Railroad stations

Elements area

Taxonomy

Code

DXXXX-XXX-014-003-002

Scope note(s)

  • At Pacific Northwest Railroad Archive (PNRA), a still photograph of a structure constructed by a railroad company for the accommodation of passengers and/or freight. At PNRA this term also includes structures for the exclusive use of freight, sometimes known as freighthouses.

Source note(s)

Display note(s)

    Hierarchical terms

    Railroad stations

      Equivalent terms

      Railroad stations

      • UF Depots, Railroad

      • UF Rail stations

      • UF Railway stations

      • UF Stations, Railroad

      • UF Train stations

      • UF Railroad depots

      • UF Freighthouses

      Associated terms

      Railroad stations

        4438 Archival description results for Railroad stations

        4438 results directly related Exclude narrower terms
        US WaBuPNRA D0335.2-ex: 001-014-003-002-NPDepot0656 · Item · undated
        Part of Northern Pacific Railway Historical Association Depot Photograph Collection

        The North Yakima depot was designed by Cass Gilbert and carries to an extreme the notion of using the center portion of the building as a decorative element. The tapered shingled walls of the tower derive from both the Goodrich Avenue Church (1886) and Saint John the Divine Episcopal Church (1898-99), and the tower has little function except to support a clock and provide for an open deck. The half-timbered design differs from the Little Falls depot in that it seems to be German or central European inspired (the English did not build wood towers). The large chimney is for a fireplace in the waiting room, a common feature in depots of the era. The chimney does not reflect the Germanic influence of the depot's otherwise unified design. The depot was enlarged within a few years of its construction and was later replaced. The second depot is pictured. Located at Milepost 90, from the collection of Thomas R. Blanck.