Father Pitt

Why should the beautiful die?


Indiana Station

Indiana Station

Built in 1904, this well-preserved old train station in Indiana, Pennsylvania, is on the National Register of Historic Places. It was built by the Buffalo, Rochester and Pittsburgh Railway, which later became part of the Baltimore and Ohio.

Indiana Station
Indiana Station
Indiana Station
Canon PowerShot SX20 IS.

In 1991, Jet Lowe photographed the building for the Historic American Engineering Record. (The originals of these pictures are at the Library of Congress.)

1991 photo of the station
1991 photo of the station


One response to “Indiana Station”

  1. von Hindenburg

    Connellsville has a lovely, restored station, though unfortunately, the town’s Amtrak stop (the only one in western PA not on the old Pennsy mainline) is only a small platform across the Yough.

    Washington has two remaining stations. One is the offices of an investment advisory and orthodontist. The other is a warehouse for a concrete firm.

    Latrobe has a lovely station that is still an active Amtrak stop.

    Surely, though, the jewel of SWPA train stations (outside of Pittsburgh) must be Greensburg. Aside from being a Jacobian masterpiece, it is still an active Amtrak stop and contains a decent Italian restaurant and an excellent tea house.

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