Riverside | |||||||||||
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![]() The station building, c. 1910 | |||||||||||
General information | |||||||||||
Location | 3751 Vine Street Riverside, California | ||||||||||
Owned by | San Pedro, Los Angeles and Salt Lake Railroad (1904–1921) Union Pacific Railroad (1921–) | ||||||||||
History | |||||||||||
Opened | 1904 | ||||||||||
Closed | May 2, 1971 | ||||||||||
Former services | |||||||||||
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San Pedro, Los Angeles, & Salt Lake RR Depot | |||||||||||
Coordinates | 33°58′47″N117°22′07″W / 33.979825°N 117.368562°W | ||||||||||
Built | 1904 | ||||||||||
Built by | San Pedro, Los Angeles and Salt Lake Railroad | ||||||||||
NRHP reference No. | 77000326 [1] | ||||||||||
Added to NRHP | April 18, 1977 |
Riverside Depot is a former train station in Riverside, California.
The station was constructed in 1904 by the San Pedro, Los Angeles and Salt Lake Railroad along their route to Los Angeles. Union Pacific Railroad acquired the line on Vine Street along with the station in 1921. Local Pacific Electric streetcars served the station via a terminal at 7th and Vine until 1924. [2] Passenger service ceased in 1971 when Amtrak took over intercity passenger service in the United States. [3] The final trips of the City of Los Angeles serving the station were on April 30 eastbound and May 2 westbound. [4] [5]
The depot was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on April 18, 1977 as San Pedro, Los Angeles, & Salt Lake RR Depot. Metrolink commuter rail service to Riverside began in 1993, followed by Amtrak in 2002; both use Riverside–Downtown station near the former Santa Fe Railroad station. [6] [7]
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The Los Angeles and Salt Lake Railroad was a rail company in California, Nevada, and Utah in the United States, that completed and operated a railway line between its namesake cities, via Las Vegas, Nevada. Incorporated in Utah in 1901 as the San Pedro, Los Angeles and Salt Lake Railroad, the line was largely the brainchild of William Andrews Clark, a Montana mining baron and United States Senator. Clark enlisted the help of Utah's U.S. Senator Thomas Kearns, mining magnate and newspaper man, to ensure the success of the line through Utah. Construction of the railroad's main line was completed in 1905. Company shareholders adopted the LA&SL name in 1916. The railway was also known by its official nickname, "The Salt Lake Route", and was sometimes informally referred to as "The Clark Road". The tracks are still in use by the modern Union Pacific Railroad, as the Cima, Caliente, Sharp, and Lynndyl Subdivisions.
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