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03000903 [1] Added to NRHP. March 12, 2004. The El Paso and Southwestern Railroad Depot is a historic building in Tucson, Arizona. It was designed in the Classical Revival style, and built in 1912 by the Phelps-Dodge Corporation. [2] It was used as a railroad depot until 1924. [2] In 1978, it was remodelled as a restaurant. [2]
The El Paso and Southwestern Railroad began in 1888 as the Arizona and South Eastern Railroad, a short line serving copper mines in southern Arizona. Over the next few decades, it grew into a 1200-mile system that stretched from Tucumcari, New Mexico, southward to El Paso, Texas, and westward to Tucson, Arizona, with several branch lines, including one to Nacozari, Mexico.
Added to NRHP. April 16, 1986. The El Paso and Southwestern Railroad Depot is a Beaux Arts building constructed in 1913 in Douglas, Arizona. Two-stories tall, it was a major station on the El Paso and Southwestern Railroad line. It is slightly to the northwest of the Douglas Historic District, sitting on a 3.2331 acre parcel.
Historic and existing passenger train stations in Arizona, United States. Originally Arizona and California Railway depot. Last Santa Fe service 1955. Moved to Scottsdale's McCormick-Stillman Railroad Park in 1972. Still standing. Last mixed passenger service in 1984. Still standing. Escalante Harvey House and depot built 1907.
The St. Louis Southwestern Railway Company (reporting mark SSW), known by its nickname of "The Cotton Belt Route" or simply "Cotton Belt", was a Class I railroad that operated between St. Louis, Missouri, and various points in the U.S. states of Arkansas, Tennessee, Louisiana, and Texas from 1891 to 1980, when the system added the Rock Island's Golden State Route and operations in Kansas ...
San Pedro Valley Railroad. The San Pedro Valley Railroad (reporting mark SPVR), formerly the San Pedro & Southwestern Railroad, is an Arizona shortline railroad, currently operating from a connection with the Union Pacific Railroad (UP) at Benson, Arizona, seven miles to Curtiss, Arizona west of St. David.
Since 1986, the Pacific Southwest Railway Museum operates all-volunteer train excursions from the restored 1916 Depot in Campo, in the Mountain Empire area of southeastern San Diego County, California. These trains are powered by vintage diesel-electric locomotives. [4][5] The facility sits on a 140 acres (0.57 km 2) property.
Texas Pacific Railroad: Southwestern Railroad: SW 1990 2007 N/A Southwestern Railway: 1907 1920 N/A Stamford and Northwestern Railway: CB&Q: 1909 1952 Fort Worth and Denver Railway: Stephenville North and South Texas Railway: SSW: 1907 1941 N/A Sugar Land Railway: SL MP: 1893 1956 Missouri Pacific Railroad: Taylor, Bastrop and Houston Railway ...