Windsor station (Michigan Central Railroad) explained

Windsor, ON
Tracks:2
Opened:1911
Closed:1979
Status:Destroyed by fire (1996)
Style:Amtrak
Style2:Amtrak old
Other Services Header:Former services

Windsor was a train station in Windsor, Ontario, Canada. The station was built by the Michigan Central Railroad in 1911 and subsequently controlled by the Canada Southern Railway. The station served Canada Southern Railway and New York Central trains. Windsor also has another railroad station in town.

Through most of its decades, and into the latter 1960s, the station served New York Central passenger trains over a New York–Buffalo–Windsor–Detroit–Jackson–Chicago route: the Empire State Express and the Wolverine.[1] It also served trains bound for a slightly more northerly route east: to London, Toronto and Montreal: the New York Central-Canadian Pacific pooled train, the Canadian (later renamed the Canadian-Niagara).[2]

The last train service to this station was Amtrak's Niagara Rainbow from October 1978 to January 31, 1979.[3] The building was burnt to the ground in 1996 due to arson.

External links

Notes and References

  1. New York Central timetable, June 17, 1951, Table 1, 2, 7, 15 http://streamlinermemories.info/NYC/NYC51-6TT.pdf
  2. New York Central Timetable, 1947, Table 29 http://streamlinermemories.info/NYC/NYC47-12TT.pdf
  3. Web site: Windsor, Ontario, Canada . trainweb.org . January 2, 2019.