The Harris Centennial
Harris --The past 100 Years

Railroads
Page 48

An Era of Railroad Service Ended in Harris

When the first railroad office was established in Harris, the agent was Harry Tripp. The second was Ernest Beam and the third was Homer Richards.

Then the railroad started to add more to its passenger and freight service. In 1912 they had four passenger trains a day and two local freights. One passenger train arrived from the East at 7:25 a.m.; another from the West at 8:25 a.m.; the third arrived from the West at 3:25 p.m.; and the last from the East at 7:05 p.m. One local freight was due from the East at 10:00 a.m., and the other from the West at 2:30 p.m.

During this era two agents served at once. The first was A. D. Curtis and the second was Jim Heppler. One served from 7:05 a.m. until 3:55 p.m., and the other from 3:05 p.m. until 7:05 a.m. The town was also serviced with a stock train special every Saturday night. Two full section crews were maintained. One worked on the track east of the depot and the other west of it.

Then in 1932 the first major railroad strike came, cutting the depot force down to one agent, A. D. Curtis, and taking out one section house.

The section crews were bossed by Foreman R. H. Halverson and John Hillman.

The station agents in succession were Barney Horswell, Jim Price, Sam Campbell and Ed Daries.

The passenger trains were finally discontinued and a passenger coach was added to the local freight. This was later taken off and the freight went West one day and came back the next.

The depot has been torn down and the local section crews abolished. At the present time, one freight runs West in the morning and the other east at night. The servicing agent is from Ocheyedan and the servicing section crews are from Lake Park.
- Written by Lester Heppler – 1964
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Update by Committee – 1989: Ronald Ernst should be added to the list of station agents. 1989 update notes that only grain trains travel through town.

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