Since we've already posted several of White River Junction Vt. Here's my even closer station - Windsor Mt. Ascutney (just Windsor to the CV) just north of the dividing line between the CV/NECR Rockingham Sub, and the CV/NECR Palmer Sub (former B&M Conn River Main Line).
looking north.
selector This is the E&N Ry station at it's northern terminus in Courtenay, Vancouver Island. The RDC ran until 2012 when service was suspended due to embargoed tracks and bridge structures. Money was arranged, except the Federal portion never seemed to be forthcoming. Then local municipalities got annoyed and withdrew their own offers. It's all in limbo, but I'd say it's moribund...badly so.
This is the E&N Ry station at it's northern terminus in Courtenay, Vancouver Island. The RDC ran until 2012 when service was suspended due to embargoed tracks and bridge structures. Money was arranged, except the Federal portion never seemed to be forthcoming. Then local municipalities got annoyed and withdrew their own offers. It's all in limbo, but I'd say it's moribund...badly so.
Johnny
My hometown station was the Erie Railroad station in Fair Lawn, NJ. I grew up here watching Erie Lackawanna, Conrail, NJ Transit and NS for over 50 years. This past summer the station received a new slate roof and waiting room ceiling / cleanup. The station was built in 1930 and is a registered landmark. My hometown station looks good as new!
Enzoamps A very few miles downriver from Brunswick, MD is Point of Rocks, MD. We passed it driving home from Brunswick. The fine old station there shows up more often than we might think. The near tracks going left are the old main line to Baltimore, while the tracks on the far side head left to Washington DC. Point of Rocks is where they join, and to the right are the tracks towards Cumberland. I always make sure my nose is pressed to the window as we roll through on the Capital Limited.
A very few miles downriver from Brunswick, MD is Point of Rocks, MD. We passed it driving home from Brunswick. The fine old station there shows up more often than we might think. The near tracks going left are the old main line to Baltimore, while the tracks on the far side head left to Washington DC. Point of Rocks is where they join, and to the right are the tracks towards Cumberland. I always make sure my nose is pressed to the window as we roll through on the Capital Limited.
If I remember right, Whippany's on the old Lackawanna. You can tell it's Lackawanna by the way that station's put together, the Lackawanna built to last!
Magnificent shot Becky! And what a coincidence, I was just re-reading Don Ball's "Decade Of The Trains" and there on page 224 is Cleveland Union Terminal and it's Terminal Tower, all 52 stories of it. At it's completion in 1930 (according to Don) it was the tallest structure west of Manhattan.
Whippany, NJ
greg - Philadelphia & Reading / Reading
I gotta go with Cleveland Union Terminal.
Trains, trains, wonderful trains. The more you get, the more you toot!
I should have mentioned this earlier but the site I got the River Edge and Ridgewood station photo spread from is...
www.subwaynut.com
An amazing site, it's apparantly the mans mission to photograph every transit/rail station in North America, and he's well on his way. There's shots from Canada as well, plus a few from Buenos Aires. Well worth a look.
Holy Mackinaw...these are some great looking stations...I'm jealous.
My early childhood was spent in Newark, OH with my father being a Assistant Trainmaster there for the B&O
I currently live in Sykesville - Station as it is today known as Baldwins Station a fine food place.
The former B&P Tower that controlled one end of the PRR's Penn Station in Baltimore was moved out to Sykesville and set up adjacent to the B&O station. The bottom of the tower is now a Post Office, the top of the tower is a meeting room for the community.
Never too old to have a happy childhood!
I grew up in Paramus NJ, which was right in the middle of Erie country, however the Erie Railroad never came through our town. It did, however, seem to hit towns all around us.
Just to the east is the town of River Edge, and here's the station...
http://www.subwaynut.com/njt/river_edge/index.php
And to the west of us was Ridgewood...
http://www.subwaynut.com/njt/ridgewood/index.html
A sentimental favorite of mine is the Tenafly NJ railroad station, a spectacular piece of Gilded Age architechture. Tenafly is my father's home town.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tenafly_(Erie_Railroad_station)
Both River Edge and Ridgewood are active stations for New Jersey Transit rail. The tracks through Tenafly are owned by CSX and are moribund, most likely to be abandoned soon.
My mother's home town is New York City, so she had Grand Central and Pennsylvania Stations, but you all know about those two!
Sacramento Northern Station Yuba City CA
http://users.snowcrest.net/photobob/sn6.jpg
I tried to sell my two cents worth, but no one would give me a plug nickel for it.
I don't have a leg to stand on.
Southern Pacific Station Marysville CA from
https://www.cardcow.com/84118/southern-pacific-depot-marysville-california/
Westetn Pacific Marysville CA around 1975
Image23 by Donald Schmitt, on Flickr
Image12 by Donald Schmitt, on Flickrhttp://users.snowcrest.net/photobob/sn21.jpg
1962 http://users.snowcrest.net/photobob/sn20.jpg
1962 http://users.snowcrest.net/photobob/sn21.jpg
Now an entertainment center. May the trains return!
Brunswick, MD. I don't live there,but it was my favorite place to watch trains growing up.
Here's a (somewhat) interesting idea. How about we start an album about our hometown, (or adopted home town, whatever you identify yourself with), railway station pictures with a brief description, story or just the picture. The place you saw the trains and all the comings and goings in your earlier years. I will start.
Simcoe
The Wabash and the Pere Marquette came through with trackage rights along with of course the Canadian National. I recall steam on all three. Later it was the Norfolk and Western and the Chesapeake and Ohio. Everything you see here is gone, the magnificient station, all the tracks, the whole line abandoned and tore up. The Last train I ever saw through here was on a snowy day just after New Years Day ( visiting family). It was a Norfolk and Western train with GP7 or 9's up front and a bay window caboose on the tail end. 1980-81. The station did not change in appearance one bit over the years. Pictures of the Simcoe station are quite hard to find, this being a depiction way back before my time when it was the Grand Trunk but already theWabash and Pere Marquette were coming through. Little known fact was the Wabash ran a passenger train solely contained within Canada along this line. Up to the early 60's you could book a sleeper to just about anywhere in North America from here, using connections of course. Now there is nothing. Today you need to take a hellish drive on a jam packed 401/ QEW to Pearson International way off in Toronto, endure humiliating security, board a stinky airplane and hope you do not get the middle seat next to a guy wearing shorts and hairy legs. Thats progress.
Just before the station to the West a couple of hundred feet away from this picture was the diamond with the Canadian Pacific Electric Lines, Lake Erie and Northern. To the North about 3 miles was the New York Central CASO which parallels this route from Detroit to Niagara Falls/Buffalo. All of that is gone as well.
Sigh
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