Difference between revisions of "Union Station"

From FranaWiki
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[[Image:Union-station-amtrak.JPG|thumb|300px|Union Station in 2008. Photo by Phil Frana.]]
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[[Image:Pratts-hotel-1892.JPG|thumb|300px|Pratt's Hotel in Little Rock's Union Depot.]]
 
[[Image:Union-station.jpg|thumb|300px|Union Depot. Public domain photo taken between 1905 and 1915. Detroit Publishing Company Photograph Collection. Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division.]]
 
[[Image:Union-station.jpg|thumb|300px|Union Depot. Public domain photo taken between 1905 and 1915. Detroit Publishing Company Photograph Collection. Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division.]]
 
[[Image:Union-station-postcard.jpg|thumb|300px|Union Depot postcard.]]
 
[[Image:Union-station-postcard.jpg|thumb|300px|Union Depot postcard.]]
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[[Image:Union-station-amtrak.JPG|thumb|300px|Union Station in 2008. Photo by Phil Frana.]]
 
'''Union Station''' is a Little Rock train station stop for the 1,308-mile Amtrak Texas Eagle route. The Texas Eagle makes twenty-six stops between Chicago, Illinois, and San Antonio, Texas.  
 
'''Union Station''' is a Little Rock train station stop for the 1,308-mile Amtrak Texas Eagle route. The Texas Eagle makes twenty-six stops between Chicago, Illinois, and San Antonio, Texas.  
  
====History of Union Depot====
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====History of First and Second Union Station Depots====
  
[[Pratt's Hotel]] was located inside the depot in the late nineteenth century.
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The original Union Station was constructed in 1885. [[Pratt's Hotel]] was located inside the depot in the late nineteenth century. The first station burned to the ground in 1900. It was rebuilt only to burn again in a 1921 fire. Only the clock tower and Italian Renaissance arches survived the second fire.  
  
''Railroads served by Union Depot:''
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''Railroads served by first two Union Depots:''
  
 
*[[Little Rock, Mississippi River, and Texas Railway]]
 
*[[Little Rock, Mississippi River, and Texas Railway]]
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====History of Union Station====
 
====History of Union Station====
  
Union Station was constructed in 1921 after fire gutted the older Union Station Depot. The Missouri Pacific Railroad sold the station on April 27, 1973, to Train Station, Inc.
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Union Station was reconstructed in the Prairie style in 1921 after fire gutted the older Union Station Depot. The four-story station contains 110,000 square feet and covers 5.6 acres at the west end of Markham Avenue. The Missouri Pacific Railroad sold the station on April 27, 1973, to Train Station, Inc.
  
 
''Railroads served by Union Station:''
 
''Railroads served by Union Station:''
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*[[Amtrak]]
 
*[[Amtrak]]
 
*[[Missouri Pacific Railroad]]
 
*[[Missouri Pacific Railroad]]
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*[[Union Pacific Railroad]]
  
 
==References==
 
==References==

Revision as of 15:47, 8 February 2010

Pratt's Hotel in Little Rock's Union Depot.
Union Depot. Public domain photo taken between 1905 and 1915. Detroit Publishing Company Photograph Collection. Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division.
Union Depot postcard.
Union Station in 2008. Photo by Phil Frana.

Union Station is a Little Rock train station stop for the 1,308-mile Amtrak Texas Eagle route. The Texas Eagle makes twenty-six stops between Chicago, Illinois, and San Antonio, Texas.

History of First and Second Union Station Depots

The original Union Station was constructed in 1885. Pratt's Hotel was located inside the depot in the late nineteenth century. The first station burned to the ground in 1900. It was rebuilt only to burn again in a 1921 fire. Only the clock tower and Italian Renaissance arches survived the second fire.

Railroads served by first two Union Depots:

History of Union Station

Union Station was reconstructed in the Prairie style in 1921 after fire gutted the older Union Station Depot. The four-story station contains 110,000 square feet and covers 5.6 acres at the west end of Markham Avenue. The Missouri Pacific Railroad sold the station on April 27, 1973, to Train Station, Inc.

Railroads served by Union Station:

References

  • George Waldon, "Running Off the Tracks," Arkansas Business, August 19, 1991.

External links