Jackson station (Michigan)

Jackson is a historic Amtrak station in Jackson, Michigan, United States. It is served by the Wolverine. The station was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2002.[2]

Jackson, MI
The station building in 2010.
Location501 East Michigan Avenue
Jackson, MI, 49201
Owned byAmtrak
Line(s)Michigan Line
Platforms1 side platform, 1 island platform
Tracks2
Construction
ParkingYes; free
Disabled accessYes
Other information
Station codeJXN
History
Opened1841
Rebuilt1872 & 1978
Passengers
201823,700[1] 1.4%
Services
Preceding station Amtrak Following station
Albion
toward Chicago
Wolverine Ann Arbor
toward Pontiac
Former services
Preceding station Amtrak Following station
Albion
toward Chicago
Lake Cities
1980-2004
Ann Arbor
toward Pontiac
Preceding station New York Central Railroad Following station
Parma
toward Chicago
Michigan Central Railroad
Main Line
Grass Lake
toward Buffalo
Horton
toward Fort Wayne
Fort Wayne Branch Terminus
Haires
toward Niles
Michigan Air Line Railroad
Terminus Jackson Branch Napoleon
toward Toledo
Cincinnati Northern Railroad Lyonette
toward Franklin
Bay City Branch Rives Junction
toward Bay City
Michigan Central Railroad Jackson Depot
LocationJackson, Michigan, USA
Coordinates42°14′53″N 84°24′01″W
ArchitectHenry A. Gardner
Architectural styleItalianate
NRHP reference No.02001504[2]
Added to NRHP2002

History

What eventually became the Michigan Central Railroad was begun in 1837, and the track reached Jackson by 1841. By the 1870s, multiple other lines served the city including the Jackson, Lansing and Saginaw Railroad, the Fort Wayne, Jackson and Saginaw Railroad, the Grand River Railway, and the Michigan Air Line Railroad.[3] In 1872, the Michigan Central Railroad decided to construct a replacement for its earlier station built in 1841.[4] The new station, named 'Jackson Union Station,'[5] was used as a Union Station, serving all the other lines (namely, the Cincinnati Northern Railroad (1894–1938)) through Jackson except the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway, which was then a major competitor with the Michigan Central, and the Grand Trunk Railway.[6] Construction began in late 1872, and finished in the summer of 1873.[7]

Passenger service into Jackson remained high until the coming of the automobile. New York Central service along the Chicago-Detroit-Buffalo-New York New York Special and the Wolverine (operating on the same route) made stops at Jackson. Other routes were the Chicago-Detroit Chicago Mercury; a Grand Rapids-Jackson train; and a Jackson-Lansing-Saginaw-Bay City train. Service to Bay City and Saginaw ended in 1959, and in 1964, when I-94 was completed, ridership dropped dramatically. In 1971, Amtrak took over the Detroit-Chicago passenger service through Jackson, which remains the only current service in the station.[7]

In 1978, the station underwent a refurbishing inspired by the nation's Bicentennial celebrations. Workers cleaned the brick exterior, reground the terazzo floors and refinished the elaborate wood trim and benches. Artist Leland Beamon created a mural showing the depot in 1904 alongside a modern Turboliner Amtrak train.[8] Also in 1978, a former disgruntled New York Central employee named Rudy Bladel killed three former coworkers at the station.[9] The murder trial led to a U.S. Supreme Court case, Michigan v. Jackson, on the admissibility of confessions. Additional improvements were made in 2008, 2013, and 2018.[10]

Description

The Jackson Station consists of two buildings: the depot proper and nearby Express Building. The depot is a single story red brick Italianate structure, measuring about 325 feet in length and 44 feet in width. The building has two-story blocks measuring 23 feet by 45 feet extending from the roof at either end. The building sits on a foundation of light brownish sandstone with a whitish sandstone sillcourse running on top. The long walls are divided into sixteen bays by projecting brick piers; each bay contains a single window or door. The windows are narrow, tall six-over-six sash units with a three-light transom above, placed in an arched head opening with a five-piece segmental sandstone lintel above and a sandstone sill below. The building's ends each contain a double doorway and a coupled window on the second story above. The flanking sections of the two-story blocks contain single second-floor windows.[7]

The building has a gable roof on the main section, with hipped roofs on the two-story blocks; the roofs are covered with modern asphalt shingles. The eaves have sheet metal cornices. On the track side, a wooden canopy runs along most of the building. The canopy is supported by cast iron columns.[7]

The Express Building is a single-story L-shaped, brick building with a hip roof. It measures approximately 98 feet by 82 feet along the longest sides. It sits on a light brownish sandstone foundation. The elevations are divided into bays by brick piers, with each bay containing a freight door or window.[7]

References

  1. "Amtrak Fact Sheet, FY2018, State of Michigan" (PDF). Amtrak. June 2019. Retrieved 31 December 2019.
  2. "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
  3. Jackson (JXN) Great American Stations (Amtrak), Great American Stations
  4. "Stations: Jackson, Michigan (Michigan's Internet Railroad History Museum)". Michigan Railroads.
  5. Pure Michigan, 'AMTRAK-Jackson Station' https://www.michigan.org/property/amtrak-jackson-station
  6. "Index of Railroad Stations, 1259, indicating GTR using different station". Official Guide of the Railways. National Railway Publication Company. 42 (8). January 1910.
  7. John Guidinger; Charles Ahronheim; R. O. Christensen (July 2002), United States Department of the Interior National Park Service: Michigan Central Railroad Jackson Depot
  8. "Celebrate Renovation of Jackson, Michigan, Station (Amtrak NEWS)". Amtrak History & Archives. November 1978. Retrieved 29 October 2014.
  9. 475 U.S. 627
  10. Taylor Desormeau (June 21, 2018). "144-year-old Jackson train station getting upgrades from Amtrak". MLive.

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