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Middletown (Erie Railroad station)

MIDDLETOWN
Middletown NY Station LOC 121197pu.jpg
The Middletown station, seen trackside in 1971
Location 11–19 Depot Street, Middletown, New York 10940
Coordinates 41°26′50″N 74°25′12″W / 41.44722°N 74.42000°W / 41.44722; -74.42000Coordinates: 41°26′50″N 74°25′12″W / 41.44722°N 74.42000°W / 41.44722; -74.42000
Owned by Erie Railroad (1843–1960)
Erie–Lackawanna Railroad (1960–1976)
Conrail (1976–1983)
Metro-North Railroad (1983)
Line(s) Erie Railroad Main Line (New York Division)
Middletown and Crawford Branch
Platforms 1 side platforms
Tracks 2 main line
Construction
Platform levels 1
Other information
Station code 2665
History
Opened 1843
Closed April 18, 1983
Rebuilt 1896
Services
Preceding station   Erie Railroad   Following station
Main Line
Terminus Middletown and Crawford Branch
toward Pine Bush

Middletown was the main station along the Erie Railroad mainline in the city of Middletown, New York. Located on Depot Street, the station was first opened in 1843 with construction of the New York, Lake Erie and Western Railroad, which had originally terminated at Goshen. The station was located along the New York Division, which stretched from Pavonia Terminal in Jersey City, New Jersey to the Sparrowbush station just north of Port Jervis.

The building was opened in 1896 to replace one that had been in use since 1843 when the New York and Erie began service to the city. The Romanesque Revival building was designed by George E. Archer, Chief Architect of the New York, Lake Erie and Western Railroad, later the Erie Railroad. The station saw service for trains going from Chicago to Erie station in Jersey City, and later, to Hoboken, New Jersey. It also saw regular commuter service.

The building served as a railroad station until 1983, when rail service was taken over by MTA's Metro-North Railroad. Service on the route of Erie's original Main Line was discontinued in favor of the Graham Line, an Erie-built freight line now used by Norfolk Southern and the Port Jervis Line and was replaced by the Middletown Metro-North station.

The station depot was renovated and restored, becoming the Thrall Library in 1995.


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