Kansas City Public Service Company

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The Kansas City Public Service Company was the most well known name for a series of public transit operators in Kansas City, Missouri, USA,[1] until being sold to the Kansas City Area Transportation Authority in 1969.

Streetcar operations in Kansas City began as horsecar operations in 1869, followed by cable cars and electrification after the 1880s.

There were five operators during the consolidation and post-consolidation period:

  • Metropolitan Street Railway Company (1886-1914)
  • Kansas City Railway Company (1914-1925)
  • Kansas City Public Service Company (1925-1960)
  • Kansas City Transit (1960-1969)

Kansas City acquired 184 PCC streetcars after 1941, but streetcar operations ceased in June 1957. Over the history of streetcar operations, there were 25 streetcar routes in Kansas City operating on 318 miles of track. Twenty-nine of the PCC cars were later acquired by the Toronto Transit Commission. One car, ex-TTC 4752, is now located at the Western Railway Museum in Rio Vista, California. PCC #551 has been restored and is on display at Union Station.

One of the most famous routes, "The Country Club Line", still had rail until the 1990s when it became a hike/bike recreation trail. Other segments of streetcar line could still be found around the city in 2013.

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