- Source: St. Joseph and Savannah Interurban Railway
- St. Joseph and Savannah Interurban Railway
- List of defunct consumer brands
- List of Missouri railroads
- List of interurban railways in North America
- Kansas City, Clay County and St. Joseph Railway
- List of unused railways
- List of streetcar systems in the United States
- East Troy Electric Railroad
- Timeline of transportation technology
- List of rail accidents (1910–1919)
The St. Joseph and Savannah Interurban Railway was a 13-mile interurban electric railway that ran between St. Joseph, Missouri, and Savannah, Missouri, from 1910 to 1939.
Today, a tiny one-room waiting station still stands in a mostly residential neighborhood in Savannah.
History
It was operated by the St. Joseph Railway, Light, Heat and Power Company, which operated the trolley system in St. Joseph. It began, on July 5, 1910, to compete with the Chicago Great Western Railroad. It consisted of three wooden cars and headed north on the streetcar line down St. Joseph Avenue and terminated four blocks west of the square in Savannah.
The line connected to the Kansas City, Clay County and St. Joseph Railway.
See also
List of interurbans
References
External links
Interurbanroad.com history