Yarmouth station (Massachusetts) explained

Yarmouth
Style:New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad
Address:Railroad Avenue at Cross Street
Coordinates:41.6986°N -70.2583°W
Line:Cape Cod Main Line, Hyannis Secondary
Opened:1854
Rebuilt:1878, 1941
Other Services Header:Former services

Yarmouth station was a railroad station in the Yarmouth Port section of Yarmouth, Massachusetts.

History

The original station was built in the village of Yarmouth Port when the Cape Cod Railroad extended its line from Sandwich to Hyannis in 1854. In December 1865, the Cape Cod Central Railroad opened a branch from Yarmouth to, which was later extended to .[1] It was destroyed by a fire on November 17, 1878; the Old Colony Railroad built a replacement.[2]

A branch from to opened in 1887; Yarmouth–Chatham service ran until 1931.[3] Service past Yarmouth to Provincetown ended with the 88 stations case on July 17, 1938, with a brief revival in mid-1940. Yarmouth station was again destroyed by fire in 1941; the New York, New Haven, and Hartford Railroad built a brick replacement. It served year-round Boston–Hyannis trains until June 30, 1959, and New York–Hyannis trains including the Day Cape Codder and Neptune until 1964. This station was torn down around 1975 to make room for the warehouse of Yarmouth-based Christmas Tree Shops.[4]

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Book: Karr, Ronald Dale . The Rail Lines of Southern New England . 2 . Branch Line Press . 2017 . 9780942147124 . 408–414.
  2. Book: Farson, Robert H. . Cape Cod Railroads including Martha's Vineyard and Nantucket . 1993 . Cape Cod Historical Publications . 0-9616740-1-6 . 155.
  3. Book: Karr, Ronald Dale . Lost Railroads of New England . Branch Line Press . 2010 . 9780942147117 . 121, 153.
  4. Web site: Yarmouth, Mass. in the Penn Central Days . Pegnato . Fred . January 1, 2010 . 1 April 2013.