Central Missouri / Missouri River Corridor
Sedalia grew as a railroad junction town
Sedalia's character as a county seat and regional hub comes largely from its 19th-century role as a railroad junction, which explains its street grid, depot, and economic history.
Sedalia grew up around the railroads. A railroad junction is a place where train lines meet. In the 1800s, several lines came together here. That made Sedalia a busy junction town. It also helped Sedalia become the seat (the main government town) and the trade center of Pettis County. You can still see this rail past today. Look at the Katy Depot, the old train station. Look at the rail-trail, a walking path built on an old rail line. Look at the older downtown shops. The town did not grow around a river or a fort. It grew around the train lines and the business they brought. To learn the real settlement and rail story, the State Historical Society of Missouri and the Missouri State Archives are the best places to check. Trust them over local stories or ranking websites.
References
Where this fits: this note belongs to Pettis County. See every local note for the county on its page.