West Hurley station

West Hurley, MP 9.8, later MP 10.2, was a railroad station on the Ulster and Delaware Railroad in West Hurley, New York that was constructed in the late nineteenth century and rebuilt during the construction of the Ashokan Reservoir. The original station was made of wood. It was later torn down and temporarily replaced with a board-and-batten shed close to Woodstock, which created much local indignation. A new brick station to replace it was constructed at the West Hurley Dike of the Ashokan Reservoir. The depot was torn down in 1967.

West Hurley
Postcard view of the former West Hurley station
LocationWest Hurley, Ulster County. New York
Tracks1
Services
Preceding station New York Central Railroad Following station
Ashokan
toward Oneonta
Catskill Mountain Branch Stony Hollow

Water service was available for steam engines at this station. A water tower was located northwest of the station, which served water plugs located between the tracks.

Present condition

The West Hurley station area still retains a single, 750-foot-long (230 m) siding that was used by the railroad to store the first half of a train when it was necessary to break a train while coming up the 2% grade from Kingston.

The Catskill Mountain Railroad planned to use the siding as a storage track for four passenger cars, a ballast hopper and a gondola, which were to be brought up from Kingston in 2007.

The foundations of the depot are still easily seen, and the CMRR planned to further clear out the area around the station and the siding in 2007.

The station area may eventually be used as a loading area for pulpwood to be shipped by rail.



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