railroad.wikisort.org - StationNew Haven Junction station is a former railway station at the junction of United States Route 7 and Vermont Route 17 in New Haven, Vermont. Probably built in the 1850s, it is a well-preserved example of a first-generation railroad depot. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1978 as New Haven Junction Depot, and now houses offices.[1]
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 New Haven Junction station building in 2013 |
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Opened | 1849 |
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Closed | 1953 |
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New Haven Junction Depot |
U.S. National Register of Historic Places |
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Coordinates | 44°7′24″N 73°11′0″W |
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Built | 1855 (1855) |
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Built by | Rutland and Burlington Railroad |
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NRHP reference No. | 78000226[1] |
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Added to NRHP | October 19, 1978 |
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Description and history
The former station stands adjacent to railroad tracks just north of the western junction of US 7 and Vermont 17 in the village of New Haven Junction. It is a single-story brick building with a gabled roof. It has Italianate styling, including rounded-arch windows and extended eaves supported by large brackets. The track-facing facade has two entrances, located in the second and fourth of five bays. An original manual semaphore control tower rises through the eave near the center of that facade.[2]
The station's exact construction date is not known, and is assumed to be in the decade following the 1849 introduction of railroad service to the area by the Rutland and Burlington Railroad. The station was first listed as a stop in that railroad's timetables in 1854, and the current brick station was completed during August 1868, replacing a wooden structure across the tracks (which became the freighthouse). The railroad was in the second half of the 19th century an important transportation artery for both the Burlington area's lumber industry, and the Rutland area's marble quarries.[2] The station became a junction in 1891 when the Bristol Railroad opened.
The building underwent restoration in the late 1970s.[2] It had to be moved - or else demolished - to accommodate the Amtrak Ethan Allen Express extension to Burlington, as the structure was too close to the tracks to permit trains to run at 59 miles per hour (95 km/h).[3] The town selectboard chose a new site for the building, adjacent to the town office and library, in May 2021. Moving the station is expected to cost more than $600,000.[4] The town has applied for state and regional funding to move the structure.[5] The Vermont Department of Historic Preservation transferred ownership to the town in December 2020. The building was moved to a city-owned lot on January 12, 2022, with a new foundation to be poured that spring.[6]
See also
- National Register of Historic Places listings in Addison County, Vermont
References
- "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
- Charles Ashton (1978). "NRHP nomination for New Haven Junction Depot". National Park Service. Retrieved 2016-08-31. with photos from 1978
- Ross, Christopher (January 28, 2021). "Future in doubt for New Haven train depot". Addison County Independent. Retrieved February 2, 2021.
- Ross, Christopher (May 13, 2021). "New Haven picks new home for train depot". Addison County Independent. Retrieved May 14, 2021.
- Varricchio, Lou (May 26, 2021). "Historic Vt. railroad depot has a new home". The Sun. Retrieved June 1, 2021.
- "Vermont depot set to move Jan. 12". Trains. January 7, 2022. Retrieved January 7, 2022.
- New Haven Junction-Bristol, Vermont: Crossroads to Caskets by James R. Jones (2020, Tell-Tale Productions)
External links
Media related to New Haven Junction station at Wikimedia Commons
National Register of Historic Places in Addison County, Vermont |
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National Historic Landmark |
- Robert Frost Farm
- Mount Independence
- Rokeby
- Emma Willard House
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Districts |
- Bristol Downtown Historic District
- Camp Marbury Historic District
- Colonel Ephraim and Sarah Doolittle Farm
- Fenn Farm
- Field Farm
- John Hamilton Farmstead
- The Heights
- Middlebury Village Historic District
- Salisbury Fish Hatchery
- Shard Villa
- University of Vermont Morgan Horse Farm
- Vergennes Historic District
- Vergennes Residential Historic District
- Witherell Farm
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Buildings | Commercial |
- Chimney Point Tavern
- Chipman's Point
- Cornwall General Store
- Dog Team Tavern †
- Old Stone Blacksmith Shop
- Salisbury Village Blacksmith Shop
- Stagecoach Inn
- Waybury Inn
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Educational |
- Cotton Free Library
- District School No. 1
- District Six Schoolhouse
- Lampson School
- School House and Town Hall
- Old Stone Row
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Government |
- Cornwall Town Hall
- Monkton Town Hall
- Salisbury Town Hall
- School House and Town Hall
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Industrial |
- Hoag Gristmill and Knight House Complex
- Stone Mill
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Religious |
- Addison Baptist Church
- Brooksville Advent Church †
- First Congregational Church
- First Congregational Church of Cornwall Parsonage
- Leicester Meeting House
- Monkton Borough Baptist Church
- Ripton Community House
- Salisbury Congregational Church
- Shoreham Congregational Church
- South Starksboro Friends Meeting House and Cemetery
- Starksboro Village Meeting House
- Union Church
- Union Meetinghouse
- Wesleyan Methodist Church
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Residential |
- Bottum Farm
- Capts. Louis and Philomene Daniels House
- Paris and Anna Fletcher House
- Glen Dale
- Hand's Cove
- Hawley's Ferry House
- House at 215 School Street
- Ruth Stone House
- Gen. Samuel Strong House
- John Strong House
- Samuel Paddock Strong House
- Wilcox-Cutts House
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Transportation | |
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Site | |
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Structures |
- Bridge 26
- Cedar Swamp Covered Bridge
- East Shoreham Covered Railroad Bridge
- Halpin Covered Bridge
- Middlebury Gorge Concrete Arch Bridge
- Pulp Mill Covered Bridge
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Footnotes | † This entry has been removed from the register. |
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See also: National Register of Historic Places listings in Addison County, Vermont and List of National Historic Landmarks in Vermont |
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