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Hersey (MBTA station)

HERSEY
Hersey MBTA station.JPG
Hersey station in May 2012, facing east
Location Great Plain Avenue at Broad Meadow Road
Needham, Massachusetts
Coordinates 42°16′33″N 71°12′53″W / 42.275842°N 71.214853°W / 42.275842; -71.214853Coordinates: 42°16′33″N 71°12′53″W / 42.275842°N 71.214853°W / 42.275842; -71.214853
Line(s)
Platforms 1 side platform
Tracks 1
Construction
Parking 360 spaces ($4.00 fee)
8 accessible spaces
Bicycle facilities 11 spaces
Disabled access Yes
Other information
Fare zone 2
History
Opened 1917
Closed October 13, 1979 - October 19, 1987
Rebuilt c. 1991
Previous names Bird's Hill (1917-1979)
Traffic
Passengers (2013) 540 (weekday inbound average)
Services
Preceding station   MBTA.svg MBTA   Following station
Needham Line
  Former services  
toward Millis
Millis Branch
Closed 1967

Hersey is a passenger rail station on the MBTA Commuter Rail Needham Line, located in the Bird's Hill section of Needham, Massachusetts. The station serves as a park-and-ride, with easy access from Route 128. Hersey station has been open since 1917, except for an 8-year closure during Southwest Corridor construction. It is fully handicapped accessible.

The Needham Cutoff opened on November 4, 1906 from West Roxbury to Needham Junction, allowing trains from the former New York and New England Railroad to reach Boston without needing to use the New York Central's Highland Branch. Building the cutoff required a significant length of difficult rock cuts - "one of the heaviest pieces of short railroad construction ever attempted in New England" - reaching a depth of 57 feet (17 m) at Great Plain Avenue. Originally Needham Junction was the only stop on the cutoff; Bird's Hill opened as an infill station at Great Plains Avenue in 1917.

The station was closed with the rest of the line from October 13, 1979 during Southwest Corridor construction. On March 21, 1980, the Massachusetts Legislature directed the MBTA to rename the station to honor Needham selectman Henry D. Hersey, "an outstanding spokesman for commuter rail service in the commonwealth". In addition to this station, the MBTA also honored Hersey by naming locomotive MBTA 1000 as Henry D. Hersey "Mr. Commuter Rail". Newly designated Hersey station reopened with the rest of the line on October 19, 1987.

Unlike the other Needham Line stations, Hersey was not renovated during the closure with a mini-high platform for handicapped accessibility. A mini-high platform was added between 1990 and 1992, making the Needham Line the first completely accessible line on the MBTA system.


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Wikipedia

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