Chappaqua | |||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
View north from platform, 2009, with historic station on right | |||||||||||||
| General information | |||||||||||||
| Location | 108 Allen Place,Chappaqua, New York | ||||||||||||
| Line | Harlem Line | ||||||||||||
| Platforms | 1island platform | ||||||||||||
| Tracks | 2 | ||||||||||||
| Connections | Bee-Line: 19 | ||||||||||||
| Construction | |||||||||||||
| Parking | 1,416 spaces | ||||||||||||
| Accessible | Yes | ||||||||||||
| Other information | |||||||||||||
| Fare zone | 5 | ||||||||||||
| History | |||||||||||||
| Opened | June 1, 1847[1][2] | ||||||||||||
| Rebuilt | –June 14, 1902[3] 2007 | ||||||||||||
| Electrified | 1984 700V (DC)third rail | ||||||||||||
| Previous names | Chapequa | ||||||||||||
| Passengers | |||||||||||||
| 2018 | 2,038[4] (Metro-North) | ||||||||||||
| Rank | 30 of109[4] | ||||||||||||
| Services | |||||||||||||
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| Former services | |||||||||||||
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Chappaqua Railroad Depot and Depot Plaza | |||||||||||||
| Coordinates | 41°9′28.44″N73°46′29.64″W / 41.1579000°N 73.7749000°W /41.1579000; -73.7749000 | ||||||||||||
| Area | 2.7 acres (1 ha) | ||||||||||||
| Built | 1902 | ||||||||||||
| Architect | Nicholas Grant[6] | ||||||||||||
| Architectural style | Richardsonian Romanesque | ||||||||||||
| MPS | Horace Greeley Related Sites TR | ||||||||||||
| NRHP reference No. | 79003210[5] | ||||||||||||
| Added to NRHP | April 19, 1979 | ||||||||||||
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Chappaqua station is acommuter rail stop on theMetro-North Railroad'sHarlem Line, located inChappaqua, New York, United States, within thetown ofNew Castle.
Next to the modern station is the building opened by theNew York Central Railroad in 1902.[7] Still in use as a waiting area, it is part of theChappaqua Railroad Depot and Depot Plaza listed on theNational Register of Historic Places since 1979.[8] It was built on land donated by the daughter ofHorace Greeley, a prominent newspaper editor and presidential candidate who had moved to Chappaqua in the mid-19th century and been responsible for much of its early development, on the condition that a small park adjacent to the station be maintained.[9]
Chappaqua was first settled byQuakers moving inland fromLong Island Sound in the 1740s. For a century after that, it remained a self-sustaining farming community, centered around themeeting house 0.6 mile (1 km) north of the present downtown along Quaker Road. The meeting house and several other buildings remain from that era. They are now part of theOld Chappaqua Historic District, also listed on the National Register.[10]
In 1846 theNew York and Harlem Railroad laid the first tracks along the current route. That led to gradual changes in the economy and geography of Chappaqua. Farmers could now easily ship their crops to New York for sale, and many switched to growingcash crops to take advantage of this. A few businesses began to cluster around the original depot site, a few hundred feet north of the present station.[9] Three buildings were eventually built close to the station.[11]
The rail connection made it possible for those with social and commercial links to the city to maintain them, and some who had business there moved to Chappaqua. Among them wasHorace Greeley, the crusading editor of theNew York Tribune. He settled there with his wife and daughter in 1853, seeking a quiet country retreat from the demands of his job and a place to test the farming methods he advocated. Shortly after moving in he builtthe first concrete dairy barn in the country. In 1864 he bought a large farm south of the station and expandedits farmhouse. He lived there for the last nine years of his life.[12]
His daughter Gabrielle inherited the farm. Over the remaining years of the 19th century more city residents followed her family's lead and moved out to Chappaqua. They often settled on farms that had beensubdivided into large residentiallots. By the turn of the century the 1846 depot was no longer able to handle its daily passenger and freight traffic, and the existing buildings were preventing easy access to the station. As sites for a new depot were being proposed and considered, with considerable opposition from the owners of the three buildings near the old station,.[11] Gabrielle offered to donate the 2.7 acres (1.1 ha) where it presently stands for a station, a public park to always be maintained there, and an access road to be named Woodbine Avenue after her mother's family.[9]
Her offer was accepted, and the station was built there. It was completed and opened in 1902, amid much local celebration. Its completion triggered the development of most of modern downtown Chappaqua, and accelerated thesuburbanization of the community, as Gabrielle Greeley continued to subdivide the remnants of the farm fordevelopment by others until her death in 1937. The small park, decorated with a statue of her father and war memorial in 1914, remained per the stipulation of her original gift.[12]
In the early 1970s thePenn Central Railroad, successor by merger to theNew York Central Railroad, which had absorbed the New York and Harlem, wentbankrupt. Commuter rail services it had operated were first run byConrail, then byMetro-North Railroad after that agency was created under the aegis of New York'sMetropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA). During the 1980s the new station, with elevated platforms, was built. Café La Track was opened in the old station a decade later.[13]
In the early 2000s, 20 spaces in the station's lot were equipped with plug-in recharging stations forelectric cars as part of apilot program to encourage their use. Drivers of those vehicles were guaranteed access to one of those spaces.[14] Three years later, during a $1.1 million renovation of the station, the owners of Café La Track, which occupied the southwestern corner of the station building, resorted to anonline petition to successfully prevent themselves from being replaced by aDunkin' Donuts franchise.[13]
The historic station building was converted into a restaurant, Chappaqua Station, in 2015, while retaining much of the station's original character.[15] As of 2019, the station is occupied by Bobo's Cafe.[16]
The station has one eight-car-long high-levelisland platform serving trains in both directions.[17]: 12
The station is located on the southwest corner of downtown Chappaqua, located in a low area amid hilly terrain just north of theMount Pleasant town line. At that point the two railroad tracks run straight in a northeast-southwest heading, paralleling theSaw Mill River Parkway and theheadwaters of theeponymous stream immediately to their west.[18] Quaker Road (New York State Route 120) crosses over the tracks just north of the station, east of its interchange with the parkway. Beyond the Quaker Road bridge, a parking lot separates the road from the main commercial area of downtown around the intersection of King Street, South Greeley Avenue, and North Greeley Avenue.[19]
East of the station, across South Greeley Avenue, are commercial buildings north of Woodburn Avenue andRobert E. Bell Middle School of theChappaqua Central School District. South of it is theEpiscopalChurch of St. Mary the Virgin, also listed on the Register due to its connection to the Greeley family. A baseball diamond lies between the station and New Castle's town hall and the Chappaqua library on the south. To the southwest of the station its overflow parking spills out alongside the tracks to the town line.[19]
Woodburn Avenue west of South Greeley serves as the station's entrance road. Parking is in concentric semicircles, mirroring the small park just east of the station. A statue of Greeley and war memorial are located just across Allen Place from the historic station building on the east side of the tracks.[9] The entry stairs to the modern station are immediately to the south.[20]
The historic building is a one-storyfieldstone structure with a tiledhipped roof pierced at either end by two stone chimneys. On its west side, opposite the statue and war memorial, is agabledporte-cochère supported by squarebracketed wooden pillars atop a stone wall. West, along the tracks, a roofedarcade extends along the tracks. It is no longer necessary as a shelter for passengers awaiting trains since the tracks are now fenced off on that side and all ingress and egress from them is via the modern station.[9]
A walkway and steps enclosed with glass and aluminum climb to a similarly treated overpass from both north and south, with an elevator in a brick shaft between them. In the overpass are ticket machines, on the west end of the overpass, another enclosed stairwell and another elevator in a brick shaft descend to the elevated concreteisland platform between the tracks.[20]
The platform, long enough to accommodate eight cars, extends about 50 feet (15 m) to the south of the overpass. North of the overpass it continues to slightly north of the Quaker Road overpass. A roof covers the first hundred feet (30 m). Along its length are ornate metal streetlights, enclosed shelters, and some vending machines.[20]
The historic station was converted to a café in 2015. While the ticket counter closed, the cafe retains most of the station's original elements, including the waiting area benches and the original ticket counter, which serves as a check-out counter.[21] It is decorated entirely in wood, from the flooring to the vertical siding to the exposed ceilingrafters. There is a simplemolding at the floor, and a more decorative one at thechair rail level and then running around the waiting room at the top of the entryways, all of which are flanked by smooth squarepilasters. Above that level is a paneledentablature (with ten-pane horizontalcasement windows above the former ticket office), with another moldedcornice at the ceiling.