Texas Porch

Railroad history

The Cotton Belt line helps explain Smith County's old rail map

Smith County's railroads started small and local. The Handbook of Texas says the line that became the St. Louis Southwestern Railway, the Cotton Belt, began here in the 1870s as the Tyler Tap Railroad, eventually crossing the county from east to northwest.

It had company. The same entry notes the International and Great Northern reaching Tyler in the 1870s and crossing the county's southeast corner. By 1880 Smith County held more than 100 miles of track, a fast build-out for the time.

That rail map is part of why Tyler grew into a regional hub instead of a quiet county seat. Tracks tied local farms, timber, and later oil to markets well beyond East Texas, and the routes still shape where the towns and old depots sit today.

Source to confirm: Handbook of Texas - Smith County

More Smith County notes