Plimptonville station explained

Style:MBTA
Plimptonville
Address:185 Plimpton Street
Coordinates:42.1586°N -71.2367°W
Tracks:1
Passengers:12 (weekday average boardings)
Pass Year:2018
Opened:April 23, 1849
Closed:December 14, 2020
Zone:4
Former:Tilton(s), Plympton(s), Plimpton(s)
Other Services Header:Former services
Mapframe:yes
Mapframe-Custom:
Shape:none
Line:none
Marker:rail
Marker-Color:
  1. 888
Zoom:12

Plimptonville station was an MBTA Commuter Rail station in Walpole, Massachusetts. It was located near the Neponset River next to a small dirt parking lot between Plimpton Street and the tracks. It was a flag stop on the Franklin Line, and received the least service of any MBTA station, with just one round trip per day, consisting of an inbound morning train and an outbound evening train at the height of rush hour. Ridership on that round trip averaged just 12 passengers daily by a 2018 count.

Station design

Plimptonville had one of the smallest station facilities on the MBTA Commuter Rail system: an approximately 10foot-wide low-level asphalt platform next to the single track, with a small gravel parking lot.

History

The Norfolk County Railroad was built through East Walpole beginning in 1846; it opened on April 23, 1849.[1] [2] Three stops were located in Walpole: West Walpole,, and Plimpton(s) – also spelled Plympton(s) – adjacent to the Plimpton Iron Works near East Walpole.[3] [4] Commuting from the station to Boston was possible beginning in 1850. After several reorganizations and mergers, the line became part of the New York and New England Railroad (NY&NE) in 1873.

The station was renamed to Tilton(s) by the 1870s after the mill village changed names.[5] [6] A small station building, no longer extant, was located on the northwest side of the tracks.[7] Double-tracking through the station to Walpole was completed in 1881. The NY&NE was taken over by the New Haven Railroad-controlled New England Railroad in 1895; the new railroad was leased by the New Haven in 1898. Around 1894, the name was changed again to Plimptonville (sometimes spelled Plymptonville).[8] [9] [10]

MBTA era

The 1964-formed MBTA began subsidizing service on the route on April 24, 1966; it became the Franklin Line of the MBTA Commuter Rail system. The station had become less important under public ownership due to its lack of parking, rural location, and proximity to the well-used Walpole station. Additionally, the station was in the middle of a single-track section of the line, severely limiting the number of trains that can stop. The MBTA closed the stop on February 1, 1981 due to budget cuts, but soon reopened it due to protests by riders.[11] The single round-trip served a small but dedicated contingent of riders.[12] A planned project to double-track the line through the station was announced in November 2019.[13]

The station was closed again on January 23, 2021[14] as part of the MBTA's "Forging Ahead" initiative, due to low ridership, operational impacts, and availability of alternatives, in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.[15]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Boston's Commuter Rail: The First 150 Years . Humphrey . Thomas J.. Clark . Norton D. . Boston Street Railway Association . 1985 . 9780685412947 . 43–46.
  2. Book: The Rail Lines of Southern New England . Karr, Ronald Dale . Branch Line Press . 1995 . 0942147022 . 291–293 .
  3. Web site: National Register of Historic Places Registration Form . National Park Service . National Register of Historic Places . February 2016 . Kathleen Kelly . Broomer.
  4. Book: Barrett, Richard C. . Boston's Depots and Terminals . 215 . Railroad Research Publications . 1884650031 . 1996.
  5. Book:

    commons:File:1876 map of Allenville, East Walpole, and South Walpole.png

    . Atlas of Norfolk County, Massachusetts . Tilton Sta. and East Walpole . 1876 . Comstock and Cline . Wikimedia Commons.
  6. Book: Topographical Atlas of Massachusetts . Atlas Plate No. 15 . Walker Lithograph & Publishing Co. . 1891 . David Rumsey Map Collection.
  7. Book:

    commons:File:1888 map of Walpole, East Walpole, South Walpole, and Plainville.jpg

    . Plate 42: East Walpole . Atlas of Norfolk County . 1888 . E. Robinson . Wikimedia Commons.
  8. Book:

    commons:File:1904 Atlas of Massachusetts – Plate 15.png

    . Plate No. 15 . Atlas of Massachusetts . George H. Walker & Co. . 1904 . Wikimedia Commons.
  9. News: Walpole . Boston Globe . August 18, 1893 . 2 . Newspapers.com.
  10. News: Last Week of 'Capt. Paul' . Boston Globe . December 16, 1894 . 18 . Newspapers.com.
  11. News: Protestor stops Walpole line MBTA train . Boston Globe . February 3, 1981 . 17, 18 . Newspapers.com.
  12. News: The Track Least Traveled . December 12, 2018 . Nate . Homan . DigBoston.
  13. FMCB Approves Franklin Line Double Track Phase 2 Work and Phase 3 Preliminary Design Work . November 18, 2019 . Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority.
  14. Web site: Franklin Line 2021 Winter Schedule.
  15. Web site: Forging Ahead.