Morrisville station (Vermont)
The Morrisville Depot located at 10 Depot Street in Morrisville, Vermont, is a decommissioned historic train station. Built in 1872 to serve the Portland and Ogdensburg Railway, the depot was known as the most important train station for the Vermont lumber industry, for its decorative architectural ornament, and for housing the headquarters of the St. Johnsbury and Lamoille County Railroad from 1959 to the early 1970s. It was subsequently converted into a restaurant. The Morrisville Depot was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1982 as building #15 in the Morrisville Historic District.
History
In the beginning of the 19th century, several small towns in Vermont's Green Mountains, including Morristown, began supplying lumber from their forests. The Central Vermont Railroad was established in 1849 to transport this supply from the mountains to Burlington. For their terminal they chose the relatively flat mountain township of Waterbury. This would open up new heights of demand for Morristown, located just away. In 1866 the speculative Mt. Mansfield Railroad Company raised $10,000 to build a line around its namesake mountain, from Waterbury to Morrisville. However, this plan fell through three years later when the Portland and Ogensburg Railroad began planning a Maine-New York throughway. On its way from Atlantic coastal New England to Lake Ontario the line could be opened to Morrisville lumber transport as long as the village agreed to build and maintain its own station and roadways.The rails reached Morrisville on December 31, 1872, the same year that the depot building was completed. Although the Portland and Ogdensburg's system was reorganized in 1880, by 1884 the station was popular enough to warrant a extension in the form of the Depot Restaurant. The Portland and Ogdensburg Railroad leased its central Vermont section of rails to the Maine Central Railroad in 1888. In 1900 a poolroom was added to the Morrisville Depot's east side. The Maine Central's lease on Morrisville's rails was held until 1927, when the Maine Central decided to renew only as far west as St. Johnsbury. Passenger railway service declined in the early 1930s, and the Depot Restaurant closed. The original Portland and Ogdensburg line retook freight operations on the rails. In 1959 the company moved their headquarters into the depot. In doing so, the depot's original platform was converted into a "northern wing" to their office. Although the rails remained, the Morrisville Depot would never be used as a train station again.
Recent history
In 1973 the St. Johnsbury-Lake Champlain Railroad Company was purchased by the state. Although several freight companies continued to operate on the lines, the depot was permanently converted from offices into a restaurant space. In the 1980s this restaurant was owned by the Loati family. They ran The Station Restaurant, a local landmark, until 1989. Just five years later, the freight rails were decommissioned. Around this time the Morrisville Depot became an Asian restaurant, which later closed due to a fire. In 2005 the Benson family moved "Melben's" into the space.In the early 2010s, joint efforts of the VAST Trail and the government repurposed the railway path into the Lamolle Valley Rail Trail, a all-season sports and recreation pathway. The project broke ground on July 19, 2013. The Morrisville section of track, included in Phase 1B, was converted to a paved recreational path in 2014.
Also in 2014, the Morrisville Depot was purchased by its current owners Kim Kaufman and James Goldsmith. The owners were awarded over $30,000 in tax credits to rehabilitate the 144-year-old landmark.
Chronological list of companies housed in the Morrisville Depot
- The Depot Restaurant
- An unnamed poolroom
- STJ&LC Railroad Company
- The Station Restaurant
- Oriental Station
- Melben's
- 10 Railroad Street