The Chicago, Kansas, and Western Railroad (CK&W) was formed by combining the charters of ten smaller railroads on May 31, 1886.
At this time, the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railroad and the Missouri Pacific Railroad were stiffly competing to build lines in new territory. While this competition was going on, the Chicago, Kansas, and Western Railroad built many disconnected lines all over Kansas. Then, it leased them to one of the two competitors.
This railroad sometimes had competitors playing the same game and racing to get to certain destinations. All through 1886, construction crews for the CK&W and the Denver, Memphis & Atlantic Railroad, a Missouri Pacific subsidiary, raced one another westward through Chautauqua County, each vying to beat the other to the Cowley County line. When the CK&W failed to reach Cedar Vale and the county line first, the company had little reason to share the same territory with the Missouri Pacific Railroad and quit building after the line was operated by the Santa Fe Railroad as the Cedar Vale branch, with most of the traffic coming from the cattle town of Elgin, Kansas, near the Oklahoma state line.
The Chicago, Kansas, and Western Railroad continued until it was sold to the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway in April 1901.
An old stone arch bridge continues to stand over a branch of the Caney River along Road 11 near Elgin, Kansas, in Chautauqua County.
Compiled and edited by Kathy Weiser/Legends of Kansas, updated November 2023.
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