Wilkinsburg station

Wilkinsburg
Line(s) Pittsburgh Line
History
Closed 1975
Former services
Preceding station   Amtrak   Following station
toward Kansas City
National Limited
Pennsylvania Railroad
toward Chicago
Main Line
Homewood, PA
toward Chicago
Edgewood, PA
Conrail
Terminus
Parkway Limited
Swissvale, PA
toward Greensburg
Pennsylvania Railroad Station-Wilkinsburg
Location Hay St. at Ross Ave., Wilkinsburg, Pennsylvania
Coordinates 40°26′35″N 79°53′17″W / 40.44306°N 79.88806°W / 40.44306; -79.88806Coordinates: 40°26′35″N 79°53′17″W / 40.44306°N 79.88806°W / 40.44306; -79.88806
Area 0.5 acres (0.20 ha)
Built 1916
Architect Cookson,Walter H.
Architectural style Beaux Arts
NRHP reference # 85001568[1]
Significant dates
Added to NRHP July 18, 1985
Designated PHLF 1976[2]
The Pennsylvania Railroad through Wilkinsburg in 1913 before being elevated.

The Pennsylvania Railroad Station-Wilkinsburg is located in Wilkinsburg, Pennsylvania, on Hay St. at the foot of Ross Ave. The building was completed in 1916 when the railroad embankment through town was elevated above street level to eliminate hazardous grade crossings.[3] The two previous stations had been located three blocks southeast along Wood St. between Franklin and Rebecca Aves.[4]:80

The 1916 station was built of brick and stone in the current Beaux-Arts architecture style with a vitrified tile waiting room[4]:89 and monumental wooden benches. It served three 12-car-length island platforms with enclosed seating areas situated between three pairs of tracks (main and yard leads). Originally the platform surfaces were level with the floors of the railroad passenger cars,[3] but they were later lowered to the level of the track, reportedly due to substandard lateral clearances between the platforms and carbodies caused by the tracks' partially curved alignment when lengthier cars came into use; the change further spared train crews the inconvenience of having to lower and raise trap doors over the coach stairwells for this single station alone when platform levels of the other stations on this commuter route were not elevated to match. One of the platforms was removed altogether. Access to the platforms was available by stairways at the Penn Ave., South Ave., and Franklin Ave. underpasses, in addition to the station tunnel which also served as the Ross Ave. pedestrian underpass. There was also a separate tunnel at the station to deliver mail, express, and baggage to the platforms (a U.S. post office was later constructed across the street from the station, forming a sort of civic center in conjunction with the municipal building/public library, also across the street). The station's strategic location visible down Ross Ave. was negated when that street's motor traffic was made one-way in the opposite direction.

Some time after demolition of the nearby East Liberty station in 1963[5], the Wilkinsburg station was designated to assume its function as the satellite station for selected long-distance express trains serving passengers in the East End of Pittsburgh. Meanwhile, Pennsylvania Railroad commuter trains at Wilkinsburg were discontinued on Nov. 27, 1964. The building was sold to the Borough of Wilkinsburg on Aug. 21, 1967. Although there was no ticket agent in later years, the waiting room remained open to customers and foot traffic during normal business hours until the freight agent was withdrawn, and then was used for the Borough's public-works purposes. The PRR was merged into the Penn Central Transportation Company on Feb. 1, 1968. Its long-distance passenger service was assumed by Amtrak on May 1, 1971, at which time the three most lightly-patronized of the four pairs of trains still making daily stops at the station were discontinued. Long-distance passenger-train service at Wilkinsburg ended on September 14, 1975 when Amtrak discontinued the stop, citing a total of 128 passengers boarding or alighting in the first six months of 1975, the lowest system-wide, a far cry from the Borough's and railroad's heyday when the borough's status as a dense bedroom community and commercial draw for the eastern suburbs meant that nearly every local train passing through stopped there, apparently second in importance to only East Liberty. The last train serving Wilkinsburg station was the National Limited, which operated daily between New York City and Kansas City, Missouri.[6] By then, Wilkinsburg had a reputation as an unsafe neighborhood, and the stop was scheduled normally during darkness rather than in daylight. The right of way was conveyed to Consolidated Rail Corp. on April 1, 1976, then to Norfolk Southern Railway on June 1, 1999. During the brief resumption of commuter service with Conrail's Parkway Limited in 1981, the platforms had been removed and the stairways were inaccessible, so these two pairs of trains made their Wilkinsburg stop about two blocks southeast of the station, nearer the location of the predecessor stations; the building was not used. The station was added to the National Register of Historic Places on July 18, 1985.[1]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 National Park Service (2009-03-13). "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service.
  2. Historic Landmark Plaques 1968-2009 (PDF). Pittsburgh, PA: Pittsburgh History & Landmarks Foundation. 2010. Retrieved 2011-07-28.
  3. 1 2 Information Bulletin Vol. IV, #25, "Why Wilkinsburg Celebrated". Phila.: The Pennsylvania RR System. July 18, 1916.
  4. 1 2 Wilkinsburg Historical Society (2007). Images of America WILKINSBURG. Arcadia Publishing.
  5. Van Trump, James D. (1985). Life and Architecture in Pittsburgh. Pittsburgh, PA: Pittsburgh History & Landmarks Foundation. pp. 238–239.
  6. "Wilkinsburg Rail Stop To End, Amtrak Says". Pittsburgh Press. September 9, 1975. Retrieved 2010-09-08.
  • 1975 National Limited Timetable
  • The Wilkinsburg Train Station Restoration Project
  • Spatter, Sam (13 December 2007). "Proposal would dust off Wilkinsburg train station". triblive.com.
  • Carpenter, Deana (22 April 2016). "Historic Wilkinsburg train station may be brought back to life". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
  • "41 Years After The Last Train Stopped in Wilkinsburg, Restoration Begins on the Wilkinsburg Train Station". I heart PGH. 25 May 2017.
  • Carpenter, Deana (10 October 2016). "Wilkinsburg Community Development Corporation sets $3 million goal for train station renewal". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
  • Conway, Brian (2 December 2016). "Why the Wilkinsburg Train Station restoration is so important to the community". NEXTpittsburgh.
  • Bencivenga, Natalie (2 October 2017). "Meet Me at the (Wilkinsburg) Station". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
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