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When Trains Were Important
Narratives from the Georgetown's Yesteryears Book
A special thanks to The Georgetown Heritage
Society and Martha Mitten Allen
for letting the Museum post these wonderful first person stories.
see Foreword and
Preface
"The Katy Railroad"
Berna Sillure Cooke - Interviewer: Rodney K. Kaase
About 1900 the Missouri, Kansas and Texas Railroad, nicknamed
"The Katy" came from St. Louis, Missouri on south through Dallas to Granger. One
section went on to Houston and the other section came by Georgetown, and into
Austin and on to San Antonio. That was our way of transportation, really, until
the automobiles began to come in. There were quite a few trains every day. One
Christmas morning, a friend of mine in Austin was marrying. I went down on the
train the afternoon before, from Georgetown to Austin, and spent the night with
her for I was to be her Maid of Honor. The wedding was at noon the next day, and
I caught the 1:00 o'clock train that was coming to Georgetown, and came on in
here and finished Christmas day with my family.
This same time, 1918-19, about the same age I was when I went to the wedding, we
would have a date and go down to Austin for dinner and a picture show. There was
a train that came through along about five in the afternoon, and we'd go down
then, in time to have our dinner and a show, then we'd catch the 12:00 o'clock
train that came back through from San Antonio. It was only about a thirty-five
or forty minute trip then. It was very convenient. The station in Georgetown was
on the MKT track beyond the University, between 7th and 8th streets. It was a
long building with a waiting room, a good-sized baggage room, and a freight
office at the other end of the building.
When World War I came up, there were trains carrying the soldiers. We would get
word of when the troop trains were coming through and we could hear the whistle
outside of town and we'd get over there as fast as we could in cars, and wave to
the soldiers as they came by. And lots of times the trains had to stop to get
water.
The railroad was the principal way of getting to Dallas or San Antonio, for our
roads were not paved nor in very good condition. Besides, many people were still
without cars to use at all, or only for business purposes. It was also a quicker
way than a car, because the highways weren't as good then.
In World War II the trains were still used a lot for the transportation of the
soldiers. My husband was working in Dallas, and he would either come home in the
car to see about the farm on the weekends or I would go up on the train. It was
so crowded at that time that I have stood in the aisle nearly all the way from
Georgetown to Dallas many times. And it was fun, really and truly. Everybody was
good natured. We had to keep our suitcase with us, and if it was stiff enough,
you could sit on that. But everybody was laughing and making the best of it, and
if the train stopped in a hurry, we would all jostle against one another.
Southwestern students weren't supposed to but they used to walk down the tracks
and across the trestle, where the train crossed the San Gabriel River, north of
town. They would go down to the river and picnic. There was one girl killed,
caught on the trestle. You could feel the train vibrations to know it was
coming, but the trains were getting up speed and were nearer than you thought.
STUDENTS
CAME BY RAIL
George Bryan Dawson III: Michael Seay, Interviewer
When I started to school, there were no cars. All the students walked to school,
or rode horses or drove in buggies. All the students at Southwestern came by
rail. There was three livery stables that housed horses, and they kept teams
that they would rent buggies to anybody. And they would meet the train. When the
students came, they would unload the trunks, and they'd haul them up there on
these dray lines with horses and leave them at Southwestern.
THE JIMMYTOWN SPECIAL
Tillman Barron: Mark Graves, Interviewer
Before [the KATY railroad came to Georgetown] there
was only one way in and out of Georgetown. Long years ago, they built this
little I. and G. N. branch on the west side of town. They called it the
Jimmytown Special. That was the only way in and out of Georgetown and all the
drummers and passengers would come over here and depart for Round Rock where
they made connections with the main line. They'd run about four or five trains a
day, just in and out. The train would come in with two passenger coaches and a
baggage coach. Of course, back in those days, they also hauled the freight cars
on it. That was the way in and out of Georgetown then.
TRAIN STATIONS
Tommye B. Jefferson: Mike Lade, Interviewer
To ride on the train was very interesting, didn't get to make too many trips,
but we made some. We had two. We had the IGN and the KATY tracks, the MK and T.
The MK and T was on the east side of town and the IGN was just up the street [on
the west side]. It went south, through Round Rock and around through that way.
We would take a walk and go to the KATY station just to watch the train come in
and wave at the people. When the train would stop, they would all get out and if
it was at night, they had their lanterns and they would run up and down the
track and check everything. And in the station we had our ticket agent, the
ticket office. We had seats in there for us to sit. If we missed the train or we
were there early, they had comfortable places. And they had the big old round
belly-like stoves, you know, that they put coal in. It was something that we
didn't have, it was interesting to us, because we didn't have a lot of things to
get involved in, or to go see, to participate in, or whatever. So we would go
over there sometime, walk way over there from down here, way across town to
visit with the train and we'd meet some of the people that would come in or go
out.
"Shipping
Cattle on The Katy"
I. M. Hausenfluke - Interviewer: Robert Zearfoss
We shipped all of our cattle to Fort Worth by rail. The railroad, which is the
Katy, by Southwestern University, is where we shipped all our cattle . . . .
Back in the 20's there was very little trucking. The moving of livestock was all
together by driving. When my grandma shipped her cattle, we would bring all that
cattle together; [from] all of the park land, all of the North Gabriel to the
Weir Road and there back to this road [airport road] to the Andice Road. Before
the flood she had her headquarters at the old Glasscock house, west of where
McDonald's is. [After the flood] She moved to her new home where Southwestern
Plaza is.
[Moving the cattle to the rail pens] Where the rivers run together is where we
always crossed the creek in the park. It was a real straight up-shoot at that
bank and you would hit the park road. You would work the cattle up it. You
worked them down to the first street and then you went around the vacant land
which used to be the sewer farm to the railroad where Mr. Shell lived. The
stockyards were close to Southwestern. It was on a spur where Exxon is. Those
pens would hold 1,000 head of cattle. They had a loading chute and would push
that car up to that chute and open the side door. A cattle car was slatted so
the heat would get out. The railroad man would seal it and put a bar across it
and then they would pull up another car. We loaded them about 7:00 or 8:00 p.m.
because the train would pick them up at 10:00 p.m. We would load about ten or
fifteen cars. Cattle cars then held about forty calves or twenty grown cows.
also view
The Bartlett-Florence Railroad
later named
The Bartlett-Western Railroad
Also called
“Bull Frog” and “Big Windy”
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