Fort Street Union Depot

The Fort Street Union Depot was a passenger train station located at the southwest corner of West Fort Street and Third Street in downtown Detroit, Michigan. It served the city from 1893 to 1971. Today, the downtown campus of Wayne County Community College occupies the site.

The Fort Street Union Depot in 1909

History

The union station began construction in 1891 and opened to the public January 21, 1893.[1] It consolidated the operations and services of several rail companies serving Detroit with the exception of the New York Central Railroad and Canadian Pacific Railroad, which used Michigan Central Station, and the Grand Trunk Western Railroad, which used Brush Street Station. The Baltimore & Ohio Railroad used the Fort Street facility intermittently. B&O never had its own tracks between Toledo and Detroit. When Pere Marquette (then later C&O which had acquired PM) handled B&O trains north of Toledo, those trains went to Fort Street. When handled by Michigan Central (later New York Central) they went to Michigan Central Station. Upon its opening, the station was located in a transportation district which included the original Michigan Railroad Central Depot two blocks south, and the Detroit and Cleveland Navigation Company nearby on the Detroit River.

The station was extensively renovated in 1946, adding a restaurant, fluorescent lighting, a baggage room, train gates and other updated amenities. Urban renewal in the 1950s saw the construction of Cobo Hall to the south of the station, and the tunneling of the Lodge Freeway beneath the railway tracks. However, due to dwindling ridership, the station closed April 30, 1971, and despite the attempts of preservationists to repurpose the building, was demolished in January 1974.[2]

Architecture

The depot was built in the Romanesque Revival architectural style by architect James Stewart, a follower of Henry Hobson Richardson. "The depot was described by architectural critics as monumental and gutsy, and of being in a solid, aggressive style. W. Hawkins Ferry, in his The Buildings of Detroit, described the station as being of 'robust plastic composition'. Ross and Carlin mention it proudly as 'an ornament to the city' in their Landmarks of Detroit, published before the turn of the century."[2]

Service

Several named passenger trains departed from the station; many were long-distance flagship trains of their respective railroads. The Pere Marquette had unnamed service to Bay City via Flint and Saginaw.

OperatorsNamed trainsDestinationYear discontinued
Baltimore & Ohio RailroadAmbassadorBaltimore1964
Baltimore & Ohio RailroadCapitol-Detroit, successor to connecting service to ShenandoahWashington, D.C.1968
Baltimore & Ohio RailroadCincinnatianCincinnati1971
Baltimore & Ohio RailroadNight ExpressCincinnati1967
Chesapeake & Ohio RailroadSportsmanNewport News, Virginia1968
Pennsylvania RailroadRed ArrowWashington, D.C. and New York, New York1959
Pennsylvania Railroad and Wabash RailroadChicago ArrowChicago1949
Pere Marquette Railway, Chesapeake & Ohio Railroad after 1947 mergerPere MarquetteGrand Rapids, Michigan1971
Pere Marquette RailwayResort SpecialBay View, Michigan1948
Wabash RailroadWabash Cannon BallSt. Louis, Missouri1971

Remnants

Parts of the structure are housed at the B&O Railroad Museum in Baltimore, Maryland. Several large pieces from the station have been saved in a warehouse in nearby Fort Wayne.[2]

See also

Preceding station Wabash Railroad Following station
Delray
toward Chicago
ChicagoBuffalo Windsor
toward Buffalo
Delray
toward St. Louis
St. LouisDetroit Terminus

References

  1. Austin, Dan (31 January 2015). "The day Detroit's 'other' train station opened its doors". Detroit Free Press. Retrieved 4 February 2015.
  2. Austin, Dan. "Union Depot". historicdetroit.org. Retrieved 4 February 2015.

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