On January 1, 1994, KCS acquired 1,197-mile MidSouth Rail Corp., a regional railroad composed of ex-ICG lines extending from Shreveport east to Gulfport, Meridian, and other Mississippi points as well as Birmingham, Ala.
During the 1990s the railroad expanded its network with a series of acquisitions, agreements, and marketing alliances to encourage growth in north-south rail traffic after the passage of the North American Free Trade Agreement. Parent company Kansas City Southern Industries now owns all or part of three other railroads, which it markets as a single network. Other railroads in the KCSI family are:
Commodities
Major commodities hauled by Kansas City Southern are coal, petroleum, chemicals, grain and farm products, paper and forest products, and intermodal trailers and containers.
KCS receives an average of five coal trains a day from BNSF and UP, delivering them to power plants across its system.
Chemicals and petroleum from Louisiana and the Texas Gulf Coast are interchanged with other U.S. railroads for consumer markets in the Northeast and Southeast.
Lumber and forest products originate from paper mills in the Southeast. Midwestern grain moves south to feed mills in the South Central U.S. and to Mexico.
KCS shuttles intermodal trains across its east-west “Meridian Speedway,” handing them off to NS at Meridian, Miss. and BNSF at Alliance yard near Fort Worth, Texas. Boxcars of auto parts also ply the corridor between Meridian and Laredo, Texas.
Headquarters:
Kansas City Southern Railway
114 West 11th Street
Kansas City, MO 64105
(816) 983-1303
www.kcsi.com