railroad.wikisort.org - StationB&O Railroad Depot was one of several railroad stations in the city of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania during the late 19th and early 20th century. The station was built in 1887, 16 years after the B&O Railroad opened its first railroad line into Pittsburgh. The station was built next to the Monongahela River. B&O railroad trains also used the Pittsburgh & Lake Erie Railroad Station for services that continued westward towards Chicago via the Pittsburgh & Lake Erie Railroad. In 1955 the station was demolished to make room for an interstate highway and remaining services were transferred to Grant Street Station. The building was designed by Frank Furness who also constructed the B&O Railroad's Philadelphia station.[2]
This article is about the former train terminal in Pittsburgh. For the occupant of the current site, see Interstate 376 and Smithfield Street Bridge.
B&O Railroad Depot, B&O Station or Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Station |
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 Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Station, 1900 |
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Location | Smithfield Street along Second Avenue, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania U.S. |
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Coordinates | 40.4363°N 80.0007°W / 40.4363; -80.0007 |
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Owned by | Baltimore and Ohio Railroad |
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Opened | 1887[1] |
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Closed | 1955 |
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Preceding station |
Baltimore and Ohio Railroad |
Following station |
Millville toward Chicago |
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Main Line |
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Hazelwood toward Jersey City |
Hazelwood |
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Cincinnati – Pittsburgh |
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Terminus |
Terminus |
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Buffalo, Rochester and Pittsburgh Railway |
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Ribold Junction |
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At the time of its 1955 closing, major named long distance passenger trains making stops at the station included:
Additionally, the B&O operated a train from Pittsburgh to Buffalo via DuBois and East Salamanca.[3]
Gallery
See also
References
Frank Furness |
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Furness & Hewitt (1871–1875) | | |
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Frank Furness, Architect (1875–1881) |
- Centennial National Bank (1876)
- Emlen Physick Estate (1879)
- Fairview (1880)
- Wallingford station (1880)
- Knowlton (1881)
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Furness & Evans (1881–1886) |
- Dolobran (1881)
- Gravers Lane station (1882)
- Mount Airy station (1882)
- Undine Barge Club (1883)
- St. Michael's Episcopal Church, Birdsboro (1885)
- Hockley Row (1886)
- First Unitarian Church of Philadelphia (1886)
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Furness, Evans & Company (1886–c.1931) |
- Lotta Crabtree Cottage (1886)
- Solomon House (1887)
- Water Street station (1887)
- Brooke Mansion, Birdsboro (1888)
- Ormonde (1888)
- Idlewild (1890)
- Williamson Free School (1890)
- University of Pennsylvania Library (1891)
- The Baldwin School (1891)
- Princeton Club, Philadelphia (1891)
- Lahaska station (1891)
- New Hope station (1891)
- Wycombe station (1891)
- Horace Jayne House (1895)
- Merion Cricket Club (1897)
- St. Luke's Church, Kensington (1904)
- Girard Trust Company Building (1907)
- Wilmington Station (1908)
- Zurbrugg Mansion (1910)
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Demolished buildings | |
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Associated people |
- Allen Evans
- John Fraser
- G. W. & W. D. Hewitt
- Daniel Pabst
- Will Price
- Louis Sullivan
- Wilson Brothers & Company
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