Yemassee station

Yemassee is an Amtrak train stop in Yemassee, South Carolina. Located at 15 Wall Street (erroneously listed as 9 Main Street on the Amtrak timetable and the Amtrak official website), the station consists of a covered platform on the northwest side of the northeast-southwest tracks, a small parking lot, and a building. The building is mostly boarded up, but it does have a small waiting room for Amtrak passengers. It also contains a freight depot. Both the station and the freight house were originally built by the Charleston and Western Carolina Railway. The current station house was built around 1955 as a replacement for several other stations in the past. The station was later run by the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad.

Yemassee, SC
Amtrak inter-city rail station
Rebuilt station building and Amtrak information board
Location15 Wall Street
Yemassee, South Carolina
United States
Coordinates32°41′17″N 80°50′49″W
Owned byTown of Yemassee
Line(s)Charleston Subdivision
Platforms1 side platform
Tracks2
Construction
Disabled accessYes
Other information
Station codeAmtrak code: YEM
History
Rebuilt1955, 2010-present
Traffic
Passengers (2013)14,915[1]
Services
Preceding station Amtrak Following station
Savannah
toward Miami
Silver Meteor Charleston
toward New York
Savannah
Terminus
Palmetto
Former services
Preceding station Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Following station
Ridgeland
toward Tampa
Main Line Green Pond
toward Richmond
Early Branch Charleston and Western Carolina Railway
Main Line
Tomotley
toward Port Royal

Yemassee is served by the Palmetto and Silver Meteor trains of Amtrak's Silver Service. Both trains pass through Yemassee, near the growing towns of Beaufort and Hilton Head, at roughly the same times of the day; the northbound Palmetto and southbound Silver Meteor do so in the morning, while the southbound Palmetto and northbound Silver Meteor come through in the evening.

From 1915 to 1965, the Yemassee station was the first place where potential United States Marines recruits stopped before reaching Marine Corps Recruit Depot Parris Island. Many Marines that fought in wars and conflicts spanning World War I through Vietnam began their careers at the train station.[2]

The town is in the process of purchasing the station from Amtrak as part of a local revitalization effort.[3]

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gollark: I was going to say something about available time, but I clearly have enough now to randomly attempt to decode spectrograms, so that isn't really a huge issue.

References

Media related to Yemassee (Amtrak station) at Wikimedia Commons


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