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Illinois Central Passenger Depot-Storm Lake

Coordinates: 42°38′35″N 95°12′06″W / 42.64306°N 95.20167°W / 42.64306; -95.20167
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Illinois Central Passenger Depot-Storm Lake
Illinois Central Passenger Depot-Storm Lake is located in Iowa
Illinois Central Passenger Depot-Storm Lake
Illinois Central Passenger Depot-Storm Lake is located in the United States
Illinois Central Passenger Depot-Storm Lake
LocationSouth of W. Railroad St., between Lake and Michigan Aves., Storm Lake, Iowa
Coordinates42°38′35″N 95°12′06″W / 42.64306°N 95.20167°W / 42.64306; -95.20167
Built1915
ArchitectE.E. Bihl
Architectural stylePrairie School
Tudor Revival
MPSAdvent & Development of Railroads in Iowa MPS
NRHP reference No.90001300[1]
Added to NRHPSeptember 6, 1990

Illinois Central Passenger Depot-Storm Lake, also known as the Storm Lake Depot, was an historic building located in Storm Lake, Iowa, United States. The Iowa Falls & Sioux City Railroad, an Illinois Central Railroad (IC) subsidiary, built the first tracks through town in 1870. They also built a two-story frame combination freight and passenger depot the same year. The present depot is a second generation IC structure built of brick. The building's architectural style is Prairie School with Tudor Revival elements in the dormer and canopy ends. It was designed by IC architect E.E. Bihl, and it is similar to the railroad's depots in Flossmoor, Illinois and Fort Dodge, Iowa.[2] The new passenger depot was completed in August, 1915, and the old depot was re-purposed for a dedicated freight depot. It was torn down sometime before 1948. Passenger service remained high during the 1910s and 1920s, with the decline accelerating after World War II, and it ended all together in the late 1960s. While freight trains continue to use the IC's tracks, the depot has been abandoned. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1990.[1] The Storm Lake Illinois Central depot was demolished on February 25, 2013.

Preceding station Illinois Central Railroad Following station
Alta
toward Sioux City
Sioux City – Chicago Sulfur Springs
toward Chicago

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
  2. ^ Tracy Ann Cunning. "Illinois Central Passenger Depot-Storm Lake". National Park Service. Retrieved 2016-02-05. with photos