Marysville station (California) explained

Style:Amtrak
Style2:Amtrak old
Marysville, CA
Address:6th Street[1]
Marysville, California
Coordinates:39.1413°N -121.5847°W
Line:UP Valley Subdivision
Tracks:1
Platforms:1 side platform
Opened:April 25, 1982 (Amtrak)[2]
Closed: (SP)
1999 (Amtrak)
Other Services Header:Former services

Marysville station was the last passenger rail station to operate in Marysville, California.

The depot was a stop on the Southern Pacific Shasta Route until their services here ceased in 1958. Passenger trains to the city ceased in 1970 when the original California Zephyr was discontinued. Amtrak's formation in 1971 left Marysville out of the nation's "basic system," but a California Senate Joint Resolution from 1974 requested that the Coast Starlight be rerouted through Sacramento including a stop in Marysville.[3] Despite opposition from Southern Pacific, service began on April 25, 1982.[4] Amtrak ceased operating at the station by November 1999,[5] as the service was rerouted over the shorter Sacramento Subdivision. The former Marysville Western Pacific Depot on that line was not reactivated, ending service to the city. Union Pacific continues to use the station building as a field office., rail service is planned to return to Marysville, though with a station along the former Western Pacific alignment as part of the North Valley Rail project.

Notes and References

  1. Book: Amtrak National Train Timetables . April 25, 1982 . Amtrak . Museum of Railway Timetables.
  2. News: Bigwigs on Inaugural Train Offer Hope for Roseville Stop . March 28, 2022 . The Press-Tribune . April 26, 1982 . . 1, 15. Newspapers.com.
  3. Book: Senate Bills . 1973 . California Senate . 5 June 2020.
  4. News: State Digest: Amtrak's new train route . . April 16, 1982.
  5. Book: Amtrak Timetable: National: Fall 1999/Winter 2000 . 53 . October 31, 1999 . Amtrak . Museum of Railway Timetables.