhead. The rival towns
and railroads fought bitterly for the cattle trade. Rates dropped
from $40 per carload to $10. The KCL&S sped the longhorns to market
at the highest possible speed, even sidetracking passenger trains.
The rate war did neither company any good and managers of both lines
talked peace. Hunnewell decided that the KCFS&G was the more promising
property and resolved to sell the KCL&S. Hunnewell eventually extended
the KCFS&G to Birmingham, Alabama. It became part of the Frisco.
The Santa Fe's affiliated Kansas City, Topeka and Western Railroad
ran between Kansas City and Topeka via Lawrence. The subsidiary
and the parent company issued new stock in the amount of existing
KCL&S securities. The two companies then traded the new stock. Then
the KCT&W traded the Santa Fe stock for KCL&S securities. This deal,
transacted on December 15, 1880, placed the KCL&S under control
of the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Rail Road through the KCT&W.
The next day, the KCL&S and its two subsidiaries -- the Southern
Kansas and Western and the Sumner County -- combined as the Kansas
City, Lawrence and Southern Kansas Railroad.
Santa Fe control ended the rate war and halted construction on
the Wellington and Western. Operating personnel, however, remained
rivals for years. Within months, the KCL&SK began to collect affiliates,
the first being the battered remnant of an old rival of the Santa
Fe. Dating back to February 4, 1870, the Kansas City, Burlington
and Santa Fe Railway had once dreamed of connecting its namesakes
but by 1878 had only stretched the forty miles between Burlington,
Kansas, and a KCL&S connection just south of Ottawa. A subsidiary,
the Kansas City, Burlington and South-Western Railroad planned to
complete the project. Despite much promotion and effort, the company
did not gain the public support that the Santa Fe, the Frisco, and
the KCL&S won. As those companies claimed the South-Western's projected
territory, the KCB&S-W and the parent company entered receivership.
The KCB&SF was purchased by Alden Speare in January of 1881. It
was briefly operated as the Ottawa and Burlington Railroad before
being leased by the KCL&SK in April. Ownership soon followed. Nearby,
the Santa Fe was displeased with the KCL&SK's entrance to Kansas
City, which ran over the KCFS&G, a non-Santa Fe company, east of
Olathe. Rumors circulated that the Ottawa-Olathe line would be abandoned
in favor of an all-Santa Fe route via existing track through Lawrence.
That route was roundabout, so the Santa Fe made other plans. On
the first of June, 1882, a connection opened between Olathe and
Holliday on the Santa Fe's line into Kansas City. The June 18, 1881-created
Kansas City and Olathe Railroad built the connection. The Kansas
City, Lawrence and Southern Kansas Railroad and its two small companions
merged July 16, 1883, as the Southern Kansas Railway. The new company
quickly began accumulating affiliates. Very little is known about
the colorfully-named Nebraska, Topeka, Iola and Memphis Railroad,
which opened sixteen miles between Girard and Walnut in May of 1883.
It had been around since June 17, 1881, in un-constructed form and
may have been a planned extension of a Frisco branch from Joplin,
Missouri. The company's independence lasted only until New Year's
Day of 1884, when it was leased by the Southern Kansas. Foreclosure
came three weeks later, and the company emerged February 6 as the
Crawford County Railroad. On the fifteenth, the company was consolidated
into the Kansas Southern Railway. The Kansas Southern began corporate
life as a "Railroad" on June 6, 1883. Operational life between Chanute
and Walnut began under lease to the SK on New Year's, the same day
the NTI&M had been leased. Once the smaller company had been reborn,
it and the Kansas Southern Railroad combined as the Kansas Southern
Railway, allowing the SK to penetrate the coal mining region of
southeastern Kansas. On December 26, 1885, a coal company was formed
under SK ownership. The Cherokee and Pittsburg Coal and Mining Company
was still part of the Santa Fe family over a century later, although
the name had been changed to "Santa Fe Pacific Mining. The "Railway"
also inherited from the "Railroad" an unfinished roadbed between
Independence and Elgin. This line was left unfinished. Also on New
Year's, the SK began operating the Pleasant Hill and De Soto Railroad,
which was a rickety track from near Corlis on the Kansas City, Topeka
and Western to Pleasant Hill, Missouri. This unfortunate line was
owned by the Santa Fe, which compensated the SK for operating losses
on this line. With scant days left in 1884, the line was sold outside
the Santa Fe family without regrets.
A more important line was the Kansas City and Emporia Railroad.
Incorporated December 12, 1880, this line opened under SK lease
the first of February, 1884, and connected its operator at Ottawa
with its owner,the Santa Fe, at Emporia. Out on the western end,
the Harper and Western Railroad came into being July 1. Attica was
connected to Harper in November. Construction continued westward
towards Medicine Lodge and southwestward towards Kiowa. On July
4, Congress authorized the Southern Kansas to build south from Arkansas
City, a point on the Santa Fe but not on the SK, down to Denison
and Fort Worth in Texas. Another line was approved to extend southwestward
towards the Texas Panhandle. This busy year, 1884, had been further
marked by the Southern Kansas Railway and the owning Atchison, Topeka
and Santa Fe Rail Road becoming so interwoven that their financial
statements were combined. Separate operation continued though. True
to precedent, on April 16, 1885, the operating road combined with
the leased roads to form a new company. Thus, the Harper and Western,
the Kansas City and Emporia, and the Southern Kansas Railway became
The Southern Kansas Railway. The new company was subtly designated
by "The" instead of "the." Former Harper and Western lines to Kiowa
and Medicine Lodge were completed in August and January. Further
extensions of these lines were underway. The line south of Arkansas
City had been chosen from among several different routes because
it passed through lands not assigned to any particular Indian tribe.
If any part of Indian Territory were opened to settlement, reasoned
railroad officials, this would be the place. The Southern Kansas
Railway built southwards about forty miles east of the Chisholm
Trail. Coming north to meet the SK was another Santa Fe property,
the Gulf, Colorado and Santa Fe Railway, which had also received
its Congressional permit on July 4, 1884. Track met at Purcell and
the through route to Texas opened on June 12, 1887. Construction
southwestward from Kiowa continued to Texas. Under state law, a
Texas corporation had to own and operate the track in Texas. Therefore
the Southern Kansas Railway of Texas was created in Austin on November
2, 1886. The line from Kiowa, Kansas, to Canadian Texas, opened
September 12, 1887. Two months later, this line was in Miami, and
in another two months, January 15, the track opened to Panhandle
City. Early plans called for the Panhandle line to continue into
the mining region at White Oaks, New Mexico. Another line was to
split off and connect with the Santa Fe's main line to the Pacific
Ocean. However, an agreement was made with the Fort Worth and Denver
City Railway, with which a connection was made at Panhandle City,
whereby the SK of T would not build beyond that place. A traffic
agreement with the FD&DC allowed the SK to dominate cattle shipping
over most of west Texas and east New Mexico. These Texas lines crossed
raw, unsettled lands. The SK hired men to build towns along the
track, which had not been done in comparatively settled Kansas.
Further SK expansion included extending the Girard branch to Frontenac
in June of 1887. The following year, a few further miles to Pittsburg
were added to this line. That accounts for all expansion carried
out under the Southern Kansas name.
During the mid-1880s, the Santa Fe became embroiled in a war of
occupation against the Missouri Pacific Railway. The two systems
took to crossing and re-crossing each other and to racing each other
to enter new territory. Most of the Santa Fe's expansion during
this era was undertaken by the Chicago, Kansas and Western Railroad,
which was formed by combining the charters of ten smaller railroads
on May 31, 1886. This company built many disconnected lines all
over Kansas and leased them to the Santa Fe or to the SK as convenient.
One line connected Chanute on the SK's north-south line with Longton
on the East-west line on the first day of 1887, forming a cutoff.
On the same day, a line opened from Independence to Cedarvale. This
branch crisscrossed an MP line which was paralleling the SK's east-west
line on the south. The right of way as far as Elgin was owned by
the SK and part of the roadbed dated back to the Kansas Southern
Railroad of 1884. A short extension of the Burlington branch to
Gridley in May crossed two MP lines. By August, a twenty-five mile
line from Colony, where the MP crossed the north-south line, extended
to Yates Center, the junction of two MP lines and midway crossed
another MP-controled line. A CK&W line that the SK may have operated
ran from Osage City, on the Santa Fe, to Quenemo. Connected by the
SK to Ottawa, this August 1, 1886, line paralleled an MP line between
Ottawa and Osage City. Another line that the SK may have operated
opened in October 1887. Running from near Benedict on the Chanute-Longton
cutoff, this line crossed the MP three times in the forty miles
to Madison, on a Santa Fe branch from Emporia. The SK itself started
and later aborted a line westward from Medicine Lodge. This line
would have joined a CK&W line headed for Englewood. The last few
miles of the line into Englewood were constructed by the Southern
Kansas and Panhandle Railroad, which had been created July 28, 1886.
Several surveys extended this line into New Mexico, but Englewood
remained the terminal. Oddly this spot was the projected terminal
of the Southern Kansas Rail Road back in 1871. Plans were laid to
extend the SK from Lawrence to Atchison to obtain a better route
to Chicago. However, that plan was abandoned when the Santa Fe built
its own line between Kansas City and Chicago. Further construction
was stifled by failing finances. The Atchison, Topeka and Santa
Fe leased the Southern Kansas May 1, 1888. Separate operation had
ended, but the corporation survived until merger on February 15,
1899.
The gentlemen who had gathered in Leavenworth in 1858 would hardly
have recognized their brainchild thirty years later. It served few
of the intended locations. It even failed to serve Leavenworth.
The name was different. Yet it was a proud enterprise that spun
a web of steel over much of Kansas and stretched down into Indian
Territory right to the border of the Lone Star State, where, by
law, another company had to take over. At the time of lease, only
three of its components were considered of great importance. Between
Holliday and Emporia, the SK was part of the Santa Fe System's main
line. South of Arkansas City was the main to Texas. Also important
were the lines to the southeastern Kansas coal mines. All else was
agricultural branch. Later, the original north-south line would
become the main line to Tulsa, Oklahoma. The very long branch from
Wellington, Kansas, to Panhandle City, Texas, would in 1908 be connected
in New Mexico to the main line to the Pacific, and would itself
become the new main line. The Southern Kansas Railway of Texas would
change its name June 5, 1914, to the Panhandle and Santa Fe Railway.
It would come to control track down to the border of Mexico, and
survived as a corporate entity until June 11, 1965. The lines in
southeastern Kansas would carry the proud title, Southern Kansas
Division, until 1948. In the 1930s, the Santa Fe's bus affiliate
would also bear the Southern Kansas name, but that was an accident.
Long after that had been changed, a joint Santa Fe-Greyhound bus
line between Kansas City and Tulsa, mostly running alongside shining
rails of the old Southern Kansas Railway, would be known as the
Southern Kansas-Greyhound. In the last years of the twentieth century,
much of the former Southern Kansas Railway remains as heavy traffic
main line. However, many of the other lines have either been abandoned
or sold. In the heart of former SK territory, the principal owner
of the property is the South Kansas and Oklahoma Railroad. One might
wish for this company, aside from prosperity, the addition of "-ern"
to the name. It is a heritage of pride.
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