Great Northern Railroad Depot
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Location | 402 E. Lake St., Wayzata, Minnesota |
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Coordinates | 44°58′7″N 93°31′3″W / 44.96861°N 93.51750°WCoordinates: 44°58′7″N 93°31′3″W / 44.96861°N 93.51750°W |
Built | 1906 |
Architect | Bartlett, Samuel; Hogeland, A.H. |
Architectural style | English Tudor |
NRHP reference # | |
Added to NRHP | July 07, 1981 |
The Great Northern Depot in Wayzata, Minnesota is a depot built by the Great Northern Railway in 1906 to a design in the Tudor Revival style by architect Samuel L. Bartlett. The depot is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The depot now houses the offices and museum of the Wayzata Historical Society as well as the Wayzata Area Chamber of Commerce, and is known as the Wayzata Depot.
The St. Paul and Pacific Railroad, predecessor of the Great Northern, reached Wayzata on August 24, 1867. The first depot was located about three blocks east of its present location. When the railroad continued building westward, local citizens protested the construction of the railroad on the stagecoach road that ran in front of the shops in the business district, because the railroad would shower the town with cinders and sparks. The railroad ignored their complaints, so the town sued the railroad in 1883. In response, James J. Hill, the president of the Great Northern, threatened to wipe Wayzata off the map. He demolished the former depot in 1893 and moved the stop a mile to the east, naming it Holdridge. Hill was quoted as saying, "Wayzata residents can walk a mile for the next 20 years!" Since Hill had influence with residents on the west side of town, he established a platform stop at Ferndale Road, about a third of a mile west of downtown. After 12 years of this feud, in which Wayzata citizens had to trudge a mile through marshy terrain to reach the train, Hill relented and built the new depot in the center of Wayzata's downtown.
The Great Northern Railway was influential in Wayzata since it brought tourists to the city to enjoy the resorts on Lake Minnetonka. Many of these tourists came from the Southern United States. Large steamboats ferried tourists to various hotels that were built to house these guests, and this contributed to Wayzata's development.
After the cessation of passenger service, the depot closed in 1971, at which point it was donated to the city of Wayzata. The Wayzata Historical Society operates a museum in the building. The original waiting room benches rest on the original terrazzo tile floor. A freight agent's desk and freight scales reproduce the experience of checking passengers' luggage on the train. There is also a ticket window where an agent hands out souvenir tickets for destinations on the Empire Builder train. The office area features the stationmaster's desk and the operator's desk, along with various memorabilia.