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Phoenix Union Station is a former train station at 401 South 4th Avenue in downtown Phoenix, Arizona, United States. From 1971 to 1996 it was an Amtrak station. Until 1971, it was a railroad stop for the Santa Fe and Southern Pacific Railroads .
St. Louis Union Station is a National Historic Landmark and former train station in St. Louis, Missouri, United States. At its 1894 opening, the station was the largest in the world. Traffic peaked at 100,000 people a day in the 1940s. [3] The last Amtrak passenger train left the station in 1978.
Phoenix Union Colored High School (Later renamed George Washington Carver High School) was built in 1926 and is located at 415 E. Grant St. It was listed in the National Register of Historic Places on May 2, 1991, ref. #91000543.
Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago and St. Louis Railway, later part of the New York Central Railroad; The Association built Union Station, opening it in 1894. The station would close in 1978 when Amtrak moved to a temporary facility several hundred yards to the east. In its early years, the Association was at odds with the St. Louis Merchants ...
Third St. / 215 E. Grant St. February 2010 1929 142: Phoenix Second Ward L.D.S. Church: 1120 N. Third Ave. / 302 W. Latham St. September 1986 1929–1932 143: Phoenix Seed & Feed Company Warehouse: 411 S. Second St. March 2004 1905 144: Phoenix Star Theatre / Celebrity Theatre: 440 N. 32nd St. September 2013 1963 145: Phoenix Union Station: 401 ...
Union Station (Manchester, New Hampshire) Marion Union Station; Martin Luther King Jr. Plaza (Toledo) Memphis Central Station; Memphis Union Station; Merced station (California High-Speed Rail) Union Station (Meridian, Mississippi) Miami Intermodal Center; Milwaukee Union Station; Montgomery Union Station; Muncie Union Station
In 2011 St. Louis was named by U.S. News & World Report as the most dangerous city in the United States, using Uniform Crime Reports data published by the U.S. Department of Justice. [266] In addition, St. Louis was named as the city with the highest crime rate in the United States by CQ Press in 2010, using data reported to the FBI in 2009. [267]
Although Chicago, Illinois had a greater volume of traffic at its Union Station, more railroads met at St. Louis than any other city in the United States. [31] Union Station's rail platform expanded in 1930 and operated as the passenger rail terminal for St. Louis into the 1970s. [31]