North Missouri Railroad
The North Missouri Railroad was a railway company that operated in the states of Missouri and Iowa in the mid-19th century. Incorporated in 1851, at its peak it owned or leased nearly of track. It was reorganized as the St. Louis, Kansas City and Northern Railway, a forerunner of the Wabash Railroad, in 1872.
History
St. Louis–Ottumwa
The North Missouri Railroad was incorporated on March 3, 1851. Construction commenced in 1854, with the company building westward from St. Louis, Missouri. The first segment, from St. Louis to the east bank of the Missouri River opposite St. Charles, Missouri, opened on August 2, 1855. The railroad was built to a broad gauge. The line reached Macon, Missouri, in 1859, from St. Louis. At Macon, the company interchanged with the standard gauge Hannibal and St. Joseph Railroad.The American Civil War broke out on April 12, 1861. Missouri, a border state, was the site of intense warfare for the next four years. Isaac H. Sturgeon, president of the North Missouri Railroad, required railroad employees to swear a loyalty oath to the Union, and the railroad transported Union soldiers during the war. The railroad was damaged repeatedly during the war the site of several battles, including the Centralia Massacre, in which two dozen unarmed Union soldiers traveling aboard a North Missouri Railroad train were executed by Confederate guerilla force led by William T. Anderson.
Following the conclusion of the American Civil War in 1865, the company resumed expansion. In 1867, the company converted its broad gauge line to standard gauge. Another major effort was the bridging of the Missouri River at St. Charles and eliminating the ferry service there. Begun in 1868, the bridge was opened on May 29, 1871. The company extended its main line from Macon to Coatsville, Missouri, on the Iowa border. This extension opened at the end of 1868.
The North Missouri leased the St. Louis and Cedar Rapids Railway, an Iowa company, in 1868. The company completed a line between Coatsville and Ottumwa, Iowa, in 1870. At Ottumwa they interchanged with the Burlington and Missouri River Railroad, a forerunner of the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad.
The Norfolk and Western Railway, successor to the Wabash, abandoned the northern end of the line between Ottumwa and Moulton, Iowa, in 1982.