The old ones seem haunted even with ole Presidents making their whistle-stop campaigns. Blacks on their exodus from the south, streaming into them, one can visualize with their souls and spirits accompanying them as they seek a decent life. Imagine the shoeshine stands with their shoeshine “boys” and black attendants in the restrooms which was probably as far as some of them got. The newsstands with their variety of newspapers and sundries alerted the lonely travelers to Wall Street and elsewhere, businessmen who would stream in with a sophistication the common traveler feared. The smells of leather baggage, the cleanser that porters used to keep the coaches clean wafted in. The smell of cigars and wrinkles of old men’s skin let us know that the porters would be appearing with a bevy of special guests. History speaks in these stations as well as some bus stations around the country with their dangerous drifters who would serial ****, and the ambitious young talents off to the big city to seek success who we would later never hear of. The local Union Station in Champaign has been turned into businesses, but I can just see Abe Lincoln arriving speaking from the caboose and making his way to a horse and buggy outside to go to the local county courthouse. Long live ghost-filled train stations everywhere, and don’t let us forget the homeless and destitute street people who need to use their restrooms and sit down in the waiting area seats to take a needed load off. They’re that important in the general pictures of things, at least to me.