Aberdeen station (Baltimore and Ohio Railroad)


Aberdeen Station is a former Baltimore and Ohio Railroad station in Aberdeen, Maryland. The station was designed by architect Frank Furness, who also designed some B&O stations in Pennsylvania. The station has deteriorated in condition mightily since B&O ended service in 1955, and was almost torn down in 2003. An :wikt:eleventh hour|eleventh hour agreement was made by CSX and the Historical Society of Harford County to save the building. The Station was transferred from the Historical Society of Harford County to the Aberdeen Historical Museum in 2016.

Station house

Aberdeen Station was built in a Queen Anne style of architecture. It is located on the west side of the single tracked CSX Philadelphia Subdivision, and south of Bel Air Avenue. The building is one-and-a-half stories tall, and was described as the type of station where the agent would live above the waiting room. The building is also the last wooden station remaining on the Baltimore–Philadelphia line, and one of the only stations Frank Furness designed that is still standing.

History

The first B&O service to Aberdeen used the Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore Railroad between Baltimore and New York City, now apart of Amtrak's Northeast Corridor. Rival Pennsylvania Railroad began using the PW&B after opening its line between Washington, D.C. and Baltimore. This caused a power struggle between the B&O and the PRR.