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Hawthorne (Metro-North station)

Hawthorne
Hawthorne train station.jpg
Location 398 Elwood Avenue
Hawthorne, NY, 10532-2503
Coordinates 41°06′32″N 73°47′46″W / 41.1090°N 73.7960°W / 41.1090; -73.7960Coordinates: 41°06′32″N 73°47′46″W / 41.1090°N 73.7960°W / 41.1090; -73.7960
Line(s)
Platforms 1 island platform
Tracks 2
Connections Local Transit Bee-Line Bus System: 15
Construction
Parking 308 spaces
Disabled access Yes
Other information
Fare zone 5
History
Electrified 1984
700V (DC) third rail
Previous names Unionville (1847–1901)
Traffic
Passengers (2006) 186,160 Steady 0%
Services
Preceding station   MTA NYC logo.svg Metro-North Railroad   Following station
Harlem Line
toward Wassaic
(closed 1984)
toward Wassaic
  Former services  
New York Central Railroad
Harlem Division
toward Chatham

The Hawthorne Metro-North Railroad station serves the residents of Hawthorne, New York, via the Harlem Line. Trains leave or arrive approximately every 20 minutes during peak periods, hourly otherwise. It is 28.2 miles (45 km) from Grand Central Terminal and the average travel time to Grand Central is 44 minutes.

This station is located in the Zone 5 Metro-North fare zone.

Rail service in Hawthorne can be traced as far back as 1847, when the New York and Harlem Railroad built a line and a railroad station with the name "Unionville", the former name of Hawthorne itself. The railroad and the station became part of the New York Central and Hudson River Railroad in 1864 and was eventually taken over by the New York Central Railroad. By the early 20th century, when Rose Hawthorne Lathrop established a home for victims of incurable cancer, the community and the station were renamed "Hawthorne". A grade crossing existed just north of the station for Broadway at Elwood Avenue until 1951, when the New York State Department of Public Works realigned New York State Route 141 onto a bridge over the tracks south of the station leading to a wye at Elwood Road. As with most of the Harlem Line, the merger of New York Central with Pennsylvania Railroad in 1968 transformed the station into a Penn Central Railroad station. Penn Central's continuous financial despair throughout the 1970s forced them to turn over their commuter service to the Metropolitan Transportation Authority, which made it part of Metro-North in 1983. At some point, the station was remodeled and moved about 100-foot (30 m) from its original location.


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Wikipedia

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