
OLDEST -- Brick Railroad Station in Florida
N 30° 28.668 W 084° 01.296
16R E 785936 N 3375503
The Lloyd Railroad Depot, also known as Bailey's Mill Station or Number Two Station, was built circa 1858 and was added to the U.S. National Register of Historic Places on December 2, 1974. The historic depot is now used as a U.S. Post Office.
Waymark Code: WMBW5C
Location: Florida, United States
Date Posted: 06/26/2011
Views: 3
"The station, built in 1858, is the oldest brick station in Florida. It was given to the Jefferson County Historical Association in 1968 by the Seaboard Coast Line Railroad. It has now been turned over to the Gulfwind Chapter of the National Railroad Historical Society and is open when the site is included in historic Tour. The Lloyd Post Office and the Lloyd Volunteer Fire Department are located there. The station is at the intersection of Highways 59 and 158 in the community of Lloyd."
-- Source
"LLOYD RAILROAD DEPOT Jct. of Fl. 59 and Lester Lawrence Rd. c. 1858. Masonry Vernacular. 1 story, brick. Built by Pensacola and Georgia Railroad to provide cotton producing county access to Atlantic and Gulf coast seaports. Decline of use began with the boll weevil infestation and the growth of highway transportation. Private. N.R. 1973."
-- Source
Type of documentation of superlative status: Jefferson County website
 Location of coordinates: Entrance to the railroad station (now the post office entrance)
 Web Site: [Web Link]

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