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Marshfield station

Marshfield was a rapid transit station on the Chicago "L". Constructed by the Metropolitan West Side Elevated Railroad, it was the westernmost station of the Metropolitan's main line, which then diverged into three branches: the northwestern Logan Square branch, the western Garfield Park branch, and the southwestern Douglas Park branch. The station was in service from 1895 to 1954, when it was demolished, alongside the main line and the Garfield Park branch, to make way for the Eisenhower Expressway and rapid-transit Congress Line in its median. In addition to its use on the "L", Marshfield was served by the Chicago Aurora and Elgin Railroad (CA&E), an interurban that used the Garfield Park branch and main line's tracks, between 1905 and 1953.

MARSHFIELD
 
1700W
400S
Former Chicago "L" station
A pre-WWI view looking east at the station. The AE&C's platform is in the foreground.
General information
Location416 South Marshfield Avenue[a]
Chicago, Illinois
Coordinates41°52′33″N 87°40′06″W / 41.875742°N 87.66825°W / 41.875742; -87.66825
Owned byChicago Transit Authority (1947–1954)
Chicago Rapid Transit Company (1924–1947)
See text before 1924
Line(s)
Platforms2 island platforms and 1 side platform
Tracks4 tracks diverging to 6
Construction
Structure typeElevated
Bicycle facilitiesYes
History
OpenedMay 6, 1895
ClosedApril 4, 1954
Key dates
March 11, 1905AE&C (later CA&E) service introduced
February 25, 1951Logan Square and Humboldt Park service discontinued
September 20 and 27, 1953Garfield Park and CA&E service discontinued
Passengers
1953688,413  3.48% (CTA)
Rank68 out of 137
Former services
Preceding station Chicago "L" Following station
Terminus Metropolitan main line Laflin
Closed 1951[b]
Madison
Closed 1951
Logan Square branch Terminus
Ogden
Closed 1953
Garfield Park branch
Polk
toward Oak Park
Douglas branch
Preceding station Chicago Aurora and Elgin Railroad Following station
Kedzie Avenue
toward Wheaton
Main Line Canal Street
One-way operation
Track layout
Location

The Metropolitan was one of four companies that established the "L". With interruptions and difficulties, it operated its lines until 1911, when it handed them over to the Chicago Elevated Railways (CER) trust. The companies forming the trust formally merged into the Chicago Rapid Transit Company (CRT) in 1924, which continued operation of the "L" until it was taken over by the publicly-held Chicago Transit Authority (CTA) in 1947. The CA&E, on the other hand, was a descendant of the Aurora Elgin and Chicago Railway (AE&C), which had become bankrupt in the aftermath of World War I and split into the CA&E in 1921.

Substantial revisions to the lines that had been constructed by the Metropolitan were planned starting in the 1930s. These projects ended up replacing the Logan Square branch with a subway to go directly downtown, and substituting a rapid transit right-of-way in the median of the Eisenhower for the main line and Garfield Park branch. The subway opened in 1951, removing Logan Square traffic from Marshfield. Construction then started on the Congress Line, which led to the Garfield Park branch's trackage being replaced by temporary right-of-way and eliminating its service at Marshfield in 1953; the CA&E also ended service on the affected route at that time. This left Douglas Park trains as the sole traffic at Marshfield until April 1954, when they too used a temporary right-of-way to go downtown.

The Congress Line opened in 1958; the junction that Marshfield had served was maintained between the new line and the Douglas Park branch, but the station prior to this divergence was located on Racine Avenue, significantly to the east of Marshfield Avenue. An entrance to the Medical Center station on the new line was located on Paulina Street, a block west of Marshfield Avenue.

History Edit

The Metropolitan West Side Elevated Railroad Company was granted a 50-year franchise by the Chicago City Council on April 7, 1892,[2] and began securing right-of-way shortly thereafter.[3] The Metropolitan's operations comprised a main line that went westward from downtown to diverge into three branches – one northwest to Logan Square, one due west to Garfield Park, and one southwest to Douglas Park – and serve various parts of Chicago's west side.[4] A further branch to Humboldt Park proceeded due west from the Logan Square branch past Robey Street.[c][4][5] The franchise stipulated that this divergence take place somewhere between Wood Street and Ashland Avenue; the Metropolitan decided to place the junction at Marshfield Avenue, a minor street.[2]

Originally intending for its railroad to be powered by steam locomotives like the competing South Side and Lake Street Elevateds, the Metropolitan decided in May 1894 to use electric traction instead.[8] The tracks had already been largely constructed prior to the decision to electrify them, but retrofitting the third rail proved an easy task besides the switches of the main line. The junction at Marshfield required "elaborate special work" in its switches and signals, more so than other elevated railroads at the time,[9] and has been described as being as late as 1948 "the most elaborate and complex junction on the Chicago elevated system".[10] The main line and Logan Square branch up to Robey[c] had their tracks completed by the middle of October 1894, and were given power in April 1895 for test and inspection runs.[5] They began service at 6 a.m. on Monday, May 6, 1895; eleven stations opened that day, including Marshfield.[11] Upon its opening, the Metropolitan became the first revenue electric elevated railroad in the United States.[12] The Garfield Park branch opened on June 19, but service on the Douglas Park branch was delayed until April 28, 1896.[13]

 
The Metropolitan Division's routes prior to 1951, with Marshfield station as a gray marker and the Loop in solid black. The Garfield Park branch – the branch heading straight west from the main line – carried CA&E trains to Chicago's western suburbs.

The Metropolitan's lines were originally operated by the West Side Construction Company, which had been responsible for constructing them, and were transferred to the Metropolitan on October 6, 1896.[14] The backers and officers of the two companies were largely identical, however, so this transfer of ownership was nominal.[4][14] The expenses incurred in constructing this vast trackage would catch up to the Metropolitan, which entered receivership in 1897. The similarly-named Metropolitan West Side Elevated Railway Company was organized in January 1899 and assumed operations on February 3 of that year.[15]

The interurban Aurora Elgin and Chicago Railway (AE&C) was incorporated in 1901 and began service on August 25, 1902, between Aurora and the Garfield Park branch's station on 52nd Avenue – later renamed "Laramie Avenue" – in Chicago.[16] The AE&C and Metropolitan entered a trackage rights agreement in 1905, effective March 11, whereby AE&C trains were allowed to go into downtown Chicago via the Metropolitan's tracks and Wells Street Terminal, and the Metropolitan could extend its service westward on AE&C tracks to its station on Des Plaines Avenue.[17] Having gone bankrupt in 1919 due to rising inflation from World War I and state regulations, the AE&C was split into two parts, one of which was the Chicago Aurora and Elgin Railroad (CA&E), in 1921.[18]

The Metropolitan, along with the other companies operating "L" lines in Chicago, became a part of the Chicago Elevated Railways (CER) trust on July 1, 1911.[19] CER acted as a de facto holding company for the "L" – unifying its operations, instituting the same management across the companies, and instituting free transfers between the lines starting in 1913 – but kept the underlying companies intact.[20] This continued until the companies were formally merged into the single Chicago Rapid Transit Company (CRT), which assumed operations on January 9, 1924; the former Metropolitan was designated the Metropolitan Division of the CRT for administrative purposes.[21] Although municipal ownership of transit had been a hotly-contested issue for half a century, the publicly-owned Chicago Transit Authority (CTA) was not created until 1945,[22] nor given operation of the "L" until October 1, 1947.[23]

Closure and demolition Edit

Plans for Chicago to have a subway system to relieve the severe congestion of, if not replace, its elevated trackage dated back to the early 20th century, but the city lagged in building subways.[24] A plan emerged in 1938 for a subway to go downtown from the west side;[25] a 1939 plan also introduced the idea of replacing the main line and Garfield Park branch with a section of rapid transit operating through a superhighway (the eventual Interstate 290 or "Eisenhower") on Congress Street that had been proposed since the 1909 Plan of Chicago and more thoroughly planned in the early 1930s.[26][27] These sections of transit would be connected, allowing for the northwest side's rapid transit to be routed through downtown rather than adhere to a trunk-and-branch model.[28]

Work soon began on the subway, which was 82 percent complete when World War II forced its suspension in 1942. It finally opened on February 25, 1951, rerouting Logan Square and Humboldt Park trains from Marshfield Junction.[d][30] Construction on the expressway and Congress Line, on the other hand, had not started even though it had been adopted by the City Council in 1940 and formally authorized for construction in 1946.[31] Clearance of the right-of-way began in 1949 and was largely complete by 1952, by which time only the "L" structure survived in the path of the future expressway.[27] Changes were made to the Garfield Park and Douglas Park lines on December 9, 1951. Several stations were closed, including Laflin to Marshfield's east on the main line. Skip-stop, wherein trains were designated as either "A" trains or "B" trains and stopped at respective "A" or "B" stations, was applied during weekdays to the surviving stations; Marshfield was designated an "all-stop" station under this scheme and was thus unaffected.[1]

As construction progressed, Garfield trains were rerouted from the "L" structure to temporary at-grade trackage running directly on Van Buren Street between Kedzie and Halsted, ceasing to make intermediate stops in that area; this included the main line stations of Marshfield and Racine. In the process, Marshfield became a "B" station and Halsted became the transfer point between Garfield Park and Douglas Park trains. These changes impacted westbound trains on September 20, 1953, and eastbound trains on September 27.[32] The CA&E, having long struggled financially, had serious doubts about its ability to reroute its right-of-way into the new expressway median, and more immediately refused to use the at-grade tracks due to safety concerns as well as the prospect of delays caused by the use of traffic signals at road crossings.[33] Despite some speculative plans for alternative train service to downtown Chicago, and after being barred by state regulators from abandoning rail service altogether in favor of buses, the CA&E ultimately abandoned service east of Des Plaines on September 20.[34] This left Douglas Park trains as the sole remaining traffic for Marshfield and Racine, which remained temporarily open for them.[32]

Douglas Park trains started using the Paulina Connector – the old Logan Square structure, connected to the Lake Street Elevated – to get to the Loop on April 4, 1954, removing the last traffic to Marshfield and Racine; they were demolished soon afterwards.[35] After the change, Douglas Park riders needing to transfer to westbound Garfield Park trains were advised to use the Madison/Wells station in the Loop, whereas eastbound Garfield Park riders headed for Douglas Park were recommended to switch at State/Van Buren.[36] The Congress Line was complete in the area of Marshfield and opened on June 22, 1958, combined with the subway and Douglas Park branch – by then simply the "Douglas" branch – as the new "West-Northwest Route". The route had a new station on Racine Avenue as the final station before the divergence of the Douglas branch from the line.[37] West of the junction, the Medical Center station on the Congress Line contained an auxiliary exit and part-time entrance on Paulina Street, a block west of Marshfield Avenue.[38]

Station details Edit

The station was located at 416 South Marshfield Avenue[a] in the Near West Side neighborhood of Chicago.[40][41] The Metropolitan boasted of providing water closets, water fountains, newsstands, and waiting rooms at its stations,[6] which also included racks for bicycles, staff to announce those in waiting rooms of approaching trains, and space for baby carriages.[14] Unlike elsewhere on the "L", the Metropolitan's station houses had central heating and basements.[14]

Marshfield had two island platforms, one each between an inner and outer track; after the AE&C began service, an additional side platform was constructed on the northern Garfield Park track west of the junction. A pedestrian bridge linked both "L" platforms and the interurban platform. East of the station, the tracks crossed over and became two bidirectional pairs rather than two pairs in the same direction. Trains bound for or coming from Logan Square and Humboldt Park used the northern tracks and island platform, while trains bound for or coming from Garfield Park and Douglas Park used the southern tracks and platform. Three switches existed at this interlocking, all of which were hand-thrown.[42][43] The junction's switches and signals were constructed by the Paige Iron Works of Chicago.[44] The tower for the junction was located on the southern platform.[10] West of Marshfield, another junction involved the Douglas Park branch diverging from the Garfield Park tracks. This divergence, combined with the crossover, has led to descriptions of the junction as "actually consist[ing] of two junctions".[10]

Operations Edit

 
An eastbound AE&C train approaches Marshfield in 1911, while an eastbound Garfield Park or Douglas Park train occupies the southern platform.

As originally opened, the Metropolitan's trains ran every six minutes between 6 a.m. and 6:30 p.m., and every ten minutes during the night, on the main line and Northwest branch; the average speed was 16 mph (26 km/h).[11] By 1898, the night hours were updated so that trains ran at 30-minute intervals on each branch, or 7.5 minutes on the main line.[6] Trains running on the Westchester branch, which was a western extension of the Garfield Park branch opened in 1926, did not stop at Marshfield, instead running express from Canal on the main line to Laramie on the Garfield Park branch.[45]

The CA&E stopped at Marshfield to board westbound passengers and alight eastbound passengers; lest it compete with the "L" directly, patrons were not allowed to board eastbound trains at Marshfield, nor were westbound passengers allowed to alight at stations within the "L"'s area of service.[46] As early as 1934, several morning rush hour CA&E trains a day stopped at Laflin instead of Marshfield to discharge eastbound passengers.[47] By 1950, such trains, now the majority of morning rush hour trains, instead used Ogden for eastbound alightment, although the remainder of CA&E trains continued eastbound alightment at Marshfield.[46] CA&E trains were limited to 45 mph (72 km/h) on "L" tracks, but were given priority over slower "L" train at the crossover east of Marshfield.[48]

Station agents on the Metropolitan were originally on duty 24 hours a day; fare collection by on-train conductors was adopted on various Metropolitan branches for night and off-peak hours during the 20th century, although the main line maintained 24-hour station agents throughout its existence.[49] Unlike other elevated railroads at the time, the Metropolitan did not sell tickets for passengers to present to staff; instead customers gave their fare to the station agent to record in a registry, a practice similar to streetcars. This practice was ultimately adopted by the other elevateds.[14] The CA&E, on the other hand, sold tickets to be checked by conductors. Tickets could be purchased either at a station or on the train; full-fare tickets sold on trains came with a dime ($1.22 in 2022) surcharge on those bought in advance.[46]

Neighborhood and connections Edit

A working-class neighborhood grew up around the station, supplanting what had been a fashionable area.[41] Underneath the CA&E platform was the Dreamland Ballroom, a venue that was at one time owned by the CRT. Located near the station was the Coyne Electrical School and the Presbyterian Hospital, and the headquarters of the retail cataloger Alden's.[48] By the 1940s, the neighborhood was inhabited by people of African, Greek, Italian, Jewish, and Mexican ancestry; it was considered blighted by officials and the public, but residents contested that description.[50]

A streetcar ran on Ashland Avenue by the late 19th century; in the vicinity of the station, it turned west to run north from Paulina Street to avoid running on a boulevard,[48] before turning back east to Ashland.[51] By the early- to mid-20th century, this route was one of the "Big Five" streetcar lines in Chicago, which had the highest ridership, received the most amenities, and had the shortest wait times.[52] Another streetcar route ran on Van Buren Street adjacent to the Metropolitan's tracks, being powered by horse until it was electrified in 1896.[53] As of 1928, both routes had owl service.[54] Buses replaced streetcars on Van Buren in 1951;[53] the eastbound Van Buren streetcar track remained until it was removed to construct the temporary westbound Garfield Park "L" track, but the westbound track survived through the highway construction and opening of the Congress Line.[55] Ashland's streetcars were replaced by buses in 1952 for weekend service, and in 1954 altogether.[56]

Ridership Edit

In 1900, the earliest year data is available, Marshfield served 499,538 "L" passengers.[57] Afterwards, ridership steadily increased until it peaked at 1,538,319 in 1926.[58] Ridership last exceeded one million in 1929 before declining substantially to roughly 1900s levels.[59] In the last full year of its operation, 1953, Marshfield served 688,433 passengers on the "L", a 3.48 percent decline from the 713,264 of 1951; ridership statistics are unavailable throughout the entire "L" for 1952. For the part of 1954 it was open, Marshfield served 135,928 passengers.[60]

For 1953, Marshfield was in the exact middle of the main line's ridership, surpassing Racine and Franklin/Van Buren but underperforming Canal and Halsted.[60] With respect to the "L" system as a whole, Marshfield's 1951 performance made it the 65th-busiest of 131 stations that were at least partially-staffed at the beginning of the year, while in 1953 it was the 68th-busiest of 137 such stations. Accounting for the part of 1954 it was open, it had the 114th-highest patronage out of those 137 stations.[e][65] These statistics only measured the number of passengers who originated a trip from Marshfield rather than used it as a transfer, so are likely underestimates of the true patronage of the station.[66]

Although the CA&E did not collect ridership statistics by station, the railroad's total ridership was less than four million annually, and declining, in the period from 1949.[f] After the September 1953 suspension of direct "one-seat ride" service into Chicago, the railroad lost half of these riders by December as riders opted instead for the nearby Chicago and North Western Railroad (C&NW, modern-day Union Pacific West Line) or automobiles to get into the city.[68] Faced with this onslaught, the CA&E discontinued passenger service altogether at midday on July 3, 1957. Passengers who had taken the morning trains to Chicago were caught unaware by this development and had to find alternative transportation home.[69]

Notes Edit

  1. ^ a b This would have been 265 South Marshfield Avenue prior to 1909.[39]
  2. ^ Racine after 1951[1]
  3. ^ a b Technically, the Logan Square branch started after Robey and was, like the Humboldt Park branch, a divergence from what was formally known as the "Northwest branch".[5] However, as early as 1898, even the Metropolitan itself was referring to the Northwest branch as part of the "Logan Square branch",[6] although ridership statistics continued to separate them.[7]
  4. ^ Earlier plans had called for both the subway and old Logan Square trackage to be used for revenue service, but the CTA abandoned those plans.[29]
  5. ^ The Humboldt Park, Normal Park, and Westchester branches, which all closed in the 1950s, had all of their stations unstaffed by 1951 in favor of fare collection by on-train conductors, meaning that their stations did not collect ridership statistics.[61] The Garfield Park branch likewise did not collect ridership statistics by station in its final years.[62] Several stations closed on the "L" in 1951, while Central Park station was opened that year to replace several stations on the Douglas Park branch.[63] Ridership statistics for stations on the Lake Street Elevated and through stations on the Kenwood branch, last recorded in 1948 and 1949 respectively, returned in 1953.[64]
  6. ^ By comparison, Washington, the busiest station on the "L", consistently served more than eight million annual passengers alone throughout the 1950s, and exceeded nine million in the latter half of the decade.[67]

References Edit

  1. ^ a b Weller & Stark 1999, p. 132
  2. ^ a b Moffat 1995, p. 123
  3. ^ 1895 Review, p. 263
  4. ^ a b c 1895 Review, p. 264
  5. ^ a b c Moffat 1995, p. 130
  6. ^ a b c The Metropolitan West Side Elevated Railroad (Map). Metropolitan West Side Elevated Railroad. 1898. pp. 1–2 – via Chicago-L.org.
  7. ^ CTA 1979, pp. 10–14
  8. ^ 1895 Review, p. 266
  9. ^ 1895 Review, p. 267
  10. ^ a b c Weller & Stark 1999, p. 36
  11. ^ a b "New "L" Road Opens". Chicago Tribune. Vol. 54, no. 127. May 7, 1895. p. 12. from the original on October 22, 2022. Retrieved February 5, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
  12. ^ Borzo 2007, p. 43
  13. ^ Moffat 1995, pp. 130–131.
  14. ^ a b c d e Moffat 1995, p. 134
  15. ^ Moffat 1995, p. 139
  16. ^ Weller & Stark 1999, pp. 2–3
  17. ^ Weller & Stark 1999, pp. 3 & 131
  18. ^ Weller & Stark 1999, p. 3
  19. ^ Moffat 1995, p. 237
  20. ^ Moffat 1995, pp. 240–242
  21. ^ Moffat 1995, p. 261
  22. ^ Moffat 1995, p. 260
  23. ^ Weller & Stark 1999, p. 131
  24. ^ Borzo 2007, p. 91
  25. ^ "Entries in Loop at Every Block; Begin Work Dec. 15". Chicago Tribune. Vol. 97, no. 245. October 13, 1938. pp. 1–2. from the original on November 17, 2022. Retrieved November 17, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
  26. ^ CTA 1967, p. 9
  27. ^ a b Weller & Stark 1999, p. 14
  28. ^ CTA 1967, p. 5
  29. ^ Banich, Terence. "Remnants of the "L"". Forgotten Chicago. from the original on January 22, 2023. Retrieved January 22, 2023.
  30. ^ Buck, Thomas (February 18, 1951). "1st Trains Run in New Subway Saturday Night". Chicago Tribune. Vol. 110, no. 7, Part 1. p. 21. from the original on October 17, 2022. Retrieved October 16, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
  31. ^ CTA 1967, p. 10
  32. ^ a b "Garfield Park-Douglas Park "L" Service Revisions". Chicago Tribune. Vol. 112, no. 226. September 21, 1953. p. 3–2. from the original on February 5, 2023. Retrieved February 5, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
  33. ^ Weller & Stark 1999, pp. 14–15
  34. ^ Weller & Stark 1999, pp. 16–17
  35. ^ Weller & Stark 1999, pp. 134–135
  36. ^ "To Change 'L' Routing on Sunday". Berwyn Life. Vol. 22, no. 40. Berwyn, Illinois. April 2, 1954. p. 1. from the original on October 4, 2022. Retrieved October 4, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
  37. ^ Weller & Stark 1999, p. 149
  38. ^ CTA 1967, p. 6
  39. ^ Renumbering Plan, p. 96
  40. ^ Polk Directory, p. 212
  41. ^ a b Reiff, Janice L. "Marshfield Avenue Station of the Metropolitan West Side Elevated Railroad". Encyclopedia of Chicago. Chicago: Chicago Historical Society. Retrieved March 3, 2023.
  42. ^ Rapid Transit Map (PDF) (Map). Chicago Transit Authority. November 1952. Retrieved February 6, 2023 – via Chicago-L.org.
  43. ^ Weller & Stark 1999, pp. 36–37
  44. ^ 1895 Review, p. 268
  45. ^ CERA 1939, pp. 3–4
  46. ^ a b c Chicago Aurora and Elgin Railway (October 29, 1950). "Time Tables" (PDF). Chicago: Poole Bros., Inc. (PDF) from the original on February 9, 2023. Retrieved February 9, 2023 – via GreatThirdRail.org.
  47. ^ Chicago Aurora and Elgin Railroad (May 27, 1934). "Fast, Frequent Electrified Service between Chicago Loop, Western Suburbs, Fox River Valley" (PDF). Chicago: Poole Bros., Inc. Retrieved February 9, 2023 – via GreatThirdRail.org.
  48. ^ a b c Weller & Stark 1999, p. 37
  49. ^ CTA 1979, pp. 10–15, 18, 20, & 21
  50. ^ Loerzel, Robert. "Displaced: When the Eisenhower Expressway Moved in, Who Was Forced Out?". WBEZ. from the original on February 19, 2023. Retrieved March 12, 2023.
  51. ^ Lind 1974, p. 221
  52. ^ Lind 1974, p. 201
  53. ^ a b Lind 1974, p. 309
  54. ^ Lind 1974, pp. 202–203
  55. ^ Weller & Stark 1999, p. 133
  56. ^ Lind 1974, p. 228
  57. ^ CTA 1979, p. 10
  58. ^ CTA 1979, pp. 10–12
  59. ^ CTA 1979, pp. 12–14
  60. ^ a b CTA 1979, p. 15
  61. ^ CTA 1979, pp. 15 & 23
  62. ^ CTA 1979, p. 23
  63. ^ "Revise Douglas and Garfield "L" Service Dec. 9". Chicago Tribune. Vol. 110, no. 288. December 1, 1951. p. 4. from the original on October 20, 2022. Retrieved November 24, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
  64. ^ CTA 1979, pp. 14–15 & 30–31
  65. ^ CTA 1979, pp. 7, 15, 23, 31, & 39
  66. ^ CTA 1979, p. 1
  67. ^ CTA 1979, p. 7
  68. ^ Weller & Stark 1999, p. 17
  69. ^ Weller & Stark 1999, p. 20

Works cited Edit

  • "The Metropolitan West Side Elevated Railroad of Chicago". The Street Railway Review. 5: 263–274. January 15, 1895.
  • Borzo, Greg (2007). The Chicago "L". Charleston, South Carolina: Arcadia. ISBN 9780738551005 – via Google Books.
  • "Chicago Rapid Transit Company: Metropolitan Division" (PDF). Bulletins of the Central Electric Railfans' Association. Chicago: Central Electric Railfans' Association (2). February 1939.
  • Public Information Department (1967). Congress Rapid Transit. Chicago: Chicago Transit Authority – via Internet Archive.
  • CTA Rail Entrance, Annual Traffic, 1900–1979 (Report). Chicago: Chicago Transit Authority. October 1, 1979.
  • Lind, Alan R. (1974). Chicago Surface Lines: An Illustrated History. Park Forest, Illinois: Transport History Press.
  • Moffat, Bruce G. (1995). The "L": The Development of Chicago's Rapid Transit System, 1888–1932. Chicago: Central Electric Railfans' Association. ISBN 0-915348-30-6.
  • (PDF). Chicago: The Chicago Directory Company. August 1909. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 25, 2012 – via Chicago History Museum.
  • "R. L. Polk & Co.'s Chicago Street and Avenue Guide" (PDF). Polk's Chicago Directory 1923. Chicago: R. L. Polk & Co. 1923. pp. 193–228 – via ChicagoAncestors.org.
  • Weller, Peter; Stark, Fred (1999). The Living Legacy of the Chicago Aurora and Elgin. San Francisco: Forum Press. ISBN 0-945213-41-7 – via Internet Archive.

External links Edit

  • A narrated late-1940s/early-1950s view of Marshfield station (courtesy of GPS Videos via YouTube)

marshfield, station, marshfield, station, redirects, here, station, hampshire, mount, washington, railway, marshfield, rapid, transit, station, chicago, constructed, metropolitan, west, side, elevated, railroad, westernmost, station, metropolitan, main, line, . Marshfield Station redirects here For the station in New Hampshire see Mount Washington Cog Railway Marshfield was a rapid transit station on the Chicago L Constructed by the Metropolitan West Side Elevated Railroad it was the westernmost station of the Metropolitan s main line which then diverged into three branches the northwestern Logan Square branch the western Garfield Park branch and the southwestern Douglas Park branch The station was in service from 1895 to 1954 when it was demolished alongside the main line and the Garfield Park branch to make way for the Eisenhower Expressway and rapid transit Congress Line in its median In addition to its use on the L Marshfield was served by the Chicago Aurora and Elgin Railroad CA amp E an interurban that used the Garfield Park branch and main line s tracks between 1905 and 1953 MARSHFIELD 1700W400SFormer Chicago L stationA pre WWI view looking east at the station The AE amp C s platform is in the foreground General informationLocation416 South Marshfield Avenue a Chicago IllinoisCoordinates41 52 33 N 87 40 06 W 41 875742 N 87 66825 W 41 875742 87 66825Owned byChicago Transit Authority 1947 1954 Chicago Rapid Transit Company 1924 1947 See text before 1924Line s Metropolitan main line Chicago Aurora and Elgin Railroad main linePlatforms2 island platforms and 1 side platformTracks4 tracks diverging to 6ConstructionStructure typeElevatedBicycle facilitiesYesHistoryOpenedMay 6 1895ClosedApril 4 1954Key datesMarch 11 1905AE amp C later CA amp E service introducedFebruary 25 1951Logan Square and Humboldt Park service discontinuedSeptember 20 and 27 1953Garfield Park and CA amp E service discontinuedPassengers1953688 413 3 48 CTA Rank68 out of 137Former servicesPreceding station Chicago L Following stationTerminus Metropolitan main line LaflinClosed 1951 b toward Loop LaSalle Van Buren or Wells Street TerminalMadisonClosed 1951toward Logan Square Logan Square branch TerminusOgdenClosed 1953toward Des Plaines Garfield Park branchPolktoward Oak Park Douglas branchPreceding station Chicago Aurora and Elgin Railroad Following stationKedzie Avenuetoward Wheaton Main Line Canal StreetOne way operationTrack layoutLegendGarfield Park branchand CA amp E Douglas Parkbranch Humboldt Park amp Logan Squarebranches Metropolitan main line LocationThe Metropolitan was one of four companies that established the L With interruptions and difficulties it operated its lines until 1911 when it handed them over to the Chicago Elevated Railways CER trust The companies forming the trust formally merged into the Chicago Rapid Transit Company CRT in 1924 which continued operation of the L until it was taken over by the publicly held Chicago Transit Authority CTA in 1947 The CA amp E on the other hand was a descendant of the Aurora Elgin and Chicago Railway AE amp C which had become bankrupt in the aftermath of World War I and split into the CA amp E in 1921 Substantial revisions to the lines that had been constructed by the Metropolitan were planned starting in the 1930s These projects ended up replacing the Logan Square branch with a subway to go directly downtown and substituting a rapid transit right of way in the median of the Eisenhower for the main line and Garfield Park branch The subway opened in 1951 removing Logan Square traffic from Marshfield Construction then started on the Congress Line which led to the Garfield Park branch s trackage being replaced by temporary right of way and eliminating its service at Marshfield in 1953 the CA amp E also ended service on the affected route at that time This left Douglas Park trains as the sole traffic at Marshfield until April 1954 when they too used a temporary right of way to go downtown The Congress Line opened in 1958 the junction that Marshfield had served was maintained between the new line and the Douglas Park branch but the station prior to this divergence was located on Racine Avenue significantly to the east of Marshfield Avenue An entrance to the Medical Center station on the new line was located on Paulina Street a block west of Marshfield Avenue Contents 1 History 1 1 Closure and demolition 2 Station details 2 1 Operations 2 2 Neighborhood and connections 2 3 Ridership 3 Notes 4 References 5 Works cited 6 External linksHistory EditMain article Metropolitan main line The Metropolitan West Side Elevated Railroad Company was granted a 50 year franchise by the Chicago City Council on April 7 1892 2 and began securing right of way shortly thereafter 3 The Metropolitan s operations comprised a main line that went westward from downtown to diverge into three branches one northwest to Logan Square one due west to Garfield Park and one southwest to Douglas Park and serve various parts of Chicago s west side 4 A further branch to Humboldt Park proceeded due west from the Logan Square branch past Robey Street c 4 5 The franchise stipulated that this divergence take place somewhere between Wood Street and Ashland Avenue the Metropolitan decided to place the junction at Marshfield Avenue a minor street 2 Originally intending for its railroad to be powered by steam locomotives like the competing South Side and Lake Street Elevateds the Metropolitan decided in May 1894 to use electric traction instead 8 The tracks had already been largely constructed prior to the decision to electrify them but retrofitting the third rail proved an easy task besides the switches of the main line The junction at Marshfield required elaborate special work in its switches and signals more so than other elevated railroads at the time 9 and has been described as being as late as 1948 the most elaborate and complex junction on the Chicago elevated system 10 The main line and Logan Square branch up to Robey c had their tracks completed by the middle of October 1894 and were given power in April 1895 for test and inspection runs 5 They began service at 6 a m on Monday May 6 1895 eleven stations opened that day including Marshfield 11 Upon its opening the Metropolitan became the first revenue electric elevated railroad in the United States 12 The Garfield Park branch opened on June 19 but service on the Douglas Park branch was delayed until April 28 1896 13 nbsp The Metropolitan Division s routes prior to 1951 with Marshfield station as a gray marker and the Loop in solid black The Garfield Park branch the branch heading straight west from the main line carried CA amp E trains to Chicago s western suburbs The Metropolitan s lines were originally operated by the West Side Construction Company which had been responsible for constructing them and were transferred to the Metropolitan on October 6 1896 14 The backers and officers of the two companies were largely identical however so this transfer of ownership was nominal 4 14 The expenses incurred in constructing this vast trackage would catch up to the Metropolitan which entered receivership in 1897 The similarly named Metropolitan West Side Elevated Railway Company was organized in January 1899 and assumed operations on February 3 of that year 15 The interurban Aurora Elgin and Chicago Railway AE amp C was incorporated in 1901 and began service on August 25 1902 between Aurora and the Garfield Park branch s station on 52nd Avenue later renamed Laramie Avenue in Chicago 16 The AE amp C and Metropolitan entered a trackage rights agreement in 1905 effective March 11 whereby AE amp C trains were allowed to go into downtown Chicago via the Metropolitan s tracks and Wells Street Terminal and the Metropolitan could extend its service westward on AE amp C tracks to its station on Des Plaines Avenue 17 Having gone bankrupt in 1919 due to rising inflation from World War I and state regulations the AE amp C was split into two parts one of which was the Chicago Aurora and Elgin Railroad CA amp E in 1921 18 The Metropolitan along with the other companies operating L lines in Chicago became a part of the Chicago Elevated Railways CER trust on July 1 1911 19 CER acted as a de facto holding company for the L unifying its operations instituting the same management across the companies and instituting free transfers between the lines starting in 1913 but kept the underlying companies intact 20 This continued until the companies were formally merged into the single Chicago Rapid Transit Company CRT which assumed operations on January 9 1924 the former Metropolitan was designated the Metropolitan Division of the CRT for administrative purposes 21 Although municipal ownership of transit had been a hotly contested issue for half a century the publicly owned Chicago Transit Authority CTA was not created until 1945 22 nor given operation of the L until October 1 1947 23 Closure and demolition Edit Main article Congress Line Plans for Chicago to have a subway system to relieve the severe congestion of if not replace its elevated trackage dated back to the early 20th century but the city lagged in building subways 24 A plan emerged in 1938 for a subway to go downtown from the west side 25 a 1939 plan also introduced the idea of replacing the main line and Garfield Park branch with a section of rapid transit operating through a superhighway the eventual Interstate 290 or Eisenhower on Congress Street that had been proposed since the 1909 Plan of Chicago and more thoroughly planned in the early 1930s 26 27 These sections of transit would be connected allowing for the northwest side s rapid transit to be routed through downtown rather than adhere to a trunk and branch model 28 Work soon began on the subway which was 82 percent complete when World War II forced its suspension in 1942 It finally opened on February 25 1951 rerouting Logan Square and Humboldt Park trains from Marshfield Junction d 30 Construction on the expressway and Congress Line on the other hand had not started even though it had been adopted by the City Council in 1940 and formally authorized for construction in 1946 31 Clearance of the right of way began in 1949 and was largely complete by 1952 by which time only the L structure survived in the path of the future expressway 27 Changes were made to the Garfield Park and Douglas Park lines on December 9 1951 Several stations were closed including Laflin to Marshfield s east on the main line Skip stop wherein trains were designated as either A trains or B trains and stopped at respective A or B stations was applied during weekdays to the surviving stations Marshfield was designated an all stop station under this scheme and was thus unaffected 1 As construction progressed Garfield trains were rerouted from the L structure to temporary at grade trackage running directly on Van Buren Street between Kedzie and Halsted ceasing to make intermediate stops in that area this included the main line stations of Marshfield and Racine In the process Marshfield became a B station and Halsted became the transfer point between Garfield Park and Douglas Park trains These changes impacted westbound trains on September 20 1953 and eastbound trains on September 27 32 The CA amp E having long struggled financially had serious doubts about its ability to reroute its right of way into the new expressway median and more immediately refused to use the at grade tracks due to safety concerns as well as the prospect of delays caused by the use of traffic signals at road crossings 33 Despite some speculative plans for alternative train service to downtown Chicago and after being barred by state regulators from abandoning rail service altogether in favor of buses the CA amp E ultimately abandoned service east of Des Plaines on September 20 34 This left Douglas Park trains as the sole remaining traffic for Marshfield and Racine which remained temporarily open for them 32 Douglas Park trains started using the Paulina Connector the old Logan Square structure connected to the Lake Street Elevated to get to the Loop on April 4 1954 removing the last traffic to Marshfield and Racine they were demolished soon afterwards 35 After the change Douglas Park riders needing to transfer to westbound Garfield Park trains were advised to use the Madison Wells station in the Loop whereas eastbound Garfield Park riders headed for Douglas Park were recommended to switch at State Van Buren 36 The Congress Line was complete in the area of Marshfield and opened on June 22 1958 combined with the subway and Douglas Park branch by then simply the Douglas branch as the new West Northwest Route The route had a new station on Racine Avenue as the final station before the divergence of the Douglas branch from the line 37 West of the junction the Medical Center station on the Congress Line contained an auxiliary exit and part time entrance on Paulina Street a block west of Marshfield Avenue 38 Station details EditThe station was located at 416 South Marshfield Avenue a in the Near West Side neighborhood of Chicago 40 41 The Metropolitan boasted of providing water closets water fountains newsstands and waiting rooms at its stations 6 which also included racks for bicycles staff to announce those in waiting rooms of approaching trains and space for baby carriages 14 Unlike elsewhere on the L the Metropolitan s station houses had central heating and basements 14 Marshfield had two island platforms one each between an inner and outer track after the AE amp C began service an additional side platform was constructed on the northern Garfield Park track west of the junction A pedestrian bridge linked both L platforms and the interurban platform East of the station the tracks crossed over and became two bidirectional pairs rather than two pairs in the same direction Trains bound for or coming from Logan Square and Humboldt Park used the northern tracks and island platform while trains bound for or coming from Garfield Park and Douglas Park used the southern tracks and platform Three switches existed at this interlocking all of which were hand thrown 42 43 The junction s switches and signals were constructed by the Paige Iron Works of Chicago 44 The tower for the junction was located on the southern platform 10 West of Marshfield another junction involved the Douglas Park branch diverging from the Garfield Park tracks This divergence combined with the crossover has led to descriptions of the junction as actually consist ing of two junctions 10 Operations Edit nbsp An eastbound AE amp C train approaches Marshfield in 1911 while an eastbound Garfield Park or Douglas Park train occupies the southern platform As originally opened the Metropolitan s trains ran every six minutes between 6 a m and 6 30 p m and every ten minutes during the night on the main line and Northwest branch the average speed was 16 mph 26 km h 11 By 1898 the night hours were updated so that trains ran at 30 minute intervals on each branch or 7 5 minutes on the main line 6 Trains running on the Westchester branch which was a western extension of the Garfield Park branch opened in 1926 did not stop at Marshfield instead running express from Canal on the main line to Laramie on the Garfield Park branch 45 The CA amp E stopped at Marshfield to board westbound passengers and alight eastbound passengers lest it compete with the L directly patrons were not allowed to board eastbound trains at Marshfield nor were westbound passengers allowed to alight at stations within the L s area of service 46 As early as 1934 several morning rush hour CA amp E trains a day stopped at Laflin instead of Marshfield to discharge eastbound passengers 47 By 1950 such trains now the majority of morning rush hour trains instead used Ogden for eastbound alightment although the remainder of CA amp E trains continued eastbound alightment at Marshfield 46 CA amp E trains were limited to 45 mph 72 km h on L tracks but were given priority over slower L train at the crossover east of Marshfield 48 Station agents on the Metropolitan were originally on duty 24 hours a day fare collection by on train conductors was adopted on various Metropolitan branches for night and off peak hours during the 20th century although the main line maintained 24 hour station agents throughout its existence 49 Unlike other elevated railroads at the time the Metropolitan did not sell tickets for passengers to present to staff instead customers gave their fare to the station agent to record in a registry a practice similar to streetcars This practice was ultimately adopted by the other elevateds 14 The CA amp E on the other hand sold tickets to be checked by conductors Tickets could be purchased either at a station or on the train full fare tickets sold on trains came with a dime 1 22 in 2022 surcharge on those bought in advance 46 Neighborhood and connections Edit A working class neighborhood grew up around the station supplanting what had been a fashionable area 41 Underneath the CA amp E platform was the Dreamland Ballroom a venue that was at one time owned by the CRT Located near the station was the Coyne Electrical School and the Presbyterian Hospital and the headquarters of the retail cataloger Alden s 48 By the 1940s the neighborhood was inhabited by people of African Greek Italian Jewish and Mexican ancestry it was considered blighted by officials and the public but residents contested that description 50 A streetcar ran on Ashland Avenue by the late 19th century in the vicinity of the station it turned west to run north from Paulina Street to avoid running on a boulevard 48 before turning back east to Ashland 51 By the early to mid 20th century this route was one of the Big Five streetcar lines in Chicago which had the highest ridership received the most amenities and had the shortest wait times 52 Another streetcar route ran on Van Buren Street adjacent to the Metropolitan s tracks being powered by horse until it was electrified in 1896 53 As of 1928 both routes had owl service 54 Buses replaced streetcars on Van Buren in 1951 53 the eastbound Van Buren streetcar track remained until it was removed to construct the temporary westbound Garfield Park L track but the westbound track survived through the highway construction and opening of the Congress Line 55 Ashland s streetcars were replaced by buses in 1952 for weekend service and in 1954 altogether 56 Ridership Edit In 1900 the earliest year data is available Marshfield served 499 538 L passengers 57 Afterwards ridership steadily increased until it peaked at 1 538 319 in 1926 58 Ridership last exceeded one million in 1929 before declining substantially to roughly 1900s levels 59 In the last full year of its operation 1953 Marshfield served 688 433 passengers on the L a 3 48 percent decline from the 713 264 of 1951 ridership statistics are unavailable throughout the entire L for 1952 For the part of 1954 it was open Marshfield served 135 928 passengers 60 For 1953 Marshfield was in the exact middle of the main line s ridership surpassing Racine and Franklin Van Buren but underperforming Canal and Halsted 60 With respect to the L system as a whole Marshfield s 1951 performance made it the 65th busiest of 131 stations that were at least partially staffed at the beginning of the year while in 1953 it was the 68th busiest of 137 such stations Accounting for the part of 1954 it was open it had the 114th highest patronage out of those 137 stations e 65 These statistics only measured the number of passengers who originated a trip from Marshfield rather than used it as a transfer so are likely underestimates of the true patronage of the station 66 Although the CA amp E did not collect ridership statistics by station the railroad s total ridership was less than four million annually and declining in the period from 1949 f After the September 1953 suspension of direct one seat ride service into Chicago the railroad lost half of these riders by December as riders opted instead for the nearby Chicago and North Western Railroad C amp NW modern day Union Pacific West Line or automobiles to get into the city 68 Faced with this onslaught the CA amp E discontinued passenger service altogether at midday on July 3 1957 Passengers who had taken the morning trains to Chicago were caught unaware by this development and had to find alternative transportation home 69 Notes Edit a b This would have been 265 South Marshfield Avenue prior to 1909 39 Racine after 1951 1 a b Technically the Logan Square branch started after Robey and was like the Humboldt Park branch a divergence from what was formally known as the Northwest branch 5 However as early as 1898 even the Metropolitan itself was referring to the Northwest branch as part of the Logan Square branch 6 although ridership statistics continued to separate them 7 Earlier plans had called for both the subway and old Logan Square trackage to be used for revenue service but the CTA abandoned those plans 29 The Humboldt Park Normal Park and Westchester branches which all closed in the 1950s had all of their stations unstaffed by 1951 in favor of fare collection by on train conductors meaning that their stations did not collect ridership statistics 61 The Garfield Park branch likewise did not collect ridership statistics by station in its final years 62 Several stations closed on the L in 1951 while Central Park station was opened that year to replace several stations on the Douglas Park branch 63 Ridership statistics for stations on the Lake Street Elevated and through stations on the Kenwood branch last recorded in 1948 and 1949 respectively returned in 1953 64 By comparison Washington the busiest station on the L consistently served more than eight million annual passengers alone throughout the 1950s and exceeded nine million in the latter half of the decade 67 References Edit a b Weller amp Stark 1999 p 132 a b Moffat 1995 p 123 1895 Review p 263 a b c 1895 Review p 264 a b c Moffat 1995 p 130 a b c The Metropolitan West Side Elevated Railroad Map Metropolitan West Side Elevated Railroad 1898 pp 1 2 via Chicago L org CTA 1979 pp 10 14 1895 Review p 266 1895 Review p 267 a b c Weller amp Stark 1999 p 36 a b New L Road Opens Chicago Tribune Vol 54 no 127 May 7 1895 p 12 Archived from the original on October 22 2022 Retrieved February 5 2023 via Newspapers com Borzo 2007 p 43 Moffat 1995 pp 130 131 a b c d e Moffat 1995 p 134 Moffat 1995 p 139 Weller amp Stark 1999 pp 2 3 Weller amp Stark 1999 pp 3 amp 131 Weller amp Stark 1999 p 3 Moffat 1995 p 237 Moffat 1995 pp 240 242 Moffat 1995 p 261 Moffat 1995 p 260 Weller amp Stark 1999 p 131 Borzo 2007 p 91 Entries in Loop at Every Block Begin Work Dec 15 Chicago Tribune Vol 97 no 245 October 13 1938 pp 1 2 Archived from the original on November 17 2022 Retrieved November 17 2022 via Newspapers com CTA 1967 p 9 a b Weller amp Stark 1999 p 14 CTA 1967 p 5 Banich Terence Remnants of the L Forgotten Chicago Archived from the original on January 22 2023 Retrieved January 22 2023 Buck Thomas February 18 1951 1st Trains Run in New Subway Saturday Night Chicago Tribune Vol 110 no 7 Part 1 p 21 Archived from the original on October 17 2022 Retrieved October 16 2022 via Newspapers com CTA 1967 p 10 a b Garfield Park Douglas Park L Service Revisions Chicago Tribune Vol 112 no 226 September 21 1953 p 3 2 Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 5 2023 via Newspapers com Weller amp Stark 1999 pp 14 15 Weller amp Stark 1999 pp 16 17 Weller amp Stark 1999 pp 134 135 To Change L Routing on Sunday Berwyn Life Vol 22 no 40 Berwyn Illinois April 2 1954 p 1 Archived from the original on October 4 2022 Retrieved October 4 2022 via Newspapers com Weller amp Stark 1999 p 149 CTA 1967 p 6 Renumbering Plan p 96 Polk Directory p 212 a b Reiff Janice L Marshfield Avenue Station of the Metropolitan West Side Elevated Railroad Encyclopedia of Chicago Chicago Chicago Historical Society Retrieved March 3 2023 Rapid Transit Map PDF Map Chicago Transit Authority November 1952 Retrieved February 6 2023 via Chicago L org Weller amp Stark 1999 pp 36 37 1895 Review p 268 CERA 1939 pp 3 4 a b c Chicago Aurora and Elgin Railway October 29 1950 Time Tables PDF Chicago Poole Bros Inc Archived PDF from the original on February 9 2023 Retrieved February 9 2023 via GreatThirdRail org Chicago Aurora and Elgin Railroad May 27 1934 Fast Frequent Electrified Service between Chicago Loop Western Suburbs Fox River Valley PDF Chicago Poole Bros Inc Retrieved February 9 2023 via GreatThirdRail org a b c Weller amp Stark 1999 p 37 CTA 1979 pp 10 15 18 20 amp 21 Loerzel Robert Displaced When the Eisenhower Expressway Moved in Who Was Forced Out WBEZ Archived from the original on February 19 2023 Retrieved March 12 2023 Lind 1974 p 221 Lind 1974 p 201 a b Lind 1974 p 309 Lind 1974 pp 202 203 Weller amp Stark 1999 p 133 Lind 1974 p 228 CTA 1979 p 10 CTA 1979 pp 10 12 CTA 1979 pp 12 14 a b CTA 1979 p 15 CTA 1979 pp 15 amp 23 CTA 1979 p 23 Revise Douglas and Garfield L Service Dec 9 Chicago Tribune Vol 110 no 288 December 1 1951 p 4 Archived from the original on October 20 2022 Retrieved November 24 2022 via Newspapers com CTA 1979 pp 14 15 amp 30 31 CTA 1979 pp 7 15 23 31 amp 39 CTA 1979 p 1 CTA 1979 p 7 Weller amp Stark 1999 p 17 Weller amp Stark 1999 p 20Works cited Edit The Metropolitan West Side Elevated Railroad of Chicago The Street Railway Review 5 263 274 January 15 1895 Borzo Greg 2007 The Chicago L Charleston South Carolina Arcadia ISBN 9780738551005 via Google Books Chicago Rapid Transit Company Metropolitan Division PDF Bulletins of the Central Electric Railfans Association Chicago Central Electric Railfans Association 2 February 1939 Public Information Department 1967 Congress Rapid Transit Chicago Chicago Transit Authority via Internet Archive CTA Rail Entrance Annual Traffic 1900 1979 Report Chicago Chicago Transit Authority October 1 1979 Lind Alan R 1974 Chicago Surface Lines An Illustrated History Park Forest Illinois Transport History Press Moffat Bruce G 1995 The L The Development of Chicago s Rapid Transit System 1888 1932 Chicago Central Electric Railfans Association ISBN 0 915348 30 6 Plan of Renumbering City of Chicago PDF Chicago The Chicago Directory Company August 1909 Archived from the original PDF on February 25 2012 via Chicago History Museum R L Polk amp Co s Chicago Street and Avenue Guide PDF Polk s Chicago Directory 1923 Chicago R L Polk amp Co 1923 pp 193 228 via ChicagoAncestors org Weller Peter Stark Fred 1999 The Living Legacy of the Chicago Aurora and Elgin San Francisco Forum Press ISBN 0 945213 41 7 via Internet Archive External links EditA narrated late 1940s early 1950s view of Marshfield station courtesy of GPS Videos via YouTube Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Marshfield station amp oldid 1177785934, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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