Texas Transportation Company (1866–1896)

Texas Transportation Company
Locale Houston area
Dates of operation 18661896
Track gauge 4 ft 8 12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Headquarters Clinton, Texas (now Houston)

The Texas Transportation Company (18661896) was one of two railroads bearing the same name.[1] The Texas Transportation Company gained its charter on 6 September 1866. John Thomas Brady promoted the company and some work was completed, but it did not operate as a railroad in the late-1860s.[1]

Steamboat magnate Charles Morgan purchased the company and its charter in 1876.[1] Dissatisfied with the high cost of transferring his steamship freight to Texas through Galveston, Morgan constructed a seven-mile railroad from Clinton, Texas to the Fifth Ward in Houston. He established Clinton as a railhead on the northern bank of Buffalo Bayou, allowing his steamers to bypass Galveston to through the bay and closer to Houston. His short line railroad was designed to interoperate with every outbound railroad from the Fifth Ward.[2] His company commenced laying tracks with supplies delivered by his own steamship on 21 April 1876 and he started rolling trains in September.[1]

Texas Transportation Company reported total gross profits of $9,000 in 1891 and total gross earnings of $36,000 in 1895. The Texas and New Orleans Railroad acquired the company the next year, and both later operated as divisions of the Southern Pacific system.[1]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Werner, George C. (20 July 2017). "Texas Transportation Company". Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Association. Retrieved 1 July 2018.
  2. Baughman, James P. (1968). Charles Morgan and the Development of Southern Transportation. Nashville: Vanderbilt University Press. pp. 198–200.


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