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This article and the Milton Railroad Station article both claim that each of the two stations is "one of the only two remaining passenger stations
along the west side of the Hudson River." (sic) without further qualification (such as "from the West Shore Railroad" or "from the 19th century" or "in Orange or Ulster Counties").
However, there appear to be many more than just two passenger stations still standing along the west side of the Hudson River. From
south to north the stations still standing include at least the following:
Passenger stations still standing along the west side of the Hudson River
An amusement park and steamboat landing were here in the 19th century. Naval depot in 20th. An interpretive sign placed by the NYSDEC mentions that 5 of 100 buildings of the weapons depot remain standing.
Converted to a pizza restaurant[7] and theatre[8] in 2011 (located a few blocks south of the Post office). Two and a half story brick and cast stone built into a hillside with riveted steel supports at trackside. A cartouche in the pediment above the main entrance on South Water Street is emblazoned with a "NYC" logo for New York Central Railroad.
As well as a couple of rapid transit stations that have been extensively rebuilt and now look quite different from their original architectural styles:
Passenger stations that have been rebuilt along the west side of the Hudson River
When first written by MrFish in 2009 this articles sentence read: "A wooden structure, the station is one of a very few original West Shore depots left.". After being modified by Daniel Case in edit from 23 July 2010 the sentence read: "It is, along the Milton station to the north in Ulster County, one of the only two remaining passenger stations along the west side of the Hudson River." Unfortunately, this erroneous fact was used as a "did you know?" element in the Trains Portal recently (where the claim caught my attention). The original wording was more accurate, and I'd prefer to change it back for the reasons shown in this table with references (which was an interesting list to compile). 69.126.127.193 (talk) 16:10, 29 May 2011 (UTC)Reply
To editor 69.126.127.193: You seem to have developed good information that should indeed be used to correct this article and the other article where an apparently incorrect claim has been made. Please do go ahead and edit these two articles to correct the information. I am sure that editor User:Daniel Case and other previous editors of this article will not take offense in any way. I am sure that the apparently incorrect or inexact statements were added to these articles with belief that they were true statements, but it often does happen that what we believe is true turns out not to be the case, particularly for broad statements about a historic place being the "only" or "oldest" or other claims relative to all other historic places. In particular, I have noticed that NRHP nominations seem to be generally extremely reliable about individual specifics of a place, like in their description of architectural details, but sometimes can be completely wrong about "oldest" and "only" type claims, where a writer is not really in a position to know about all other candidates for the claim. Daniel Case and I and other editors of articles about NRHP places have probably several times accepted statements that turned out later to be false. He and I and others certainly want for corrections to be made, in such cases. In this case, I just reviewed the NRHP nomination document and don't see the claim made here; maybe it was made in the other place's NRHP nomination document, but in any case it seems the original claim is wrong or was over-stated.
I appreciate that you have been courteous and nice in your having posted your information here. You are convincing to me. At this point, you should please go ahead and edit the article to put in correct information. Please be bold and go ahead! Thanks for your attention and your contribution. --doncram18:38, 29 May 2011 (UTC)Reply
Thanks for your reply and encouragement. I have edited this article, the Milton article, and the Did you know? subpage to restore wording closer to MrFish's original claim. I have also entered a few other West Shore Railroad names in the above table, for completeness' sake. I suspect such a table (excised of other company's stations) might be a useful addition to the West Shore article. 69.126.127.193 (talk) 14:20, 30 May 2011 (UTC)Reply