Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Southern Railway Depot (Decatur, Alabama)

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Built
  
1905 (1905)

Opened
  
1905

Added to NRHP
  
10 March 1980

NRHP Reference #
  
80004470

Area
  
2,000 m²

Southern Railway Depot (Decatur, Alabama)

Location
  
701 Railroad St., NW, Decatur, Alabama

The Southern Railway Depot is a historic building in Decatur, Alabama. The depot was built in 1904–05 along the Southern Railway line. Decatur had become a transportation hub of North Alabama by the 1870s, with its connections to the Tennessee River, the east-west Tuscumbia, Courtland and Decatur Railroad (later operated by the Memphis and Charleston Railroad and the Southern Railway), and the north-south Louisville and Nashville Railroad. It functioned as a passenger station until 1979, when Amtrak cancelled its Floridian service. The station is built of brick painted white, with quoins on the corners. The building has a rectangular central section with narrower wings stretching along the tracks. The central section has a hipped roof, while the wings have gable roofs; both have deep eaves with decorative brackets. The main entrance is covered by a porte-cochère with arched openings. The depot was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1980.

References

Southern Railway Depot (Decatur, Alabama) Wikipedia