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The Blair Enterprise,
Thursday, Oct 22, 1987 Pages 1 & 3
County Surprised with quick demolition of Blair depot
On Monday morning, October 19th, a heavy duty bulldozer, a crane
with a clam shell bucket and about a dozen railroad persons and trucks moved
on the old Blair railroad depot at 14th and Front Streets. By the end of the
day the depot was only a memory and a pile of broken lumber and bricks.
Very few people in Blair knew that the old depot was
going to be demolished. The necessary permits were in order and the building
was reduced to rubble before anyone could object to the old landmark being
destroyed.
The old depot had been the center of Blair's commerce
back about 80 years ago. Passenger
trains and freight trains made that location the most
important spot for everything from shipping eggs and cream out to even
bringing political figures into the area at election times.
Telegraph service was one of the main jobs of the 24
hour per day depot. Railroad crews were also stationed in Blair for many
years before the Chicago and Northwestern moved the section headquarters to
Missouri Valley, Iowa several years ago. The old depot was used only for
storage for about the last five years. Many local persons thought the old
depot could have been sold for such purpose as a unique type of restaurant.
A railroad employee said that the company did not want to sell the building
because it was too close to the main line and the liability risk was great.
The main line runs about 20 feet north of the old depot. Trains are speeding
past the site about every 30 minutes with even more train traffic planned
for the future. As a result the railroad company decided that the building
had to be destroyed to eliminate maintenance costs for a building that they
no longer needed.
The old "Blair" stone sign, that was mounted on the
north side of the depot, was saved. The railroad is planning to put the sign
into a permanent mounting in the future.
Depot history
History of the Blair Depot is sketchy, at best. The first
railroad in Blair was the Sioux City and Pacific Railroad, and they set up
shop in Blair 1876. That was not the first line, however. In 1867, a
railroad company did lay a line from DeSoto to Fremont that came through
Blair. The Sioux City and Pacific Railroad did much to improve the City of
Blair, according to early records. Efforts included building a combination
depot and hotel on the site of the present D.L. Blair building. That depot
was moved in later years to just south of the Blair Feed Mill, who still
uses it for storage. Across the street from the old depot, where the current
US Post Office is, was a park laid out by the railroad company. A date is
not known when the recently demolished depot was built, but the Blair
Newspapers are in possession of pictures dating back to 1911. The following
is a history of railroads in Washington County, written in the centennial
year of the United States, 1876. The history was written by John T. Bell, a
law reporter from Omaha.
RAILROADS
THE SIOUX CITY &
PACIFIC, OMAHA & NORTHWESTERN,
AND ELKHORN VALLEY RAILROADS.
In 1864 was organized the Northern
Nebraska Air Line Railroad Company, but nothing was done in the way of
constructing a road. In 1867, the company was reorganized, consisting of
John S. Bowen, John A. Unthank, Dean C. Stader, Jessie T. Davis and T.P.
Kennard, the object being to build a railroad from DeSoto to Fremont. A
land grant of seventy-five sections of land was donated the company by the
State, in aid of the enterprise, and a temporary line was built from
DeSoto to the present site of Blair. In 1868, the company disposed of Its
franchise to John T. Blair and associates, who, the following year,
completed the Sioux City & Pacific road from the Missouri Immediately east
of Blalr to Fremont, there forming a Junction with the Union Pacific and
Elkhorn Valley roads. A year or two afterwards the DeSoto branch, or
"plug" as it was called in derision, was taken up, having never been
operated. Considerable bad feeling was gotten up among, the residents of
the county In consequence of this abandonment of the original design to
make DeSoto the eastern terminus of the road, in Washington County, but
that soon passed off. County aid to the amount of $75,000 was, voted the
Sioux City & Pacific road, in 1869. This road has been successfully
operated ever since its completion. Mr. Scott Bryan is agent for the
company in Blair.
The Elkhorn Valley road does not run
through Washington county, but is built in the valley of the Elkhorn
river, on the west side of the stream, from Fremont to Wisner, affording
railroad transportation to the western portion of the county, the river
being bridged.
A look back at the Blair depot
by Dale Gentzler
In its heyday, the Blair railway depot was a veritable
hub of activity, affecting nearly everyone in Blair and the surrounding
territory in one way or another. Businesses got much of their merchandise by
rail, farmers' livestock and grain were shipped by rail, salesmen went from
town to town on trains, and passenger traffic was heavy. Several trains
arrived and left town many times a day. Townspeople met every train that
pulled in, some to meet friends and relatives, some to pick up merchandise
from the Railway Express car, and some just out d curiosity.
The arrival d the automobile took its toll on the rail
business. - Folks found it easier. to get from one place to another by
automobile and they could go when they wanted to go. Merchants learned that
they could rely upon trucks for faster and better service.
As railroads modernized their equipment, they found
that fewer stations were needed, and consequently fewer employees. Main
lines received the bulk of the upkeep needed and soon the branch lines began
to deteriorate and the railroads closed depot after depot, and, eventually,
entire branches. The huge brown water tanks and windmills that dominated the
sky lines d every small town along the way, became useless with the arrival
of diesel engines, and they, too, were torn down.
Telegraph lines were later replaced by radios and
telephones. .4t one time every depot had its telegrapher, usually the depot
agent, who copied train messages and passed them on to the trainmen, or
delivered Western Union telegrams which were sent by Morse code.
Doing the relief shift
I came involved in railroading about 1950, which proved to be the
beginning of the decline of the Nebraska Division of the Chicago and
Northwestern. One of my first permanent assignments, after working for a few
years as a relief agent, was the relief telegrapher's job at the Blair
depot, a position. I held for only a couple years.
The depot was open twenty-four hours a day at that
time, and my job was to work the three other operators' days off.
Consequently I worked two days a week from four to midnight, two days from
midnight to eight and on Sunday from 8 a.m. until 4 p.m. Passenger traffic
was already a thing d the past here, but the number of trains passing
through Blair warranted the station's full-time operation.
We still took Western Union messages and all train
messages, over the telegraph wires.
There was a considerable amount of carload traffic and
there were always a number of cars on the sidings, waiting to be unloaded,
or empty ones waiting to be picked up. An agent-telegrapher's duties
included keeping a record of all these cars, and seeing that all business
got taken care of.
Fancy depot
As depots went, Blair's was a nice one. Most C&-NW depots were those
brownish-red frame affairs, usually two-story buildings which housed the
office and freight room on the main level, with living quarters upstairs for
the resident agent. The bathroom was usually a rustic edifice out back, and
it served the public as well as the depot people.
Blair's depot was a brick one-story building that sat
in the vee formed by the crossing of two railroads. The depot office windows
faced the tracks-in the vee, and there was a waiting room on both sides of
the office, running parallel to the two sets of tracks. 1 was told that one
had been a men's waiting room and the other a women's, but I suspect that it
was more likely a different waiting room for the respective railroads. When
I arrived on the scene, one waiting room was boarded off, but one could tell
it had been quite an establishment in the early days. There were marble
floors in both waiting rooms, and there was indoor plumbing, of all things.
Two railroads.
The two railroads that crossed in front of the depot were the C&NW and
the CStPMSO. The Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis and Omaha was owned by the
Chicago and Northwestern at this time and this branch line ran from Omaha to
points north. The C&-NW came across the Missouri River from the east and
joined the main line at Fremont. The two lines were connected by another
track east of Blair, forming, what was known as a "Y", which actually was
more like a triangle. The "Y" was used when trains coming from Omaha needed
to go east instead of continuing on north, or vice versa. It was also
utilized in turning trains around. Some terminals had a round-house to turn
engines around, but the Blair "Y" served the same purpose. The engineer
simply proceeded [sic] around one side of the triangle, backed up the next,
and was then in position to go back where he came from.
Somewhere along the line, the need for a full-time
operator disappeared, probably due more to the advent of the radio than to
anything else. Messages could now be sent directly to the men on the train.
There has been a single agent at the depot in recent years, but the upkeep d
such a building just for that purpose does seem to be unnecessary.
The end of an era
It's too late now, but one has to wonder if any attempt was made by the
railroad, or local officials, to salvage this building. It played such an
important part in the history of the City of Blair, it's too bad it couldn't
have been kept as a museum, or a business d some sort. If local people
weren't notified of the depot's being torn down, they should have been. |