One of my earliest personal memories is a visit to my grandparents’ house in Bevier, Missouri. My grandfather, William Thomas Vaughn, was pastor of the Baptist Church there. My family had traveled by a Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad steam-powered passenger train, from to Bevier. The tracks were on the same roadbed as the predecessor Hannibal & St. Joseph Railroad, part of the original Pony Express route.
Bevier, at the time, was a bustling coal town, with active coal mines all around the area. I loved hearing the big steam engines pulling the heavy coal trains from the mines through town. This visit to Bevier must have taken place in the spring because I remember my grandmother, Beulah, had just dug up some roots to make fresh sassafras tea for us. Sassafras tea served steaming hot in a china cup with a touch of real cream was a special event the entire family enjoyed.
I can remember several times we would hear a train approaching, and I would run to the sidewalk along the street, to gaze the few blocks toward the railroad tracks to catch a glimpse of the engines chuffing through the intersection. I always enjoyed the noise and drama of the “working” end of the train, and admired the men in the cab of the locomotive who made the train “go.”
Bevier & Southern #109, shown here, was a 2-6-0 Mogul built in December 1900 by the Brooks Locomotive Works for Illinois Central Railroad as their #560. After retirement on Illinois Central, the locomotive was sold to Bevier & Southern in Bevier, Missouri to be their #109. It may have been one of the locomotives I saw working back then. It is now in the Illinois Railroad Museum. Another of the locomotives, #112 is on permanent display in Bevier, and I’ve included a few photos of it below.
The original operator of the Bevier & Southern Railroad was the Kansas & Texas Coal Railway, which was reorganized in May 5, 1898, as the Missouri & Louisiana Railroad. The Missouri & Louisiana divided on September 26, 1914 with the northern portion adopting the name Bevier & Southern, with the slogan “Have Train Will Haul.” During 1915 the company operated 63 miles of track in bringing coal from the many mines along its route to the CB&Q siding in Bevier for shipment to markets all over the Midwest.
Headquartered in Bevier, the railroad had its general offices located near the roundhouse, which sat just below the CB&Q siding. Records indicate that B&S employed over 40 employees at one point with an annual pay roll amounting to $135,000. The railroad was very important to the coal mines all along the line, and it was a primary transportation link for many of the residents of the communities that sprung up around the mines.
Miners would gather at the Bevier roundhouse each morning to catch the 4AM passenger train and ride to work. Schoolchildren would then ride the return train to Bevier so they could go to school. After school, the children would walk down to the train station and wait for the train home. The return trip brought miners home from their day’s work.
The passenger train usually consisted of seven miners’ coaches and coach number 204 for other passengers and the mail. Many people relied on the B&S not only for transportation but also for jobs and to ship coal out that was mined in the Bevier area. The passenger service was discontinued in 1926 after post offices at Ardmore and Keota closed, and the postal contract was canceled.
In 1943 it was necessary to construct additional tracks to serve new pits at Southern mines, and the railroad tried electric locomotives to reduce the cost of operation. The experiment lasted only two years, however, due to the severe grade between Ardmore and the Southern mines. Frequent burnouts of traction motors proved the locomotives were ill-suited for the task, and the electric operation was discontinued.
Over time, as mines depleted their veins of coal and the operations were closed, the railroad was forced to abandon unused sections of the track until it finally reached its final length in 1961 of 9.18 miles, from the CB&Q (now Burlington Northern) siding, adjacent to their yards in Bevier, to Binkley where the last working mine was located.
The B&S went out of business in 1982 after seventy years of operation. Their general offices were moved into coach #204, parked on a siding behind the roundhouse. One of their locomotives, #109, a Brooks 2-6-0 that was originally Illinois Central Railroad #560 is now on display at the Illinois Railway Museum. Another of their engines, Baldwin 2-6-0 #112, is on display at the post office in downtown Bevier.
According to Wikipedia, the free Internet encyclopedia, the railroad was reopened in the late 1990s under the ownership of the Burlington Northern and Santa Fe Railroad, now known as BNSF Railway so it could serve a large coal-fired power plant at the Thomas Hill Reservoir. The new line is approximately 25 miles long and is still in use today.
I was fortunate to make a couple of motor car trips on the abandoned railroad in the mid-1980s, once while the roundhouse was still fully equipped with its steam-powered tool shop, and then again after the equipment was sold to Boone Scenic Railroad to help maintain their steam fleet. On the first trip, the owner arranged to have some of the former employees meet us at the roundhouse to show us around the property, and they later agreed to ride down the line with us in the motorcars.
We had a splendid fall day on that first trip, and we enjoyed the former B&S employees as we ran the two motor cars down the line, listening to their stories about past operations on the line. I made tape recordings of several of the conversations as we toured the grounds and roundhouse, and we also acquired a large number of 35mm photos of the equipment, buildings, roundhouse and scenery. It was a delightful experience, and a day I will always fondly remember.
The roundhouse equipment was subsequently moved to Boone Scenic Railroad as a fine example of a steam-operated repair and maintenance facility from the steam era. It is difficult to imagine the complex web of massive drive belts that operated each of the gigantic drills, saws, and presses, but if you should have the chance to visit Boone Scenic, perhaps you’ll get to experience the thrill of a steam operation, due in part, to the long gone Bevier & Southern Railroad.
Snapshots from the Bevier & Southern Railroad motor car excursions
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February 9, 2009 at 8:19 pm
Raymond Souder
Very interesting. I worked at the strip mine at Bevier in the late 1970s. It was a more modern operation. I now work on construction operating heavy equipment. very nice, thanks.
April 11, 2010 at 3:09 pm
Wendell Burks
There is a headlight for sale on eBay from the Bevier & Southern April 11,2010.
September 9, 2010 at 1:57 pm
Ron King
Saw your article. My family comes from Bevier and I had two uncles that worked for the Bevier and Southern. One was vice president and work in the corporate headquarters (old passenger (?) car) and the other was in charge of roundhouse. Often when we went to Bevier to visit familty we’d go down to the yard to see Uncle Harry and Uncle Grit. I remember in the mid 50’s Uncle Grit trying to get me to take a ride in the cab of one of the steam engines out to the mine. I was to scared to get in the cab! Oh, the mistakes we make…
June 29, 2013 at 8:46 am
Robert W. Arthur
I wonder if you and I were the same age when we didn’t appreciate our steam loco experience. My grandfather and great uncles worked in the DT&I car shops in Jackson, OH and knew all the engineers on the Jackson to Springfield run. My vague recollections of my cab ride was that it was too hot, too dirty, too noisy and too bouncy. Kids!
Bob Arthur
February 27, 2012 at 12:32 pm
The End of a Generation (and some Reese history) | Morrie's Stories
[…] Most of the passengers on the Underwriter continued on to Florence, Nebraska (near present-day Omaha) where they were outfitted with covered wagons and continued on to Utah. The Reese party, however, had spent all they had just to get across the ocean and needed to earn more money in order to purchase their outfits. They stayed in Bevier, Macon County, Missouri. Today, Bevier is a small, sleepy town of 700 people, the coal mines all played out; in earlier days, it was quite the opposite. A recollection of a slightly later time: [When I used to visit my grandparents there,] Bevier… was a bustling coal town, with active coal mines all around the area. I loved hearing the big steam engines pulling the heavy coal trains from the mines through town…. Miners would gather at the Bevier roundhouse each morning to catch the 4 a.m. passenger train and ride to work. [Larry Vaughn, Surviving God's Woodshed.] […]
December 13, 2012 at 9:08 pm
Mike Biondi
*If anyone has access to the old employee records for the Bevier & Southern, I would be very interested. My grandfather worked for the RR sometime after 1940 until he retired in the 70’s.
My family is all from Bevier and I was born in Macon in 1953.
October 22, 2013 at 11:19 am
LINDA VAN HORN
MY grandpa worked for railroad in Bevier at roundhouse. His name was
Ralph Blake. We went every summer to stay with them until school was out.
My brother and I have old cancelled checks of his from roundhouse.
August 26, 2015 at 12:27 pm
John J. Mann
Would you consider putting some of your pictures online? I think it would make a great article.
January 22, 2019 at 9:06 pm
Darin Jacobs
I am not completely certain, but I believe the information above concerning the roundhouse is in error. Most, if not all of the shop equipment, including the original stationary belt line steam engine, lathes, drill press, tooling, lineshaft, and other equipment was purchased by the Boone & Scenic Valley Railroad in Boone, Iowa. Although not yet complete, the equipment is being restored to operating status. Several of the machines are currently being used to keep steam power alive with more to follow as time allows. I was fortunate to use the large Bradford lathe a few weeks ago.
January 19, 2023 at 5:36 pm
Larry E. Vaughn Jr
Thank you for the update. B&S did, indeed, sell the equipment, rather than making the planned transfer of ownership to the museum. We are very grateful that steam is being kept alive for the enjoyment of future generations of railfans and history buffs.