Texas and Pacific Railroad Depot (Marshall, Texas)

Texas and Pacific Railroad Depot (Marshall, Texas)
Marshall
MHL-2005.jpg
Station statistics
Address 800 North Washington Street
Marshall, TX 75670
Coordinates 32°33′06″N 94°22′03″W / 32.55175°N 94.36746°W / 32.55175; -94.36746Coordinates: 32°33′06″N 94°22′03″W / 32.55175°N 94.36746°W / 32.55175; -94.36746
Lines
Platforms 1 side platform
Tracks 2
Other information
Opened 1912
Accessible Handicapped/disabled access
Code MHL
Traffic
Passengers (2010) 8,709[1] increase 25% (Amtrak)
Services
Preceding station   Amtrak   Following station
Texas Eagle
toward Chicago

The Texas and Pacific Railroad Depot in Marshall, Texas houses the Marshall Amtrak Station. Amtrak, the national railroad passenger system, operates the Texas Eagle through Marshall each day, with service north to Chicago and west-southwest to Dallas, San Antonio and Los Angeles.

The ticket office in Marshall is staffed 7 days a week from 7am to 4pm, and 4:30pm to 8:30pm.

Of the 19 Texas stations served by Amtrak, Marshall was the ninth-busiest in FY2010, boarding or detraining an average of approximately 24 passengers daily.[2]

Contents

Texas & Pacific Railway Museum

The Texas & Pacific Depot's Railway Museum

The Texas & Pacific Depot, commonly referred to as the T&P Depot, is the only surviving structure of the Texas and Pacific Railway shops complex which originally consisted of fifty-seven buildings spanning 66 acres (270,000 m2).

The T&P Depot is located in the Ginocchio National Historic District and was built in 1912 to house the T&P passenger station and the headquarters of railroad's eastern district. The building welcomed soldiers in both World War I and World War II, and at its height housed telegraph and immigration offices.

During the 1970s a series of events lead to the station being abandoned. Amtrak passenger trains used the building beginning in 1974, however in 1988 the Union Pacific Railroad, which owned the property, filed for a permit to demolish the building. The community intervened and throughout the 1990s worked to save the Depot and the building was restored and resumed service as the local train station; however, much of the building houses the Texas & Pacific Railway Museum.

An old engine was recently moved to the depot from where it had been standing in City Park and restoration work is beginning on it.

See also

  • Ginocchio National Historic District

References

External links

Media related to Texas and Pacific Railroad Depot (Marshall, Texas) at Wikimedia Commons


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