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depot--San Antonio's third--replaced a 1927 facility which burned
in 1948. It is the last one remaining on the Orange Belt
Railway which crossed Pasco County in 1888 to connect
the St. Johns with the Gulf. This provided a long awaited link
with northern markets. The Seaboard Coast Line
had its last scheduled service here in 1972. The tracks were
removed in 1978, dooming the Trilby, San Antonio &
Cypress-- an excursion line--which then
ran from this station as the Orange Belt Rail Road. Volunteers
restored the depot for community use in 1993.
The above wording copied from a historical marker placed on
the building in 1993 by the Pasco County Board of County Commissioners
and the Pasco County Historical Preservation Committee.
On March 21, 1999 the depot was rededicated with a new purpose.
It now serves as a community building where people can have
meetings, birthday parties, etc. It is a voting precinct and
it hosts the annual Rattlesnake Run which is part of the Rattlesnake
Festival held each year in San Antonio on the weekend of the
3rd Sat. In October. It also serves as a museum where people
can go, by appointment, to look at copies of old photos of San
Antonio and the surrounding communities to see how our ancestors
lived, worked, and built the communities that we know and enjoy
today.
For the railroad buff you can see authentic memorabilia used
at our depot. You and your children can see and touch a rare
restored caboose.
More about
Railroads:

Atlantic
Coast Line and Seaboard Airline Historical Society
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