Illinois Central Combination Depot-Ackley

Illinois Central Combination Depot-Ackley is a historic building located in Ackley, Iowa, United States. The Dubuque & Sioux City Railroad, an affiliate of the Illinois Central Railroad (IC), laid the first rail track to Iowa Falls in 1865. Two years later the Iowa Falls & Sioux City Railroad, another IC affiliate, continued construction of the line to the west, and it reached Sioux City by 1870. They built a plain, two-story frame depot to serve Ackley. From the 1890s to the 1920s the IC replaced its first generation stations with new brick structures.[2] IC architect J.H. Schott designed the new depot at Ackley, and it was built by Coomer & Small Construction Company of Sioux City. The long and low single-story brick building exhibits influences from the Prairie School and the Tudor Revival style. A combination depot is one that incorporates passenger and freight services in the same building. It was also an island depot, meaning that it sat in the middle of the tracks. It was one of the last replacement depots the IC built before the Great Depression.[2] The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1990.[1]

Preceding station Illinois Central Railroad Following station
Rathon
toward Sioux City
Sioux City Chicago Aplington
toward Chicago
Illinois Central Combination Depot-Ackley
LocationNorth of Railroad St., between State and Mitchell Sts., Ackley, Iowa
Coordinates42°33′18.5″N 93°03′08.3″W
Arealess than one acre
Built1926-1927
Built byCoomer & Small Construction Co.
ArchitectJ.H. Schott
Architectural styleTudor Revival
Prairie School
MPSAdvent & Development of Railroads in Iowa MPS
NRHP reference No.90001303[1]
Added to NRHPSeptember 6, 1990

References


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