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Home Stations by State North Carolina → Hamlet, NC (HAM)

Hamlet, NC (HAM)

West Main Street and North Bridges Street
Hamlet, NC 28345

Station hours
No ticket office hours
Quik-Trak hours
No checked baggage hours
No help with baggage
Enclosed waiting area
Payphones during station hours

Ticket Revenue

FY 2011

$435,521

Station Ridership

FY 2011

4,820

Note: Fiscal year is from
October through September.

Station Ownership

Facility:
City of Hamlet

Parking:
City of Hamlet

Platform(s):
CSX

Track(s):
CSX

Amtrak Contact

Todd Stennis

Routes Served:

  • Silver Star

History

The Hamlet depot, the only Victorian Queen Anne style station in North Carolina, was built in 1900 for the Seaboard Air Line Railroad as both a passenger station and division headquarters. This two-story station was originally constructed at the crossing of the Raleigh and Augusta Air Line and Central Carolina Railways. Restoration of the depot was completed in 2004, at a cost of $11.7 million, a joint project of the City of Hamlet and North Carolina Department of Transportation (NCDOT), utilizing federal transportation funds.

The restoration of this station was many years in the making with the drawings and preparations beginning in 1997. By 1999, CSX, the successor to the Seaboard Air Line, notified the city and NCDOT of a concern about restoring a building surrounded by active railroad tracks, so it was decided that the station should be moved to a less active area, southward across the east-west rail line, and rotated 90 degrees, to sit along Main Street, which was also realigned to accommodate the station. In 2001, CSX sold the station to the city of Hamlet for $1. In 2002, the 1942 brick addition was demolished and the original structure stabilized. In March of 2003, the moving company began preparing the building for the move and the station was jacked up and rotated. By April 4, 2003, the station had moved 210 feet across the tracks to its new foundation and been stabilized. Renovations began that summer and completed by the fall of 2004.

The city of Hamlet dedicated the station to NCDOT Board of Transportation member, G. R. Kindley. The depot has received the Historic Preservation Society of North Carolina’s 2005 Carraway Award for outstanding preservation work by public agencies. The station has been on the National Register of Historic Places since 1992.

In the late 1800s, John Shortridge established a woolen and saw mill along Marks Creek in the sand hills of North Carolina. In 1879, a railroad running from Wilmington passed through the area that would become Hamlet to the Pee Dee River, where it connected to a line running to Charlotte. Another railroad was being built from Raleigh through to Augusta; it was through the influence of early residents that these tracks also crossed through Hamlet. The town originally got its name from Mr. Shortridge, who observed to his friends that in his native England, such small villages were called “hamlets.” Hamlet was not incorporated as a city until 1897.

Hamlet grew with the railroad, as it provided hospitality for travelers passing from New York to Florida. By 1936, Hamlet was dubbed the “Hub of the Seaboard,” with five Seaboard Air Line Railroad lines leading out from the city and about 30 passenger train departures each day. Freight trains still come to Hamlet for maintenance at the CSX Transportation Maintenance Shops. The citizens of Hamlet today host the railroad-themed Annual Seaboard Festival Day on the fourth Saturday in October. The National Railroad Museum and Hall of Fame is also located in the restored station.

Hamlet is also the birthplace of legendary jazzman and saxophonist John Coltrane, and of the first African-American Marine officer, Frederick C. Branch.

Amtrak does not provide ticketing or baggage services at this facility.

Hamlet is served by two daily trains.

ADA Compliance

Federal law requires compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) by 2010. The following is a list of items typically required for transportation and public facilities under the Americans with Disabilities Act. Please check the regulations for guidance or contact us for more information.

Accessible parking
Curb cuts
Accessible entrance
Accessible telephones
TTY telephones
Train information display system
Visual paging system
Accessible restrooms
ADA compliant elevator
Accessible ticket counter
Accessible Customer Service office
ADA compliant signage
Flashing/audible safety alarm system
Drinking fountains
Accessible boarding

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