Akron Union Station was a series of three union stations serving several passenger railroads in Akron, Ohio from 1852 to 1971. The station's tenants included the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad, Pennsylvania Railroad and Erie Railroad. It was a hub, serving train companies serving destinations in different directions, west, north, south and east.[1]
First station
The original station was constructed by the Cleveland and Pittsburgh Railroad in 1852. The Atlantic and Great Western Railroad moved their passenger service from a station near the modern Quaker Square to this station in 1864. The at-grade station was replaced in 1891 when a grade-separation project was completed through downtown Akron.
Midlander (Chicago, IL - Hoboken, NJ) (forerunner to the Lake Cities)
Pennsylvania Railroad
Akronite (Akron - New York, NY)
Clevelander (New York, NY - Cleveland, OH, via Akron) (west-bound only)
Gotham Limited/Golden Triangle (Chicago, IL - Cleveland, OH, via Akron)
unnamed Cleveland - Akron - Columbus - Cincinnati service, unnamed Cleveland - Akron local service
Third station and final years
The third station, Akron Union Depot, reflecting the shift of location, was opened in 1950 and was located five blocks away, on the east side of the tracks, at 220 Wolf Ledges Parkway.[5][6] The Erie Railroad split away in 1949, moving to a separate station on the adjacent Broadway Street. By the 1950s the Pennsylvania Railroad eliminated the Columbus to Cleveland trains, and Union Station was served by an Akron to Hudson taxi shuttle. The station was closed in 1971, as the last trains being the B&O's Capitol Limited and a shortened Akron-Washington Shenandoah day train.[7][8] The Capitol Limited would be subsequently rerouted with the assumption of passenger services by Amtrak. Akron briefly saw train service in the 1990s with the arrival of the rerouting of the Broadway Limited and the Three Rivers.
Disposition today
The 1950 station is currently used by the University of Akron as its Buckingham Center for Continuing Education.[9][10] The depot was scheduled for demolition in 2010 as part of a new law school to be built by the university, but plans were scrapped due to local backlash. As a result, a new expansion and renovation was instead added to the C. Blake McDowell Law Center, across the street from Buckingham.[citation needed] Buckingham has been internally renovated as of March 2020.[citation needed]