The Fort Worth and Denver City'sColorado Special rolls through theTexas Panhandle, 1929. | |
| Overview | |
|---|---|
| Headquarters | Fort Worth, Texas |
| Reporting mark | FWD |
| Locale | Texas |
| Dates of operation | 1881–1982 |
| Successor | Burlington Northern Railroad |
| Technical | |
| Track gauge | 4 ft 8+1⁄2 in (1,435 mm)standard gauge |
TheFort Worth and Denver Railway (reporting markFWD), nicknamed "the Denver Road," was aclass IAmerican railroad company that operated in the northern part ofTexas from 1881 to 1982, and had a profound influence on the early settlement and economic development of the region.
The Fort Worth and Denver City Railway Company (FW&DC) was chartered by the Texas Legislature on May 26, 1873. On August 7, 1951, the company changed its name to the Fort Worth and Denver Railway Company (FW&D).[1]
Themain line of the railroad ran fromFort Worth throughWichita Falls,Childress,Amarillo, andDalhart, toTexline, where it connected with the rails of parent companyColorado and Southern Railway, both of which became subsidiaries of theBurlington Route in 1908.
At the end of 1970, FW&D operated 1,201 mi (1,933 km) of road on 1,577 mi (2,538 km) of track; that year it reported 1493 million ton-miles of revenue freight. (Those totals may or may not include the formerBurlington-Rock Island Railroad.) In 1980, operated mileage had dropped to 1181, but freight was 7732 million ton-miles.
ThePanic of 1873 delayed the start of construction until 1881, whenGrenville M. Dodge became interested in the project. As chief engineer for theUnion Pacific Railroad, Dodge had played a large part in the construction of thefirst transcontinental railroad. Dodge organized the Texas and Colorado Railway Improvement Company in 1881 to build and equip the FW&DC in return for $20,000 in stock and $20,000 in bonds for each mile of track laid. In the same year, the FW&DC and theDenver and New Orleans Railroad Company, organized inColorado, agreed to connect their systems at theTexas-New Mexico border. The FW&DC received no state subsidy other than the right-of-way easements to cross state-owned lands totaling 2,162 acres (8.75 km2).[1]
Construction began at Hodge Junction, just north of Fort Worth, on November 27, 1881, and by September 1882, Dodge had completed 110 mi (180 km) of track to Wichita Falls, Texas. By 1885, the line reachedHarrold;[2] by 1886,Chillicothe; by 1887,Clarendon andAmarillo;[3] and by 1888,Texline on the New Mexico border. Continuing into the New Mexico Territory, the FW&DC finally linked with the D&NO where therailheads met at Union Park, near present-dayFolsom, New Mexico, 528 mi (850 km) from Fort Worth, on March 14, 1888.[1]
Service between Fort Worth and Denver began on April 1, 1888. In 1895, Dodge became president of the company, one of several railroads in which he held a financial interest.[4]
In 1899, the FW&DC was acquired by theColorado and Southern Railway, successor to the D&NO. The C&S itself was bought by theChicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad in 1908, but the three companies continued to operate as separate legal entities. In part, this separation was due to Texas law, which required all railroads operating in the state to have their headquarters in Texas. This had the effect of requiring all operating railroads in Texas to be wholly owned, even if independent companies of the regional or national roads.[5]

The FW&DC was the first rail line to penetrate the northwest part of Texas, which contributed greatly to the growth of Texas cities such as Wichita Falls, Childress, Amarillo, andDalhart. In addition, the railroad actively promoted settlement of the rural areas it served, providing free seeds, trees, and tree seedlings to farmers and ranchers to promote cotton- and wheat-growing, as well as erosion prevention.[1]
In the first four decades of the 20th century, the FW&DC built or acquired a number of feeder lines in its territory, so that by 1940, the Burlington-owned system operated 1,031 mi (1,659 km) of main track in Texas in addition to theBurlington-Rock Island Railroad.[6]
The Fort Worth and Denver City leased the Fort Worth and Denver South Plains (completed in 1928, 206 mi (332 km) from Estelline toPlainview and Lubbock; the Fort Worth and Denver Northern (completed in 1932, 110 mi (180 km) from Childress toPampa); and the Fort Worth and Denver Terminal (providing access to railyards and terminals in Fort Worth).[1] In reality, all three lines were projects of the parent company from the outset.
Several feeder lines operated by the Wichita Valley Railway Company (another subsidiary of the Colorado and Southern) connected with the FW&DC at Wichita Falls, including the Wichita Valley Railway (Wichita Falls to Seymour), the Wichita Valley Railroad (Seymour to Stamford), the Abilene and Northern (Stamford toAbilene, Texas), the Stamford & Northwestern (Stamford to Spur), and the Wichita Falls and Oklahoma Railway (Wichita Falls to Byers andWaurika, Oklahoma). In 1952, the Wichita Valley and its subsidiaries were merged into the Fort Worth and Denver Railway.[1]
In 1925, the FW&DC had extended service from Fort Worth toDallas by acquiring trackage rights over theRock Island Railroad between those cities. At Dallas, FW&DC trains connected with theBurlington-Rock Island Railroad for through service toHouston.
The premier passenger train of the FW&DC was the streamlinedTexas Zephyr (trains #1 and 2), which operated between Dallas and Denver from August 22, 1940, to September 11, 1967. Other passenger trains included theGulf Coast Special (train #7, Denver and Dallas), theColorado Special (train #8, Dallas and Denver), and theSam Houston Zephyr (trains #3 and 4 -Ft. Worth - Dallas - Teague - Houston),Twin Star Rocket (trains #507 and 508) as well as motorcars over the South Plains line between Childress and Lubbock and over the Wichita Valley between Wichita Falls and Abilene.[7]


At the railroad's peak in 1944, during theWorld War II economic boom, theTexas Railroad Commission reported that the FW&DC earned $12,132,515 in freight revenue, $5,839,399 in passenger revenue, and $1,488,095 in other revenue. However, by 1972, in the face of competition from interstate highway traffic and airlines, the Fort Worth and Denver owned 20 locomotives and 1,520 freight cars, but operated at a loss of $1,743,551.[6]
In 1970, theChicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad, theGreat Northern Railway, and theNorthern Pacific Railroad merged themselves into a single railroad, theBurlington Northern Railroad, but their subsidiaries in Colorado and Texas continued to have a separate legal existence until the Burlington Northern acquired the Fort Worth and Denver Railway by virtue of the merger between BN and the Colorado and Southern Railroad on December 31, 1981. The Fort Worth and Denver Railway's corporate existence came to an end when it was formally merged into Burlington Northern Railroad on December 31, 1982.[6]
The FW&D's former main line through theTexas Panhandle andNorth Texas is now a heavily used route of BN's successor, theBNSF Railway, primarily for coal andintermodal trains between Fort Worth and the western United States.[8] Additionally, theUnion Pacific Railroad has track rights on this line from Fort Worth to Dalhart.[9] No passenger trains have operated in scheduled revenue service on this route, though, since the FW&D ended all passenger service in 1967, before the creation ofAmtrak in 1971.
In 1989, BN abandoned the former Fort Worth and Denver South Plains track between Estelline and Lubbock. In 1993, theTexas Parks and Wildlife Department acquired 64 mi (103 km) of the abandoned right-of-way between Estelline and the town of South Plains to create theCaprock Canyons State Park and Trailway'shike and bike trail.[1] A unique feature is the 528 ft (161 m) Clarity Railroad Tunnel.[10]
TheSaints' Roost Museum in Clarendon houses a restored Fort Worth and Denver Railway depot.[11]
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