Macon Terminal Station: Its Predecessors and its Railroads

Macon Terminal Station: Its Predecessors and its Railroads

  • David H. Steinberg on behalf of the Middle Georgia Regional Library
Publisher:Arcadia PublishingISBN 13: 9781467103015ISBN 10: 1467103012

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Know about the book -

Macon Terminal Station: Its Predecessors and its Railroads is written by David H. Steinberg on behalf of the Middle Georgia Regional Library and published by Arcadia Publishing. It's available with International Standard Book Number or ISBN identification 1467103012 (ISBN 10) and 9781467103015 (ISBN 13).

Macon is certainly not the largest railroad hub in the country--not even in Georgia. Yet in the early 1900s, with nearly 100 daily passenger trains, it had nothing about which to be ashamed. In those years, the nation's railroads dominated and, as was befitting, they flaunted their grandeur by building lavish passenger stations. In the South, virtually all of Macon's counterparts had been blessed with new eye-inviting stations. Macon, however, was still being served by what the local media described as a "ramshackle structure" (the 1855 Union Depot) and a "little dingy smoky structure" (the equally embarrassing Southern Railway depot). This all changed on December 1, 1916, when Macon Terminal Station's doors were thrown open to an eagerly awaiting populace. This book traces the events that began some 78 years before, in 1838, with the entry of Macon's first railroad line and led to the creation of Macon's downtown treasure.