Union Station (Chattanooga)
Chattanooga Union Station, more commonly known as the Union Depot in Chattanooga, constructed between 1857 and 1859, served as a train car shed in Chattanooga, Tennessee. Located at Broad and Ninth Streets, the station was one of two major railroad terminals in the city, the other being the Southern Railway's Terminal Station.
Modifications were added in 1868 and 1881 to include offices and waiting rooms. The train car shed was in use during and after the Civil War. After failed efforts to preserve the structure, the Union Depot was torn down in 1972.
History
The Union Depot was constructed of limestone and brick; the bricks used were made by slaves. The center line of the train car shed was the boundary line between the Western & Atlantic Railway and the Nashville & Chattanooga Railway. During the Civil War, the train car shed was used as an army hospital. A head house was added in 1882, and the south end was demolished and replaced with butterfly sheds in 1926. In 1900, Georgian marble floors were added to the building, which was appropriate because Georgia owned the land that the Union Depot stood on.Throughout the first four decades of the facility's operation, its ownership had been disputed between the state of Georgia, the East Tennessee & Georgia Railroad, and the Memphis & Charleston Railroad, the latter two having leased portions of the property. The case was settled in the 1890s, when the courts ultimately ruled in favor of Georgia, and determined that the Western & Atlantic Railway and the Nashville & Chattanooga Railway were the rightful owners, the other two roads only having "vested rights" to its usage. The debate over ownership resulted in the organization of the Chattanooga Station Company in 1905. The company was formed by the three lines of the Southern Railway System and the Central of Georgia Railway, and opened the competing Terminal Station in 1909.
In 1901, the Western and Atlantic's General locomotive was placed on display in the station. It remained displayed until 1961, when Western & Atlantic's successor, the Louisville and Nashville removed the engine to be restored to operating condition. The engine then toured various parts of the eastern United States until 1967, when despite efforts by Chattanooga's then mayor Ralph Kelley to keep the engine in the city, the engine was ultimately given to the state of Georgia, who placed it on display in the Southern Museum of Civil War and Locomotive History, where it currently remains.
The last passenger train was the Louisville & Nashville's St. Louis and Chicago to Atlanta Georgian.
Image:General locomotive c 1907.jpg|thumb|right|Western and Atlantic Railroad No. 3: The General, on display in Chattanooga Union Depot in 1907.
Passenger trains
trains running on Nashville, Chattanooga and St. Louis Railway routes, making stops at Union Station included:- Georgian – Chicago and St. Louis, Evansville, Nashville, Chattanooga, Atlanta
- Dixie Limited – Chicago & St. Louis to Evansville, Nashville, Chattanooga, Atlanta, Macon, Albany, Jacksonville
- Dixie Flyer – Chicago & St. Louis to Evansville, Nashville, Chattanooga, Atlanta, Macon, Albany, Jacksonville
- Dixie Mail
- Dixie Flagler – Chicago to Evansville, Nashville, Chattanooga, Atlanta, Waycross, Jacksonville, Miami.
- Tennessean NCStL train #3, 4 -Evansville, Nashville, Chattanooga, Atlanta, Augusta
Restoration efforts and destruction
While the group was unsuccessful in saving the station, their efforts did manage to save Terminal Station from a similar fate.