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The line on which the Belton, Grandview & Kansas City Railroad runs has a long history, stretching back over 100 years to the late 1800's when railroads were branching out in all directions. There were actually 2 railroads that ran through Belton back at the turn of the last century. The Kansas City, Clinton & Springfield (KCCS) affectionately known as the "Leaky Roof" and the Kansas City, Osceola & Southern (KCO&S) also known as "The Blair Line". The Belton Grandview & Kansas City runs on a short remnant of the KCO&S. The only part of the KCCS that still exists in Belton is the track to the south west of our main line, closest to the fire station. That track was once the main line of the KCCS, but that short section is all that remains. The Kansas City, Clinton & Springfield Railroad Co. was begun in 1884 as a direct route from Kansas City to Springfield via Henry county. It incorporated the Atchison Topeka & Santa Fe Railroad's Peasant Hill & De Soto branch after a deal was stuck between the AT&SF and the Kansas City Fort Scott & Gulf Railroad, which was the company behind the KCCS. The Fort Scott ran south from Kansas city to Arcadia near Pittsburgh KS before turning east to Springfield, the KCCS was intended to be a more direct route and would meet up with the Fort Scott main line in Ash Grove. The KCCS line ran east from Olathe, KS, through Belton, then over through Raymore. From there it went south to Harrisonville, on to Clinton , Lowry City, Osceola and Humansville. To reach Kansas City KCCS trains would use the Fort Scott line from Olathe into Kansas City where it came into the Kansas City Union Depot in the West Bottoms. The village of Urich relocated several miles south of its former location so that it could be on the new rail line when it was completed in 1885. The nick name "Leaky Roof" came from the old and somewhat run down freight cars the KCCS used. One of their major customers was the W. S. Dicky Clay Company in Deepwater. The company shipped clay tiles on KCCS which were impervious to the elements, and because of this, just about any old freight car would do. According to legend the superintendent of the White Swan Flour Mill in Clinton, which shipped flower over the KCCS, looked out over their yards and told his men not to ship any flour that day because of all the leaky roofs. In 1891 the Kansas City, Osceola & Southern was begun when the defunct Kansas City & Southern Railway which was formed in 1880 and not to be confused with today's KCS, was reorganized as the KCO&S. The KC&S had built lines from North Osceola through Clinton, on to East Lynne and then up to Knoche Junction in Kansas City which the Kansas City, Osceola & Southern then took over. In 1897 the KCO&S signed an agreement with the St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad, commonly know as the "Frisco", which called for the KCO&S to build its line further on, constructing a bridge across the Osage River and extending its line into Osceola and on to Bolivar.
By 1932 passenger service on the Leaky Roof had all but come to an end, with only 3 mixed trains a week running over that line. Even the High Line was only being serviced by a gas-electric motor car rather than a full train by this time. In 1934 the Frisco applied to the Interstate Commerce Commission to abandon much of the former KCCS. Ironically the Leaky Roof had one last burst of activity. In mid 1934 just after the line was officially abandoned the Missouri State Highway Department ordered a large number of car loads of stone and gravel for the widening of what is now 7 Highway. The Frisco even had to put extra crews on to handle the traffic. But by mid 1935, although there was a great deal of controversy, the Leaky Roof was no more. The tracks from Clinton to Belton were removed, and only small sections of the KCCS remained as part of the Blair Line and as industrial trackage in Harrisonville and other locations. The High Line continued to operate through the middle part of the 20th century. The last passenger service was in 1954 when regular service ended, however caboose passenger service lasted until the end of all passenger trains on the Frisco in 1967. In 1979 the death knell of the Blair Line was sounded with the completion of Truman Dam. There was not enough revenue to justify building bridges over the soon to be flooded areas, and so the line was abandoned south from East Lynne. In 1980 the Frisco was acquired by the Burlington Northern Railroad which continued to operate the Blair Line as the Grandview Branch until 1986 when it was sold off by the BN. Today the Belton Grandview & Kansas City Railroad operates our excursions between the Belton Depot at mile post 28.2 and the end of our line at Cambridge Road along side US 71. The remainder of the track between there and East Lynne was abandoned and sold due to the extremely high costs of maintaining the railroad track which had seen little maintenance in the years before the BN gave it up. BG&KC also owns the track north from Belton to the north side of 155th street. Although this track is not open for passenger operations. From 155th street the track now belongs to the Kansas City Southern which services a few industries on the spur off its main line through Grandview. Information for this article was found though the excellent resources of the Henry County Library and the Truman Area Community Network, and Marty T. Myers. More information about the St. Louis - San Francisco Railroad can be found at the Springfield-Greene County Library in their online exhibit"A look back at the Saint Louis-San Francisco Railway" and at the online forums of Frisco.Org |
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Belton Grandview and Kansas City Railroad Co. (816) 331-0630 [Home] |
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