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  <title type="text">Shenandoah Stories</title>
  <updated>2026-05-13T23:12:21-04:00</updated>
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    <title type="html"><![CDATA[Strasburg Steam Pottery-Depot-Museum]]></title>
    <published>2016-05-10T10:02:14-04:00</published>
    <updated>2018-10-19T11:46:21-04:00</updated>
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      <name>Shenandoah County Library</name>
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        <xhtml:p><xhtml:img src="http://shenandoahstories.org/files/fullsize/c04553ca5c9b8d7c4904f6998046faf8.jpg" alt="The Strasburg Depot"/><xhtml:br/>Around 1890 the building that now houses the Strasburg Museum was constructed by the Strasburg Stone and Earthenware Manufacturing Company. Organization by Strasburg resident Dr. Granville Brown, this company operated a large steam pottery plant on the site. This was one of the numerous pottery operations Strasburg was known for in the 19th century.</xhtml:p>
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The building was constructed by David Milton Crabill of Toms Brook. It would operate as a steam pottery during the 1890s and first part of the 20th century. These decades were part of a boom period in Strasburg’s history during which the railroad and other commercial establishments grew exponentially. However the boom did not last and around 1909 the pottery closed. </xhtml:p>
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Four years later the Southern Railway Company obtained the building and opened a passenger and freight depot inside. From then until the early 1960s it was the center of the railroad’s expansive presence in Strasburg. </xhtml:p>
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In 1970 the Strasburg Museum obtained a lease from the railroad to convert the then abandoned structure into a museum. That same year the building became a National Historic Landmark. Later the organization acquired the structure. </xhtml:p>
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Today the former pottery/depot still houses the town’s museum which contains thousands of authentic items from the area’s history, railroad items including a caboose, a working model railroad depicting the area, local artwork, and many other attractions. </xhtml:p>
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The museum is open seven days a week, May 1-October 31. The site is staffed by volunteer docents. Admission is $3.00 for adults, $1.00 for teens, and 50 cents for children.  <xhtml:br/>
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            <xhtml:strong><xhtml:a href="http://shenandoahstories.org/items/show/34">For more (including 4 images), view the original article</xhtml:a>.</xhtml:strong>
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