Our train came into Hartford at about one o’clock. The Vermonter eased into Union Station, and we deboarded after the ticket collector shouted, “Hartford, Connecticut!”
The station is built of brownstone and gracious glass windows. It’s a trip backward in time. Like visiting the 1880s.
No sooner had I deboarded than I met an old man, struggling with his heavy baggage. He was using a walker, limping. I helped him into the station. Soon we were seated on oaken pews in the old depot. He was breathing heavily from exertion. I was breathing heavier.
“Thanks for the help,” he said. “Sometimes I forget I’m an old fart.”
“No problem,” said I.
Hartford Union Station is just a giant room. Because that’s all train stations were, long ago. Big rooms. This particular room housed thousands who would embark and disembark for parts unknown.
There’s an adventurous feeling you get inside old train stations. A feeling you don’t get in, say, LaGuardia’s Fifth Circle of Hell.
Long ago, you could have come to Hartford Union Station to travel anywhere you
wanted to go. North to Montreal. West, to Santa Fe. Or south, to the Big Easy.
The old man looks around the station. He’s overcome with nostalgia. My granddaddy always said nostalgia was a crippling narcotic.
“We came to this station all the time when I was a kid.”
He grew up in Hartford. He visited this station with his mother. Each year, as a boy, he would take a solo trip to his aunt’s Pennsylvania. His mother would pin a strip of paper inside his little coat. The paper was labeled with his home address.
The note would read: “IF THIS CHILD IS LOST, PLEASE RETURN TO…” Then, his mother would tuck five dollars into his shoe.
“Everybody’s mom did that back then. People were very trusting.”
The old man points to the ticket booth and rifles through the last 100…