Whitefish Depot - Whitefish, MT
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member T0SHEA
N 48° 24.809 W 114° 20.136
11U E 697150 N 5365688
Somewhat of a rarity, the Whitefish Great Northern Depot was designed by railroad architect Thomas McMahon in the Tudor style, which was already falling out of favour in 1928, the year of its completion. Nonetheless, it's a great looking station.
Waymark Code: WMMW4Z
Location: Montana, United States
Date Posted: 11/12/2014
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member ZenPanda
Views: 1

The Great Northern Railroad began construction on this depot in 1927 and it served them until The Great Northern became the Burlington Northern on March 2, 1970, with the merger of four railroads, the Great Northern Railway, Northern Pacific Railway, Spokane, Portland and Seattle Railway and the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad.

Purchased from the Burlington Northern Railroad in 1990 by the Stumptown (Whitefish) Historical Society, the building has been restored over the course of three years and is home to the Historical Society and the Whitefish Museum. There is also an Amtrak waiting room in the building and offices, which are rented out by the society.

On the track (north) side of the depot, beside the waiting room entrance, is a historical marker placed by the Stumptown Historical Society and the Whitefish Community Foundation, which relates a bit of the depot's history. On the opposite (south) side of the depot, beside the museum entrance, can be seen the plaque proclaiming the building a National Historic Place.
WHITEFISH DEPOT
Built by the Great Northern Railway in 1927, the Whitefish Depot is not only a local landmark but is recognized fondly by hundreds of thousands of people who have passed through Whitefish by train over the years. The building's chalet-style architecture and the gardens that surround it create a distinctive Whitefish "trademark."

The railroad's decision to construct a 36-by-150-foot building, to replace a much smaller depot at the north end of Central Avenue, occasioned a banner headline in the Whitefish Pilot in August, 1927. The three-story structure — one story for a depot and two for offices — would cost about $60,000. Butler Construction Co. of Seattle won the contract.

In the late 1980s, Whitefish almost lost its famous depot when the railroad, by then the Burlington Northern, decided to scrap it. But the Stumptown Historical Society, a group formed by local folks to preserve the town's history, refused to let it go. The Society bought the building for $1 and then raised $800,000 to renovate it, much of the work done by Whitefish volunteers. The Society uses rental fees from the Burlington Northern Santa Fe, Amtrak and a few office tenants to maintain the depot. In 2002, the Society had the building repainted in historically correct colors, a project that cost three-fourths as much as the entire 1927 construction cost.

More than 50,000 people pass through the depot each year.

Sponsored by the Stumptown Historical Society and the Whitefish Community Foundation.
From the plaque at the building
Describe the area and history:
The railroad tracks still go past and trains still stop at this depot, though now they are Amrtrak trains. South of the depot everything is new, with parks, statues, memorials, a pond and more to be found nearby.


Visit Instructions:
Please describe your visit- The good, the bad & the ugly. :)
Search for...
Geocaching.com Google Map
Google Maps
MapQuest
Bing Maps
Nearest Waymarks
Nearest Montana Historical Markers
Nearest Geocaches
Create a scavenger hunt using this waymark as the center point
Recent Visits/Logs:
Date Logged Log User Rating  
run26.2 visited Whitefish Depot - Whitefish, MT 08/02/2022 run26.2 visited it