Lincoln
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The shelter and disused railroad depot in April 2016.
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Location | 101 North Chicago Street Lincoln, IL 62656 United States |
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Coordinates | 40°08′51″N 89°21′49″W / 40.14748°N 89.36354°WCoordinates: 40°08′51″N 89°21′49″W / 40.14748°N 89.36354°W | ||||||||||||||
Owned by | State Bank of Lincoln in Trust | ||||||||||||||
Operated by | Amtrak | ||||||||||||||
Line(s) | Union Pacific Railroad | ||||||||||||||
Platforms | 1 side platform | ||||||||||||||
Tracks | 1 | ||||||||||||||
Construction | |||||||||||||||
Disabled access | Yes | ||||||||||||||
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Station code | Amtrak code: LCN | ||||||||||||||
Traffic | |||||||||||||||
Passengers (2014) | 25,587 0.8% | ||||||||||||||
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Lincoln is an Amtrak train station in Lincoln, Illinois, United States, at Broadway and Chicago Streets. Service is provided by Lincoln Service and the Texas Eagle. The station is a small brick shelter. Adjacent to the shelter is a brick Spanish Mission-style depot building, disused as of 2016, constructed by the former Chicago and Alton Railroad and later used by the Gulf, Mobile and Ohio Railroad. Although not used by Amtrak, the historic depot was renovated for commercial use and was long occupied by a restaurant. Plans were announced in June 2016 to renovate the disused depot for reopening in 2017.
Many pioneers of Illinois's Logan County tried to develop towns within the county that could become the county seat and business center for local farmers. Early plats and developments include the Postville Courthouse State Historic Site and the Mount Pulaski Courthouse State Historic Site. A final decision on the county seat was not reached until 1853, when a railroad, the predecessor of what was to become the Chicago & Alton, laid tracks through the county as part of a trunk line from Chicago to St. Louis. Railroad management selected a site along the tracks for development, and named the new town after the railroad's lawyer, Abraham Lincoln.
On August 27, 1853, Mr. Lincoln arrived from Springfield and led a ceremony by the railroad tracks to mark the founding of the new town. The successful lawyer paid a farmer to bring a wagonload of watermelons, which were handed out to the celebrants. Lincoln cut into one of the melons and "christened" the railroad trackside with the juice.