News & Reviews News Wire News Photos: Historic Ohio tower demolished

News Photos: Historic Ohio tower demolished

By Trains Staff | December 9, 2021

| Last updated on April 1, 2024

Fostoria’s Jackson Street tower held nation’s first CTC system

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Heavy equipment next to rubble from demolished building
Rubble is all that remains of Fostoria, Ohio’s Jackson Street Tower as of Dec. 2, 2021. Dale DeVene

FOSTORIA, Ohio — Fostoria’s historic Jackson Street Tower, which housed the nation’s first Centralized Traffic Control equipment, has been demolished. The former New York Central structure was torn down as part of an ongoing effort by CSX Transportation to remove old, unused structures along its routes. It was the operator in the Jackson Street Tower who controlled the CTC machinery installed in 1927, overseeing about 40 miles between Stanley, southeast of Toledo, and Berwick, on NYC’s former Toledo & Ohio Central route. The tower’s control panel was donated to the Smithsonian Institution.

Train passing closed brick tower
A CSX southbound on the former Chesapeake & Ohio line passes the Jackson Street Tower in 2009. Brian Schmidt

3 thoughts on “News Photos: Historic Ohio tower demolished

  1. We saw this tower some years back. It seemed to have little or nothing to do with most of the action at the Fostoria interlockings. Kind of off by itself.

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