Texas Interurban Railway


The Texas Interurban Railway was an electric interurban railroad that operated from Dallas, Texas, to Terrell and Denton from 1923 to 1932. The Missouri–Kansas–Texas Railroad line was electrified between Dallas and Denton and services were withdrawn after the Dallas Union Trust Company foreclosed.

Services

As part of the contract that created Dallas Power and Light, which first provided electric power in Dallas, the parent company, General Electric, was required to build two interurban systems from Dallas, guaranteed by a bond of $550,000. The line from Dallas to Terrell opened on January 14, 1923.
An interurban service from Dallas to Denton had been proposed in 1906, but it was 1923 before the company Strickland, Calder and Hobson, who were to be become the Texas Interurban Railway Company, began work on the Missouri–Kansas–Texas Railroad branch between Dallas and Denton. After a legal battle with landowners in Dallas, the inaugural trip was made on September 30, 1924. A public service started the next day, costing $1.25 for a one-way ticket and $2.40 for a return. The line had 25 stops, with city termini on branches off the Katy line; in Denton the brick terminal was built at the corner of Ash and McKinney streets. The line was electrified using a catenary with power supplied from three substations. Six passenger cars and one express car provided an hourly service from Denton from 5 am and 6 pm. The average speed was and cars reached a top speed of.
The bus service between Dallas and Denton began offering lower fares from 1925, and though the line to Terrell was profitable, the Denton line was never financially successful. The rail service was withdrawn on March 13, 1932, after the Dallas Union Trust Company foreclosed on the Texas Interurban Railway. The property was auctioned off, the cars transferred to the Dallas Railway and Terminal Company and some were later used as trolleys in Dallas until 1956.