Railroad history
Magnolia's Depot Still Carries the Farm-and-Sawmill Era
Magnolia's old depot turns a place name back into a working landscape. The International and Great Northern Railroad built it in 1902. It became a shipping point for cotton, sweet potatoes, other produce, cattle, and lumber from area farms and sawmills.
The depot did not stay safe the whole time. It closed in 1963, was auctioned off, and spent years as a barn. In 1993 it was found and moved back to Magnolia. It was restored within yards of its first site.
That return matters because the depot shows that Magnolia was not just a later suburban edge. It was tied to farms, sawmills, freight, and the daily rail rhythm. Folk Victorian details, including pedimented doors and windows, roof brackets, and clipped gable ends, give the building some style along with the work story. It is freight history with trim work.
Source to confirm: Texas Historical Commission Atlas - Magnolia Depot