Our son
took us on a drive around Omaha doing a bit of sightseeing and checking out
important sites such as where he and his better half work…and historical or
important places around the city.
Before
I get into the first phase of our sightseeing adventure, I want to post a
complaint against national weather forecasters!
Omaha
is never shown on national weather maps!
Why not? I admit that the Omaha
Metropolitan area only ranks 59th in population but there is plenty
of room on any national weather map a bit north of Kansas City to plug in the
name of this key city in the upper Midwest!
There certainly isn’t anything north of the city that would be in conflict
with this addition. There are about
1,000,000 people in the Omaha Metropolitan Statistical Area! Let’s give them a little recognition!
One key
part of our tour related to Omaha’s rich railroad history…
Omaha’s
Burlington Railroad Station was completed in 1898 at a cost of $408,000. It was originally designed in the Greek
Revival Style, but it was extensively remodeled in 1930 in order to better
compete with the new Union Station located just across the tracks… Additional
remodeling took place in 1954.
The
Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad, serving the Midwest since it was founded
in 1850 came to Omaha in 1870. During
the late 1960s train travel was greatly reduced and several areas of the
station fell into disrepair. In 1971
passenger service was turned over to Amtrak and that organization operated the
Burlington Station until early 1974.
The
good news is that in 2013 the former Burlington Depot was purchased by Hearst
Television. The interior of the building
was remodeled and it’s now a state-of-the-art broadcast and web media facility
for Omaha's ABC affiliate, KETV (Channel 7).
It took 2 years to renovate the
building and the station moved into its new facility in the fall of 2015.
Note:
· The Burlington Station and the Union Station are contributing
properties to the Omaha Rail and Commerce Historic District…which is also listed
on the National Register of Historic Places.
Learn more about this historic district at http://www.nebraskahistory.org/histpres/nebraska/douglas/DO09-Om-Rail-Commerce-HD.PDF.
The
Burlington Station opened on July 4, 1898, in time for the Trans-Mississippi
International Exposition. The Exposition
was a major inter-national showcase that attracted thousands of visitors to
Omaha from around the world.
The
main lobby of this station featured a grand circular staircase that led
passengers downstairs to track level and the trains. A large canopy, a first for an Omaha train
station, covered two tracks and kept passengers from the elements. The spacious lobby included new amenities,
such as separate men's and women's waiting rooms, a gentleman's smoking room,
and a sit-down lunch counter.
Note:
· Amtrak operated the old Burlington Depot
for a number of years but in 1983 they moved their operations into a small one-level
bare bones station. You can see it on
the right just down the tracks beyond the Burlington Station.
Believe
it or not, this postcard showed what the Burlington Station looked like before
it was ‘remodeled’. When it was opened
in 1898, this Italianate style building was hailed by newspapers around the
world for its grand architecture and accommodations.
What a
difference! The 1930 remodeling changed
the building to conform to the elements of the Neo-Classical Revival. The exterior was greatly simplified. Those granite columns were removed as was
much of the external detail. Actually,
24 of the original columns were moved intact to Lincoln Nebraska where they now
stand between Memorial Stadium and the Coliseum.
In 1985
the interior was gutted by an architectural salvager who removed and sold every
interior fitting. The four enormous chandeliers were taken down, one of which
was broken and was sold in pieces. While
it’s great that the Burlington Station has been repurposed, it’s especially sad
that the interior of the building was in effect wiped clean of all the
historical architectural detail…
The
Union Passenger Terminal, which is just across the tracks from the Burlington
Terminal, was completed in 1931. The
impressive exterior walls are of cream-colored glazed terra cotta with Art Deco
detailing. The completion of this terminal and the reconstruction of the nearby
Burlington Station firmly established Omaha as an important railroad terminus
in the Midwest.
Construction
started in mid-July of 1929. The
124,000-square-foot building cost $3.5 million to build. The architect was said to have remarked,
"We have tried to express the distinctive character of the railroad:
strength, power, masculinity." This
was the Union Pacific Railroad's first Art Deco railroad station.
When it
was completed the Union Station was known for its technological innovations. These included electric luggage conveyor
belts, escalators and extensive lighting throughout the building. Passengers and critics both appreciated the
over-the-top amenities and attributes of the building. It had massive women's restrooms, beautiful
marble columns and flooring throughout plus deep oak woodwork surrounding every
window and door in the station. During
its first year, 1.5 million passengers passed through!
Passenger
service ceased in 1971 and in 1973 the Union Station was donated to the City of
Omaha. That same year the station became
the home of the Durham Museum. The Union
Pacific Museum and Archives were also located there. The Durham Museum is dedicated to preserving
and displaying the history of the United States' western region. A variety of transportation and commerce
exhibits includes relevant railroad equipment.
To learn more about this museum, you can go to http://www.durhammuseum.org/.
Looking
at the desolation that once was a major rail yard with multiple tracks it’s hard
to imagine what it must have been like back in the heyday of passenger railroad
service. By 1946, 64 steam locomotives brought
10,000 passengers each day in and out of Union Station!
In
1947, Omaha’s 2 stations served 114 passenger trains per day that connected the
city with the West and Midwest. At one
time or another Omaha was served by the following railroads: Chicago and North
Western; Wabash Railroad; Missouri Pacific Railroad; Chicago Great Western
Railway; Rock Island Railroad; Milwaukee Road; Chicago, Burlington and Quincy; Chicago,
Rock Island and Pacific; Illinois Central; Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis and
Omaha, and; the Union Pacific Railroad.
Railroads
also carried many of the tens of thousands of animals for processing at the
packing plants which were located near the stockyards and railroads. The city's
stockyards and packing industry were the largest in the world by the mid-1950s,
even surpassing Chicago.
This is
the former Burlington and Missouri (later the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy)
Railroad Headquarters Building in Omaha.
This commercial adaptation of the Italianate style was built in 1879 at
a cost of $40,000. The fourth floor was added
ca. 1886. The building was remodeled in
1899 to resemble the Chicago, Burlington, and Quincy Railroad Company building
in Chicago. That building was recognized
as a showplace of the time. The interior
of this building has been carefully preserved and it has a unique combination
of skylights, cast iron railings, staircases, columns, and ornamental
detailing.
Originally
the first floor was leased by a wholesale grocer as well as a wholesale notion
dealer while the upper floors were used as headquarters for the railroad. The railroad occupied this building until
1966. Then it sat empty for several
years. In 1983 the structure was
rehabilitated and converted into office space that closely matched the original
design.
Omaha
is the location of Union Pacific Railroad's and its parent company The Union
Pacific Corporation’s headquarters. That
company’s big 19 floor glass office building is located downtown near both of
the former railway stations.
Completed in June of 2004, Union Pacific
Center is the largest building by square feet in the state of Nebraska. Union Pacific Railroad has been headquartered
in Omaha since 1867. Other major
corporations that are located in Omaha include Berkshire Hathaway, the Kiewit
Corporation (building contractor), ConAgra Foods and Mutual of Omaha.
Note:
· In 2015, the Union Pacific Railroad had
32,100 route miles of track, 8,500 locomotives and 44,500 employees. The company payroll came to $4,600,000,000,
the company made $8,500,000,000 in purchases and it spent $4,300,000,000 in
capital projects.
This facility is a railroad ‘downer’ after the beauty and power exhibited by the Burlington and
Union Stations. It's the current Amtrak Depot just down the track or
across from its predecessors. It was
depressing just to stop by and take these photos… The depot was locked so we
couldn’t go inside. It’s only open from
9:30 PM until 6:30 AM. If you’re
electronically inclined, be forewarned…there is no Wi-Fi!
Beautiful
building isn’t it! The ‘look’ of the
structure just discourages one from taking the train… Opened in July 1984, this
Amtrak facility follows a standardized plan introduced by the company in the
late 1970s. Intended to be functional
and cost-efficient, these depot designs enforced Amtrak branding by employing a
unified material and color palette. (It’s
uninspiring and bland…perhaps a bit depressing too!)
Of
course the big problem is that there are only 2 daily trains, 1 westbound and 1
eastbound. To think that there used to
be 114 passenger trains in and out of Omaha every day! Amtrak, our national passenger rail system,
provides service through Omaha. It
operates the California Zephyr daily in each direction between Chicago and
Emeryville California. Emeryville is
just across the bay from San Francisco. In
2013, this depot handled a total of 24,410 passengers…about 69 passengers per
day.
Just
click on any of the photos in enlarge them…
Thanks
for stopping by for a visit!
Take
Care, Big Daddy Dave
The Burlington Station was a grand old building that was drastically changed, too bad it was "remodeled, as it was very stately!" And the last photo is definitely not an incentive to travel by rail! It's a little sad that the days of traveling by train is a lost mode now. You start the Omaha weather map petition, I'll sign! We feel that way about Cary when just the local weather map is shown! :-) Take care and have a great day!
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