Rio Grande Depot – Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah
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The grand Denver & Rio Grande Western Depot, built in 1910, still stands as a majestic relic of Utah’s golden railroad era. Designed by Chicago architect Henry Schlacks in a blend of Renaissance Revival and Beaux‑Arts styling, the station once pulsed with the life of thousands of travelers.
Though trains no longer roll through its platforms, many believe the depot hasn’t emptied its souls. Over the decades, employees, security guards, historians, and ghost hunters have whispered of strange happenings within its vaulted halls, restless footsteps in the night, flickering lights, and a spectral figure known only as the Purple Lady.
The Legend of the Purple Lady
The story goes that the Purple Lady was once a woman waiting at the station for her fiancé’s arrival. According to most versions, he discarded her engagement ring in the tracks during an argument. In despair, she leaped onto the tracks herself to retrieve it — only to be struck by an oncoming train.
Since then, she is said to roam the depot’s corridors in a flowing purple dress, sometimes seen near the women’s restroom, whispering in the shadows, or flickering in and out of existence. Staff and visitors have reported hearing her cry, feeling cold spots in hallways, and seeing faucets in the bathroom turn on by themselves.
Hauntings & Unexplained Events
Lights in the old building flicker and go dark with no cause. Doors close on their own. Objects are displaced overnight, paintings hang crooked when left straight, and the elevator has been the subject of multiple reports of unexplained cold spots or phantom presence.
In one telling, a café manager in the depot claimed she had been locked out of the building on late nights — even though she held a key — with no explanation. Another account speaks of singing in the women’s restroom late at night, when no one else was there.
Security guards have also reported breaking up supposed ghostly “gatherings” in the depot’s lower levels, where lights and alarms would activate themselves, or phantom footsteps echoed through empty corridors.
History & Fading Tracks
Originally built for $750,000, the Rio Grande Depot was meant to outshine its Union Pacific competitor in Salt Lake. Over the years it served as a vital hub, seeing soldiers shipped off in war, immigrants arriving, and trains departing for distant lands.
Passenger train service continued into the late 20th century, with Amtrak using the depot from 1986 until 1999. In 1975, it was added to the National Register of Historic Places. The state acquired it in 1977 for the token sum of $1.
Despite its sturdy bones, the depot hasn’t been spared from the ravages of time. A 2020 earthquake inflicted structural damage, forcing tenants — including the Utah State Historical Society and museum entities — to relocate while renovations and seismic retrofits are underway. Though closed to the public currently, the ghost stories persist.
Between Belief and Skepticism
Some skeptics argue the Purple Lady legend was amplified by ghost tour operators and local lore over the years to attract attention. A few state there is no historical evidence of a real woman dying on the tracks there, and that many hauntings may be attributed to old plumbing, wiring, and the building’s natural settling.
Yet for many, buildings like this don’t just echo history — they hold it. The souls of those who passed through, who died waiting or left unfinished, may linger in the beams and hallways. Whether spirit or shadow, the energy remains.
Address & Visitor Info:
Rio Grande Depot / Denver & Rio Grande Western Depot
300 S. Rio Grande Street
Salt Lake City, Utah 84101
*The building is currently closed to the public due to earthquake damage and undergoing renovations for seismic upgrades.
Historically, the depot housed the Utah State Historical Society offices, the Rio Gallery, and museum exhibits.