The skyrocketing popularity of passenger train travel resulted in Union Pacific replacing Omaha’s old Union Station with an extravagant new building in 1931. It was built on the site of the old station at 801 S. 10th Street in the area that would become known as the Rail and Commerce District. The new station, in addition to the renovation of the Burlington Station to the south, provided “Omaha railroad passengers, terminal facilities equal to those of any city of its size in the country.”

1909 Durham Museum photo of the previous Union Station before it was demolished to make way for a more modern station in 1931. From the Bostwick-Frohardt/KMTV Photograph Collection, permanently housed at The Durham Museum.

The new Union Station was designed by Gilbert Stanley Underwood of Los Angeles and constructed by Peter Kiewit and Sons. The steel frame structure was covered with glazed terra cotta and featured sculpted figures of a brakeman, locomotive engineer, civil engineer and railroad mechanic atop its entrances on the west and north sides of the building.

1930 Durham Museum photo showing the current Union Station being constructed. The steel frame is up but the terra cotta has not yet been installed. Burlington Station sits in the background to its south. From the Bostwick-Frohardt/KMTV Photograph Collection, permanently housed at The Durham Museum.

It was the first U.P. station designed in the Art Deco style. Inside, the focal point was the Main Hall with its 60-ft. ceilings that featured sculpted plaster painted with gold and silver trim, ten cathedral-like plate glass windows, patterned terrazzo floors, colonnettes of blue Belgian marble and wainscoting of black Belgian marble. Hanging from the ceiling were six chandeliers measuring 13 ft. tall and 5 ft. in diameter.

1931 Durham Museum photo of the completed Union Station with its terra cotta exterior glowing in the light. From the Bostwick-Frohardt/KMTV Photograph Collection, permanently housed at The Durham Museum.

The station provided travelers with a wide range of amenities including a dining room, gift shop, soda fountain, telegraph and telephone rooms, barbershop, and a ladies’ lounge. In what is now the Swanson Family Gallery on the eastern end of the station was the popular Hayden House restaurant. The restaurant was divided into two with one side offering a formal dining experience and the other à la carte meals. The room was decorated with six murals depicting stages in the development of transportation, painted by Los Angeles artist Joseph Keller.

1931 Durham Museum photo of the Main Hall inside Union Station. From the Bostwick-Frohardt/KMTV Photograph Collection, permanently housed at The Durham Museum.

The building’s 13 tracks established Omaha as an important passenger hub in the west when it opened in 1931, serving eight railroads including Union Pacific, Rock Island, and Missouri Pacific. When combined with Burlington Station, it made Omaha the fourth-largest railroad center in the country. Union Station peaked with 64 passenger trains and 10,000 passengers per day. The concourse connecting the two stations was erected over the railyard in 1937.

1932 Durham Museum photo of the concourse over the railyard connection Union Station and Burlington Station. From the Bostwick-Frohardt/KMTV Photograph Collection, permanently housed at The Durham Museum

During World War II the railroads became a critical tool with which the military mobilized troops and supplies. To assist in this effort, a USO center with letter writing facilities, a dormitory and shower and bath facilities was added to Union Station. Following the war, the combination of increased air travel and completion of the interstate system significantly reduced passenger traffic starting in the 1950s. As a result, the federal government consolidated passenger rail service when it formed Amtrak in 1971. In the aftermath, U.P. announced it would cease passenger service on May 1, with the last passenger train departing Union Station at 2 AM.

Undated Durham Museum photo of the lunch counter at Union Station. From the Bostwick-Frohardt/KMTV Photograph Collection, permanently housed at The Durham Museum.

Afterward, there were multiple suggestions for Union Station, including converting it to a shopping mall; a downtown campus for UNO; a sports hall of fame; a combined library, museum, and auditorium; and even a theater for the Omaha Junior League. When none came to fruition, there was talk of demolishing it due to the cost to maintain and operate the building. The Nebraska State Historical Society managed to save it from the wrecking ball, in part, by nominating it as a national historical site.

1931 Durham Museum photo of the restaurant at Union Station. From the Bostwick-Frohardt/KMTV Photograph Collection, permanently housed at The Durham Museum.

Following the preference of Mayor Eugene Leahy, the building was converted into a museum, and the Omaha Public Library saw it as a potential home for its Byron Reed collection. The collection, which had been willed to the library after Reed passed away in 1891, consisted of rare books, manuscripts, medals, autographs, and both American and foreign coins. His collection of colonial and U.S. coinage was said to be one of the most complete in the United States. It remained in bank vaults as the library couldn’t afford the security and insurance required to display it.

1940 Durham Museum photo showing WWII Servicemen arriving at or waiting to depart Omaha at Union Station. From the Bostwick-Frohardt/KMTV Photograph Collection, permanently housed at The Durham Museum.

U.P. donated the building which had been added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1971 to the City of Omaha in 1973. The Western Heritage Museum moved in and opened its doors in 1975. The building was designated an Omaha Landmark in 1978. The Reed collection was finally moved out of the vaults and into the museum in 1985 under the stipulation that a portion always be accessible to the public.

1956 Durham Museum photo of Union Station. Notice the sign fo Hayden House restaurant. From the Bostwick-Frohardt/KMTV Photograph Collection, permanently housed at The Durham Museum.

Its most extensive restoration was completed in 1996. It included a new parking deck, roof, mechanical and electrical systems, office space, a gift shop, and its authentic soda fountain. Just a year later, it was renamed the Durham Western Heritage Museum in honor of Charles and Margre Durham, whose generosity made it possible. Charles was an engineer who built HDR into one of the country’s largest engineering and architectural firms. Margre served on the District 66 School Board for 12 years, becoming its first female president in 1967, and received three honorary doctorate degrees for her support of higher education and civic leadership.

1970 Durham Museum photo of the Western Heritage Museum. Burlington Station and Post Office are on the right and the Western Heritage Museum on the left connected by 10th Street. From the Bostwick-Frohardt/KMTV Photograph Collection, permanently housed at The Durham Museum.

Twenty-seven years after it opened, the museum celebrated its one millionth visitor in 2002. It has since been named a Smithsonian Institution affiliate and has partnered with the Library of Congress and National Archives, bringing new exhibits and programming well beyond its original focus, prompting a change to its current name.

July 2024 Omaha Exploration photo of the of the north side of the old Union Station turned Durham Museum.

Designated a National Historic Landmark in 2016, the building houses not just the Byron Reed collection and exhibits but an extensive photo archive, train cars and locomotives, a historic streetcar, and a grocery store representing the one opened by Warren Buffett’s grandfather, Ernest.

Today, the building remains one of the finest examples of the Art Deco style in the Midwest and continues to pay homage to the importance of railroad travel in Omaha.

Content written by Omaha Exploration. If you enjoy my content, sign up to receive emails or make a donation on my website. You can also follow along or subscribe on my Facebook page. Sources for this article can be found on my website. Thank you and keep exploring!

Read OE on Grow Omaha: Local History by Omaha Exploration | Grow Omaha

More pictures

July 2024 Omaha Exploration photo of the western entrance to the Durham Museum.
July 2024 Omaha Exploration photo of the passage that appears above the northern entrance on the east side of the Durham Museum.
2026 OE photo of the former ticket booths in the Great Hall at Durham Museum.
2026 OE photo in the Great Hall at Durham Museum.
2026 OE photo inside the Great Hall at Durham Museum. The gift shop sits behind the old ticket booth.
2026 OE photo of the train schedule in the Great Hall at Durham Museum.
2026 OE photo inside the Great Hall at Durham Museum.
2026 OE photo inside the Great Hall at Durham Museum.
2024 OE photo looking inside the Main Hall.
2024 OE photo of the Swanson Family Gallery where the Hayden House used to sit. Today it is a rental facility used for special events.
2026 OE photo of the soda fountain inside Durham Museum.
2024 OE photo of the locomotive on display in the basement of the Durham Museum.
2024 OE photo of the terra cotta that covers the Durham Museum.
2024 OE photo of the Durham Museum sign that sits along 10th Street.
1898 Durham Museum photo of the previous Union Station before it was demolished to make way for a more modern station in 1931. From the Bostwick-Frohardt/KMTV Photograph Collection, permanently housed at The Durham Museum.
1909 Durham Museum photo looking inside the previous Union Station. From the Bostwick-Frohardt/KMTV Photograph Collection, permanently housed at The Durham Museum.
1937 Durham Museum photo of the train schedule inside Union Station. From the Bostwick-Frohardt/KMTV Photograph Collection, permanently housed at The Durham Museum.
1987 Durham Museum photo of Union Station. From the Bostwick-Frohardt/KMTV Photograph Collection, permanently housed at The Durham Museum.

2024 Google Earth image of Union Station, present-day Durham Museum.

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2 responses to “From Union Station to Durham Museum”

  1. A couple of changes need to be made. The Chicago Great Western did not use Union Station–it used the Burlington Station. Also, the concourse over the railyard connecting the stations was built in 1931, not 1937

    1. Thank you, I’ll make the changes. Appreciate the feedback.

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