Chatham station (Massachusetts)

Chatham Railroad Station is a former railroad station located on Depot Road in Chatham, Massachusetts which houses a museum. It has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since 1978,[3] and it is now home to the Chatham Railroad Museum.

Chatham Railroad Station
Location153 Depot Road
Chatham, Massachusetts
Coordinates41°41′09″N 69°57′42″W
Owned byTown of Chatham, Massachusetts[1]
Line(s)Chatham Branch
Platforms1 side platform
History
Opened1887
Closed1937[2]
Rebuilt1960 (as a museum)[2]
Chatham Railroad Depot
Location153 Depot Road
Chatham, Massachusetts
ArchitectDavid Howes[3]
Architectural styleQueen Anne, Stick, Eastlake
NRHP reference No.78000422
Added to NRHP1978[3]

The Chatham Railroad Museum features many railroad artifacts, including the New York Central model locomotives used at the 1939 New York World's Fair. Other displays include original and operating Western Union telegraph equipment, lanterns, badges, signs, tools, timetables, menus and passes, promotional literature, original paintings and prints, calendars, and a restored 1910 caboose.

Service to Chatham was on a line that spurred from the mainline to Provincetown.

The station around 1910

Service ended to the station in the 1930s. There is no connected railroad track running there for train service. The former New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad line ends in South Dennis and no longer runs to Chatham.

Plans were made in the first years of the 21st Century to extend the Cape Cod Rail Trail into Chatham and west of Dennis and into Barnstable.

See also

References

Media related to Chatham station (Massachusetts) at Wikimedia Commons



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