DeKalb station
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DeKalb, Illinois
DeKalb | ||||||||||||||||
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The eastbound Kate Shelley 400 arriving at DeKalb in December 1964 | ||||||||||||||||
| General information | ||||||||||||||||
| Location | 200 N Sixth Street DeKalb, Illinois | |||||||||||||||
| Coordinates | 41°55′45″N 88°44′47″W / 41.929203°N 88.746323°W | |||||||||||||||
| System | Chicago and North Western Railway station | |||||||||||||||
| Owned by | Union Pacific Railroad | |||||||||||||||
| Platforms | 1 side platform, 1 island platform (removed) | |||||||||||||||
| Tracks | 5 (2 remain) | |||||||||||||||
| Construction | ||||||||||||||||
| Structure type | At-grade | |||||||||||||||
| History | ||||||||||||||||
| Opened | 1853 | |||||||||||||||
| Closed | 1971 | |||||||||||||||
| Rebuilt | 1891 | |||||||||||||||
| Services | ||||||||||||||||
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DeKalb station is a former railway station in Downtown DeKalb, Illinois. It served passenger trains of the Chicago and North Western Railway (C&NW) along its main line between Chicago and Omaha. The station was designed by Charles Sumner Frost and Alfred Hoyt Granger in 1891 and closed for passenger service in 1971. The building still stands and is used by the Union Pacific Railroad for offices.
The station is built in a rectangular design, on the south side of the tracks. It was designed in a Richardsonian Romanesque style by Charles Sumner Frost and Alfred Hoyt Granger.[1] The building is made from brick and stone, and features a tower facing the tracks.[2]: 37 A freight depot once existed across the tracks from the passenger station. The area featured five tracks, and has since been reduced to two.[3] A near identical twin of the station was built in Fond du Lac, Wisconsin.
