Chelsea Depot Association
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History of the Chelsea Train Depot
During the influx of settlers in the early 1800βs, Darius and Nathan Pierce, from Ontario County, New York, Elisha and James Congdon from Chelsea, Massachusetts, and settlers from VermontΒ moved toΒ the area now known as the βCity of Chelseaβ.
The Pierce brothers bought 640 acresΒ located at the present day Main Street and Old U-12. This area was soonΒ established as a hamlet called βPiercevilleβ. Further to the south was a group from Vermont who took up an area,Β callingΒ it βSylvan Centerβ,Β known today as M-52 and Jerusalem Rd.
The Congdon brothersΒ had taken up land on the hill that was to figure prominently in the history of Chelsea.Β The prospects for crops were poor.Β The only advantage was a wagon trail cutting throughΒ a third of their land.Β After some time NathanΒ split from Darius, and settled an area near today’sΒ M-52 and Sibley Rd.. By 1834, this Washtenaw County community was renamedΒ βKedronβΒ after a river in Jerusalem.
In 1840 the Michigan Central Railroad began to build westward from Detroit to Marshall. By 1844 they had built as far west as Kedron.Β Elisha, owning the land south on the hillΒ with the wagon trail and railroad crossingΒ didn’t care forΒ the name Kedron. On July 20, 1844, Darius Pierce wrote to U.S. Senator Alpheus Phelps of Ann Arbor and asked if the name of the settlement Kedron could be changed to Chelsea, after his hometown. Phelps wrote toΒ Washington, andΒ they replied that if it were satisfactory to the five families who lived there, the name could be changed. Shortly βKendronβ became βChelseaβ.
With the connection of the wagon trail (M-52) and the railroad,Β business fromΒ βPiercevilleβΒ and βSylvan CenterβΒ started to move up to Congdon hill, bringingΒ Barbers,Β Blacksmiths, General Stores, and Hotels. The hamlet of Chelsea was transformed.
In 1848 they offered the Michigan Central Railroad a free site on which to build a station. The first and succeeding structures were freight stations. First shipment sent on May 2, 1850, was a barrel of eggs weighing 130 pounds. For a time more wool was shipped from Chelsea than from any other place in the state.Β Grain, apple, stock, and meat shipments were also large. In 1880 the Michigan Central established Chelsea as a passenger service point. The depot was built with two waiting rooms – the east for women and children, the west for men. Chelsea was chosen by the Michigan Central Railroad for an experiment in upgrading the appearance of rural stations. Mason and Rice of Detroit were commissioned as the new station’s architect. Their design was Victorian, characterized by numerous gables and gingerbread embellishments. This depot served patrons of the Michigan Central until 1975 when the company was taken over by Amtrak. In 1981, Amtrak discontinued service to Chelsea and closed the station. Fearing damage from prolonged neglect, area citizens formed the Chelsea Depot Association in 1985 to restore the building. The group purchased the depot that year, and restoration began in 1986.








