Pittsfield & North Adams Passenger Station and Baggage & Express House

Pittsfield & North Adams Passenger Station and Baggage & Express House is a historic building at 10 Pleasant Street in Adams, Massachusetts.

It was built in 1889 along the North Adams Branch of the Boston and Albany Railroad, and added to the National Historic Register in 1982.

Famous quotes containing the words north, adams, passenger, station, baggage, express and/or house:

    Why does man freeze to death trying to reach the North Pole? Why does man drive himself to suffer the steam and heat of the Amazon? Why does he stagger his mind with the mathematics of the sky? Once the question mark has arisen in the human brain the answer must be found, if it takes a hundred years. A thousand years.
    Walter Reisch (1903–1963)

    Every man who has at last succeeded, after long effort, in calling up the divinity which lies hidden in a woman’s heart, is startled to find that he must obey the God he summoned.
    —Henry Brooks Adams (1838–1918)

    Every American travelling in England gets his own individual sport out of the toy passenger and freight trains and the tiny locomotives, with their faint, indignant, tiny whistle. Especially in western England one wonders how the business of a nation can possibly be carried on by means so insufficient.
    Willa Cather (1876–1947)

    With boys you always know where you stand. Right in the path of a hurricane. It’s all there. The fruit flies hovering over their waste can, the hamster trying to escape to cleaner air, the bedrooms decorated in Early Bus Station Restroom.
    Erma Bombeck (20th century)

    It is up to my spirit to find the truth. But how? Grave uncertainty, each time the spirit feels beyond its own comprehension; when it, the explorer, is altogether to obscure land that it must search and where all its baggage is of no use. To search? That is not all: to create.
    Marcel Proust (1871–1922)

    Blueness doth express trueness.
    Ben Jonson (1573–1637)

    The house on the edge of the serious wood
    Was aware, was aware
    Of why he came there....
    Philip Larkin (1922–1986)