Piermont station explained

Piermont
Style:Erie Railroad
Address:50 Ash Street, Piermont, New York 10968
Coordinates:41.0415°N -73.9184°W
Platform:1 side platform
Tracks:removed
Opened:May 21, 1870[1]
Closed:December 14, 1965[2]
Rebuilt:2008 (restored)
Code:2007 (Erie Railroad)[3]
Owned:Village of Piermont
Other Services Header:Former services
Nrhp:
Piermont Railroad Station
Embed:yes
Location:50 Ash St., Piermont, New York
Coordinates:41.0439°N -73.9192°W
Built:1873
Architecture:Stick/eastlake
Added:December 3, 2008
Area:less than one acre
Refnum:08001146

Piermont Railroad Station is a historic train station located at Piermont in Rockland County, New York. It was built about 1873 by the Northern Railroad of New Jersey, later acquired by the Erie Railroad. It is a -story, light frame building above a stone foundation. It features Stick Style exterior siding and a Late Victorian interior.[4]

It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2008.

The station is owned by the Village of Piermont. It is maintained by the Piermont Historical Society which has raised funds for and completed a structural and exterior restoration. The restoration included replacing the missing cupola and roof support timbers. Exterior paint colors were selected based on a period newspaper article describing the then new station. Interior renovations are underway. The station is open to the public on selected dates. An earlier station at Piermont, no longer in existence, was located on the Piermont Branch, which was originally the main line of the New York and Erie Railroad opened in 1841. It was located on the east side of Piermont Avenue about 200feet north of Paradise Avenue.[5] As early as 1868 it had only one passenger train a day in each direction.

The opening of Pavonia Terminal in Jersey City, New Jersey, constructed from 1886 to 1889, diverted most of the Erie Railroad traffic southward. By 1892 the Piermont station was for freight only. The 1916 station list does not show it at all.[6]

Passenger service ended on December 14, 1965 when the Erie Lackawanna Railroad truncated service from Nyack to Sparkill. The railway's right-of-way has been converted into the Old Erie Path multi-use rail trail.[7]

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Railway Extension . November 6, 2020 . . May 22, 1870 . 6. Newspapers.com.
  2. News: End of the Line for Nyack's Commuters . November 6, 2020 . The Journal-News . December 15, 1965 . White Plains, New York . 1. Newspapers.com.
  3. Web site: List of Station Names and Numbers. May 1, 1916. Erie Railroad. Jersey City, New Jersey. November 23, 2010.
  4. Web site: National Register of Historic Places Registration: Piermont Railroad Station. May 2006. May 28, 2010. William E.. Krattinger. New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation. See also: Web site: Accompanying five photos.
  5. Book: Beers, F. W.. Atlas of the Hudson River Valley. Watson and Co.. New York. 1891.
  6. Book: Travelers Official Railway Guide. June 1868. Book: Travelers Official Guide of the Railway and Steam Navigation Lines. June 1893.
  7. http://bikeitorhikeit.org/old_erie_path.htm Old Erie Path