The
Andover and Wilmington Railroad opened between its namesake cities in August 1836 as a branch line off the new
Boston and Lowell Railroad (B&L). The line was moved several blocks west in Andover, away from the busy intersections of the town square. A small house was converted into a temporary station, which was soon replaced by a larger L-shaped station with a large
train shed. A brick freight house was built sometime between then and 1875. In 1906, the B&M began construction of a new station, as residents complained about the smoky conditions inside the train shed. The new station, a copy of
Beverly Depot designed by
Bradford Lee Gilbert a decade earlier, opened on September 1, 1907. It was used as the station until 1959. It was later converted for commercial use, housing an auto parts store by 1977. In 1982, it was added to the
National Register of Historic Places as
Third Railroad Station. The
Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) was formed in 1964 to subsidize suburban commuter rail service. Andover was outside the MBTA district. On January 4, 1965, the B&M discontinued most interstate service. The only service north of Haverhill was a single Boston–Dover round trip. On January 18, 1965, the B&M discontinued almost all remaining intrastate service outside the MBTA district. This left only the Dover round trip serving Andover. It was cut to Haverhill on June 30, 1967, with Andover and the other towns outside the district subsidizing the train. In November 1974, North Andover and Andover declined to renew their subsidies. Service to North Andover station ended on November 15. Days before, Andover commuters and businesses raised funds to continue service until April 1975. On April 7, 1975, town residents voted "overwhelmingly" to reimburse the commuters and subsidize service for an additional year. The town declined to subsidize further service, and the three Andover stops (Shawsheen, Andover, and ) were dropped effective April 2, 1976. The round trip, by then stopping just at
Lawrence,
Bradford and
Haverhill, was ended in June 1976. The MBTA purchased most of the B&M commuter assets, including the Western Route, on December 27, 1976. Planning began in 1978 for restoration of Haverhill service using the
Merrimack Valley Regional Transit Authority as a funding intermediary.
Haverhill Line service returned on December 17, 1979, including the resumption of the Lawrence stop. The platforms at the two stations were constructed in 1992. MBTA passengers board from a single platform behind the former freight house. Both the former station and former freight house have been repurposed for commercial use. A second track was built through the station in 2015–2017. The originally-planned second MBTA platform was not built; by 2022, the second track was largely used for idling freight trains. ==See also==