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Wrightwood station (CTA)

Coordinates: 41°55′43″N 87°39′11″W / 41.9287°N 87.6530°W / 41.9287; -87.6530
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WRIGHTWOOD
 
2600N
1000W
Former Chicago 'L' rapid transit station
Location of the demolished station
General information
LocationWrightwood Avenue, Lincoln Avenue, and Sheffield Avenue
Chicago, Illinois
Coordinates41°55′43″N 87°39′11″W / 41.9287°N 87.6530°W / 41.9287; -87.6530
Owned byChicago Transit Authority
Line(s)North Side Main Line
Platforms2 side platforms
Tracks4 tracks (2 express)
Construction
Structure typeElevated
History
OpenedMay 31, 1900; 124 years ago (1900-05-31)
ClosedAugust 1, 1949; 75 years ago (1949-08-01)
Former services
Preceding station Chicago "L" Following station
Diversey
toward Howard
North Side main line Fullerton
Location
Map
former location of the station

Wrightwood was a station on the Chicago Transit Authority's North Side Main Line, which is now part of the Brown Line. The station was located at Wrightwood Avenue, Lincoln Avenue, and Sheffield Avenue in the Lincoln Park neighborhood of Chicago. Wrightwood was situated south of Diversey and north of Fullerton. Wrightwood opened on May 31, 1900, and closed on August 1, 1949, along with 22 other stations as part of a CTA service revision.[1][2]

Station details

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Operations and connections

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Wrightwood was one of five stations on the Ravenswood route – alongside Western, Irving Park, Addison, and Paulina – served by the Lincoln Avenue streetcar.[3] A carbarn was built at the corner of Lincoln and Wrightwood between 1908 and 1910.[4]

Streetcars serving the Ashland branch of the Lincoln Avenue streetcar terminated south at Wrightwood instead of downtown starting February 1, 1889. This ceased by July 1913, when branch streetcar service was cut back farther north at Belmont.[5]

References

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  1. ^ Garfield, Graham. "Wrightwood". Chicago-L.org. Retrieved October 7, 2009.
  2. ^ "Begin Skip-Stop Runs Monday on North, South 'L'". Chicago Daily Tribune. July 29, 1949. p. A9.
  3. ^ Lind, Alan R. (1974). Chicago Surface Lines: An Illustrated History. Park Forest, Illinois: Transport History Press. p. 280.
  4. ^ Lind 1974, p. 360
  5. ^ Lind 1974, p. 228