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Bangor Union Station

Coordinates: 44°47′56″N 68°46′01″W / 44.799°N 68.767°W / 44.799; -68.767
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Bangor Union Station
Circa-1940 postcard of the station
General information
LocationExchange Street at Washington Street
Bangor, ME
Coordinates44°47′56″N 68°46′01″W / 44.799°N 68.767°W / 44.799; -68.767
Line(s)Maine Central Railroad
Tracks8
ConnectionsBangor and Aroostook Railroad
History
Opened28 July 1907
Closed30 November 1961
Former services
Preceding station Bangor and Aroostook Railroad Following station
Terminus Main Line Northern Maine Junction
toward Grand Isle
North Bangor SearsportSouth LaGrange Reverses direction
Northern Maine Junction
toward Searsport
Preceding station Maine Central Railroad Following station
Northern Maine Junction
toward Portland
Main Line Terminus
Terminus BangorBar Harbor Brewer Junction
BangorVanceboro Mt. Hope
toward Vanceboro
Brewer Junction
toward Bucksport
BucksportBangor Terminus

Bangor Union Station was a passenger train station in Bangor, Maine. Long the state's second-largest railroad station, it was served by the Maine Central Railroad and the Bangor and Aroostook Railroad. In 1961, the railroads ended service to the station, which was then demolished to avoid an annual property tax of $10,788 on an assessed valuation of $372,000.[1]

The station site is now occupied by the Penobscot Plaza Shopping Center.

Construction

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The station was designed for the Bangor & Aroostook and the Maine Central by architect Henry B. Fletcher, who had designed stations for the Boston and Maine Railroad.[2] Built under the supervision of Elbridge A. Johnston, the station was 154 feet (47 m) long and 82 feet (25 m) wide with a 40-foot (12 m)-by-29-foot (8.8 m) wing and a separate 250-foot (76 m)-by-30-foot (9.1 m) building for baggage, mail, and package express rooms. The station with a clock tower on the front was built of buff-colored brick with brownstone trimmings and base. The 130-foot (40 m) clock tower was capped with a steeply peaked roof above an open octagonal cupola. The principal entrance was defined by a porte-cochère opening into an 18-foot (5.5 m) vestibule to a 41-foot (12 m)-by-84-foot (26 m) waiting room with an adjoining dining room, kitchen, and storeroom. A women's retiring room and toilet were to the right side of the vestibule, and the ticket office, agent's office, news stand, smoking room, and men's toilet were on the opposite side of the vestibule. Marble flooring was used in the entrance, waiting room, dining room, smoking room, and women's retiring room. The station included a 500-foot (150 m) train shed covering eight tracks.[1]

Location

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The station was built on the west bank of the Penobscot River estuary, just upstream of the confluence with Kenduskeag Stream. The train shed extended upstream from the station, covering tracks between the station and the Penobscot River. Three tracks ran through and the remaining five were stubs extending downstream. The Maine Central Eastern Division main line extended upstream from the station to connect with the Canadian Pacific Railway to the Maritimes at Vanceboro, Maine. Maine Central Eastern Division branch line trains to Calais, Bar Harbor, or Bucksport required backing moves to cross the Penobscot River bridge approach upstream of the station. The stub tracks served trains crossing Kenduskeag Stream departing or arriving from the Bangor and Aroostook or from the Maine Central Portland Division to the Boston and Maine Railroad connection at Portland, Maine.[1]

References

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  1. ^ a b c Bangor and Aroostook Railroad Historical and Technical Society The BAR Newsletter December 1976 volume III, issue IV, pages 5-7
  2. ^ "Bangor's Handsome New Railroad Station". Bangor Daily News. August 31, 1905. p. 10 – via Newspapers.com.
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