(Redirected from Missouri-Kansas-Texas):''For other meanings of 'MKT' see
MKT (disambiguation)''
The 'Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad' (known as the 'MKT', or 'Katy') began as the Union Pacific Railway, Southern Branch (unrelated to the
Union Pacific Railroad) in
1865. It was the first
railroad to enter
Texas from the north. In
1896 the Katy
crashed two locomotives as a publicity stunt.
Eventually the Katy's core system would grow to link
Kansas City and
St. Louis,
Missouri;
Tulsa and
Oklahoma City,
Oklahoma;
Dallas,
Fort Worth,
Waco,
Temple,
Austin,
San Antonio,
Houston, and
Galveston,
Texas. An additional mainline between Fort Worth and
Salina,
Kansas, was added in the 1980s after the collapse of the
Rock Island Railroad; this line was operated as the
Oklahoma, Kansas and Texas Railroad (OKKT).
The Katy's purchase by the
Missouri Pacific Railroad Company (MoPac)
and the MoPac's owner, the Union Pacific, was approved in
1988. The M-K-T is now part of the
Union Pacific Railroad system. On
December 1 1989, the Katy was formally merged into the MoPac. A large portion of the
Missouri track has been converted into a
Missouri State Park: the
Katy Trail State Park. A 3.5
mi (6
km) long section is being converted into a multi-use trail through downtown Dallas, linking White Rock lake to the American Airlines Center, also called the
Katy Trail.
The former M-K-T rail line (20 miles) which linked Katy to Downtown Houston has been converted; a section between
Loop 610 and Katy, Texas, is part of the
Interstate 10 expansion of the Katy Freeway since
TxDOT purchased the M-K-T right-of-way in 1998, and the M-K-T line east of Loop 610 into
Downtown Houston is currently owned by the City of Houston's Parks and Recreation Department (plans are underway to convert the right-of-way into a bicycle trail).
The
Houston suburb of
Katy, Texas, is named after the railroad's nickname. A
blues song, "
She Caught the Katy" - written by
Taj Mahal and
Yank Rachell - makes mention of the MKT. The song was prominently featured in the
1980 movie ''
The Blues Brothers''. Folk-rocker
Gillian Welch references the lyrics to "She Caught the Katy" in her 2001 song, "Revelator", the title track on her
Time (The Revelator) album.
In July 2005, Union Pacific unveiled a brand new
EMD SD70ACe locomotive,
Union Pacific 1988, in MKT colors as part of a new heritage program.
Company officers

An 1881 advertisement for the line
Presidents of the Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad:
★
Leonor F. Loree, 1926–1928
★
Columbus Haile, 1926–1930
[1]
★
Michael Harrison Cahill, 1930–
1
★
Matthew S. Sloan, 1933–1945
★
William N. Deramus III, 1957–1965
★
John W. Barriger III, 1965–1970
★
Reginald N. Whitman, 1970–1975
★
Harold L. Gastler, 1975–1988
In popular culture
★ The song "
She caught the Katy" popularized in the 1980s by the
Blues Brothers refers to this railroad.
★
President Dwight D. Eisenhower's father (
David Jacob Eisenhower) was an MKT employee working in
Denison, Texas at the time of Ike's birth.
External links
★
Katy Trail State Park
★
Map of the Missouri, Kansas and Texas Railway, published 1877, hosted by the Portal to Texas History
★
Official site of the Katy Railroad Historical Society - Lots of info.
★
Dallas Friends of the Katy Trail
★
The "M" in the MKT - A detailed history of the MKT.
★
Info on the Texas Special.
★
The locomotive roster at "edisaurus.com".
References
★ Katy Railroad Historical Society, ''
M-K-T / Katy Frequently Asked Questions''. Retrieved
February 22 2005.
1. Personnel, , , , Time,