KAHNDOG P&LE RR
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HEADLINES
Building
embodies railroad nostalgia
West
Pittsburg train station may see new life if society has its way

Forward into the past
New
Brighton resident Don Gee looks out from the tracks in front of the old West
Pittsburg train station. Gee, a member of the Beaver Valley Junction Chapter
of the National Railway Historical Society, is spearheading an effort by the
group to purchase the station, built in 1913, and turn it into a regional
train museum.
(Ledger photo by Eric
Poole) Ledger staff writer.
History slumbers beneath a blanket of midwinter snow in West Pittsburg,
where a train station, boarded up and largely unused for decades, may be on
the verge of a new life.
The station once served as a way-station for travelers
between Ashtabula, Ohio, and Pittsburgh on the Pittsburgh and Lake Erie
Railroad. It served as the site of farewells and arrivals both routine and
monumental. Today, after four decades of neglect, the 92-year-old train
station is showing signs of wear. The roof is crumbling and sagging in
places. That could change soon.
A local group, the Beaver Valley Junction Chapter of the
National Railway Historical Society, is planning to purchase the station and
surrounding property. The group’s ultimate goal is to refurbish the building
and turn it into a museum, which would celebrate the region’s rail heritage.
New Brighton resident Don Gee is acutely aware of that
heritage. A confessed train enthusiast and son of a railroader, Gee is
spearheading the chapter’s effort to purchase the station but says the
building’s design also is a factor in his group’s preservation efforts.
"Twenty years ago, I had no idea that I would be involved with this," he
says. "I have loved trains my whole life. "It doesn’t have to be a railroad
building; it’s a nice building."
The station was built in 1913 along the Pittsburgh and
Lake Erie line. At one time, it was used as a pick up and drop-off point for
passengers on the line, which was primarily a carrier of freight, such as
coal to Lake Erie and iron ore dropped off at Ashtabula, Ohio, by Great
Lakes freighters and delivered along. However, the train did carry
recreational travelers and even commuters who took the train from West
Pittsburg into Pittsburgh’s Station Square, says Gee.
In its heyday, from the 1920s into the 40s, he says, the
station was more opulent than its function might indicate. On the facility’s
roof, there is still a large glass skylight, which allowed sunlight to shine
onto an elaborate stained-glass ceiling. Like the customers that once passed
through the building, the stained-glass ceiling is nothing more than a
memory.
Gee estimates that passenger service ceased in the early
to mid-1960s. In 1968, a nearby business owner purchased the station and
used it for years afterward as a storage facility. The building, now owned
by the business owner’s family, sits dormant, with members of the Beaver
Valley Chapter plotting a new beginning.
Right now, finances are a major concern. Gee says the
effort to purchase the building is either near success or not near,
depending on whether the chapter obtains a bank loan for the property. In
part because of its status as a tax-exempt organization, the Beaver Valley
Chapter has some credibility. It also helps, says Gee, that this isn’t the
chapter’s first project. Previously, the group purchased and restored a
railroad tower, called the UN Tower because of its location near Union
Valley Road. The tower, once located near the train station, was moved into
Mahoningtown. The group also accepts donations and holds fund-raisers,
including the "Frosty Rails" winter train show events, and operation of an
exhibit and booth at the annual festival in Mahoningtown near the UN Tower’s
present-day site.
The chapter is holding "Frosty Rails ’05," a model train
show and festival from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 12, 2005 at the
Homewood Volunteer Fire Department hall. Admission to the event is $4.
Included in the event will be model railroad clinics and layouts, as well as
slide shows and vintage railroad movies.
Once the group purchases the property, says Gee, it
could become eligible for state grants to help pay for repairs to the
building and cover operating expenses for the museum. Gee also envisions
renting office space in the building.
Many chapter members already have railroad artifacts
looking for a permanent home. Those artifacts include small train cars –
known as "speeders" in train parlance – and cabooses, which would be
displayed on spur tracks located on the four-acre property. "We already have
a lot of stuff we could display," says Gee. "When it started looking real
good for us to get this place, people started giving us railroad equipment."
Preservation, not just of the building, but of the past
it represents, is a key goal of the project, according to Gee, who says the
history of the United States is, to a great extent, the history of its
rails. Eventually, he says the former station could be a resource, for both
education and recreation. "When we restore it, it could be in such nice
condition that people would want to go there."
Once
upon a train

A
train chugs along the Pittsburgh and Lake Erie line at the West Pittsburg
train station in this pre-1920 postcard. The station, which still sits at
the site, ended its train service in the early to mid 1960s. A local
railroad historical group has designs on refurbishing the facility. (photo
provided)
"When we
restore it, it could be in such nice condition that people would want to go
there."
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