MO Missouri Porch

Central Missouri / Missouri River Corridor

Moberly, the 'Magic City,' grew up on the railroad

Moberly's nickname and rapid early growth come directly from its role as a railroad town, which explains the city's street grid, old shops, and identity today.

Moberly is often called the “Magic City.” That nickname comes from how fast the town grew after the railroad arrived in the years right after the Civil War. Moberly became an important rail junction. It was also a “shops town,” meaning a place where train cars and engines were built and repaired. Those railroad jobs brought in workers and built much of the early city. This history helps explain a few things you can still see today. It shows why the city sits where the rail lines meet. It explains where the old industrial and shop areas are. And it explains why Moberly grew larger than Huntsville, the older county seat. Treat the “Magic City” nickname, the exact dates, and the railroad-company names as facts to confirm, not just repeat. For the real story, check with the State Historical Society of Missouri or the Missouri State Archives. Have any office confirm any “largest” or “first” claim before you trust it.

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Where this fits: this note belongs to Randolph County. See every local note for the county on its page.

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