The Rock Hill Depot Decorative Dish Collection consists of two commemorative ceramic dishes featuring images of the Rock Hill Depot of the Southern Railway System in Rock Hill, South Carolina. The dishes were sponsored by the Twilight Home and Garden Club of Rock Hill and were produced to commemorate the historical significance of the city’s railroad depot. Both dishes display photographic images taken by Joel Nichols Jr., a longtime staff photographer at Winthrop University, whose work documented significant landmarks and events in the Rock Hill area. One dish presents a color image of the depot, while the other features a black-and-white image, offering contrasting visual interpretations of the structure. The Rock Hill Depot was constructed by J. C. Dickson of Durham, North Carolina, and opened to the public on June 29, 1912. Located on Trade Street in downtown Rock Hill, the depot occupied a strategic position where the Columbia (north–south) Division of the Southern Railway intersected with the Charleston (east–west) Division. The building was notable as one of the few two-level passenger stations in the United States, reflecting the importance of Rock Hill as a regional transportation hub in the early twentieth century. The depot remained a prominent feature of the city’s landscape until it was razed in the summer of 1973. Together, these decorative dishes serve as commemorative artifacts that document the architectural, transportation, and community history of Rock Hill and reflect local efforts to preserve and celebrate the memory of a landmark that played a central role in the city’s development.
Rock Hill Train Station (Thu,) studied this question.