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A word on the construction of the Second Avenue Elevated
Line: Of the four els built in Manhattan, the Second Avenue Line was
the last to be constructed. Mayor Wickham and the Rapid Transit
Commission fixed the route. The Metropolitan Elevated Railway Company
(formerly the Gilbert Elevated Railway Company) began to construct the
Second Ave. Line, the work actually being undertaken by Mills and
Ambrose, the foundation contractors. The iron manufacturers were Edge
Moor Iron Company and Clarke, Reeves & Company. Work began at the
corner of Allen and Division streets on February 24, 1879. It wasn't
long after this that the Manhattan Railway Company took over
construction. They took over the sub-contracts from the previous
companies and finished the project in the allotted time given them.
The first test train ran over the line from South Ferry to Second
Avenue and 65th Street on January 15, 1880, and was ready to open the
line to the public on March 1, 1880. As it was explained in the above
articles, there were a host of problems, but eventually the populace
found the line adequate and running smoothly. There were subsequent
changes to accommodate the riding public, like additional tracks,
more stations,, wooden platforms replaced with iron structures and
other improvements.
Both the Third Avenue Line and the Second Avenue Line
were using Chatham Square as a transfer point. On June 19, 1882,
Third Avenue trains were allowed to operate to South Ferry without
grade crossings, and also continued on to City Hall Station. An
overhead bridge was finally constructed and opened on September 25,
1882 connecting the Chatham Square Station on the north side with the
Chatham Sq. Sta. On the south side. This bridge permitted free
transfer between the lines. They finally got it right.
Fares were collected by conductors on the trains, but
this became impractical as ridership increased and this method of fare
collection was abolished by Jan. 20, 1879. Cancelling boxes were
introduced in 1880 whereby passengers deposited their tickets into
these contraptions before entering the trains. After riding the trains
for a nickel (all-day fare was established in October 1886), the
passengers could then drop their tickets in a ticket box as they
exited the station.
THE
NEW
YORK
TRIBUNE · TUESDAY
MARCH
2ND, 1880
STEAM IN SECOND AVENUE
The fourth rapid transit line open.
Running trains on the Chatham Square branch and the Second Avenue
elevated road.
Scenes along the line and at the transfer station.
The Second Avenue Elevated Railroad was opened to the
public yesterday, as was also the branch from Chatham Square to the
City Hall. The first trains started promptly at 5:30 a. m. and
afterward ran every three minutes during commission hours. Through
the day trains were run about every five minutes. Travel over the
road was heavy. Many persons living a considerable distance above the
upper end walked to Sixty-fifth-st. in order to ride on the new road.
On the west side of Second-avenue, between Sixty-fifth
and Sixty-sixth-sts., there is a large wooden structure for coal and a
switch track for engines.
A large number of locomotive engines and cars were in
readiness on the middle track, which extends from Sixty-fifth-st. to
Fifty-ninth-st., in order to make up trains as often as the travel
required. The cars were mostly those that have been used on the Third
Avenue line, but some of them were like the Sixth Avenue rolling
stock. The trains ran smoothly over the road, but the new rails
seemed to cause more noise than even the Third or Sixth Avenue Road.
At several different places along the line the track is
very high. Between Thirty-fourth-st, and Forty-second-st, the tops of
the cars are seen above the roofs of the houses. The track apparently
descends after a few blocks to the level of the first- story windows.
The curves were all made slowly and smoothly yesterday.
At Twenty-third st. and Second-ave the curve was particularly sharp.
The station is between the curves at First and Second-aves. The
stations along the line are not yet completed, and only the iron
framework is in position. Little wooden structures are now provided
for the ticket agents. Many mechanics are engaged finishing the work.
Large placards are posted in each station forbidding the
workmen to cross the tracks. The station at Thirty-fourth-st., will
not be finished for some time, and the trains will not stop here for
the present.
The City Hall Branch, which has been closed since early
last Summer, is now part of the Third Avenue route to Harlem. There
are thus two separate lines of elevated road, which approach each
other at Chatham-square, but do not cross each other. To provide for
the transfer of passengers from one road to the other a high bridge
connecting the two has been constructed. Passengers coming down-town
on Third-ave, are able to reach the Battery by crossing the bridge and
taking the down-train on the Second Avenue Line. By the same means
passengers going up-town from City Hall who desire to go by the Second
Avenue Line are able to make the transfer. A new station has also
been built adjoining the old one of the Third Avenue Line from which
extra trains are to be dispatched during the busy hours of the day,
for the accommodation of those going up-town from Chatham-square.
The transfer of passengers yesterday was attended with
considerable confusion. The arrangement of stations of the two lines,
which becomes plain enough after being studied out , at first sight
appears perplexing on account of the numerous gates, passage-ways and
flights of stairs. It appeared to be a puzzle, especially to women
many of whom were only able to find their way over the bridge after
repeated directions from the gatemen. The wooden stairs leading to
the bridge, temporarily constructed until the iron ones should be
finished, soon proved too narrow. Passengers meeting on them were
compelled to squeeze past each other in single file or wait at the
foot until the coast was clear. Workmen were engaged last night
remedying this difficulty by making the stairs wider.
The platform of the station is not close enough to the
track, and consequently there is a considerable space between it and
the cars. A person at night might easily step into the open space and
be seriously injured.
With reference to the working of the junction, the chief
engineer of the Third Avenue Line said last evening to a TRIBUNE
reporter:
"There seemed considerable of a hitch to-day, but I think
it was largely attributable to the fact that many of the passengers,
instead of passing on stopped to see how the tracks had been arranged
and to watch the transfers. A great many transfers are made necessary
because a large proportion of the passengers coming down Third-ave
desire to go to the Battery, and most of those coming up from the
Battery wish to take cars on Third-ave."
The ticket agent at the City Hall station stated last
evening that the traffic over the City Hall Branch was much heavier
yesterday than it was on an average day before the branch had been
closed. After midnight no trains will be run on the Second Avenue
Line or the City Hall Branch. The Third-ave. trains after that hour
will run to the South Ferry Station at the Battery until 5 o'clock in
the morning. At that time the regular order of running on both roads
will be resumed. On Sundays also traffic will be suspended on the
Second Avenue Line and the City Hall branch; but the trains on
Third-ave. will run to the Battery as heretofore.
THE
NEW
YORK
SUN · TUESDAY
MARCH
2ND, 1880
THE UNCOMPROMISING OPENING OF THE SECOND AVENUE RAILROAD
The Jam on the Narrow Bridge at the Chatham Square Junction.
Stairways and Stations in an Unfinished Condition, and Confusion
Everywhere. Scenes on the Line.
The Second Avenue elevated railroad was thrown open
yesterday morning, in a condition of incompleteness that surprised its
patrons, in view of the length of time employed in preparation and the
resources at command for its construction. All beyond the mere
building of the track had evidently been left to the incompetent, and
everything was done in a hurry.
By the new arrangement the southern terminus of the
Second Avenue elevated road between 5:30 A. M. and midnight, is at
South Ferry; that of the Third Avenue line at the City Hall.
For the supposed convenience of the public, a bridge
over the Third Avenue upward-bound and the Second Avenue
downward-bound tracks, connects the two depots at Chatham Square. The
company's order restricts exchanges nominally to "trains of the other
line bound in the same direction," but there does not seem to have
been as yet any effective system adopted to prevent anyone exchanging
at Chatham Square for any direction. Consequently, that bridge must
be crossed by passengers from below there on the Second Avenue line
going up Third Avenue, by passengers from below on the Second Avenue
line going to the City Hall, by passengers from above on the Second
Avenue line going to the City Hall, by passengers from above on the
Second Avenue line going up Third Avenue, by passengers from City Hall
going to the stations below on the Second Avenue line or above on that
line, by passengers from above on the Third Avenue line going to South
Ferry or up to some First or Second Avenue station; and to these must
be added all passengers by the Second Avenue line either from below or
above, who wish to get off at Chatham square, and passengers who wish
to take the Second Avenue line at Chatham square, for there is as yet
no stairway from the Second Avenue depot at this point to the street.
The bridge over which this immense multitude is expected to pass is
about twenty-four feet long by apparently ten in width and is reached
at each end by a steep flight of nineteen wooden steps....
That this passage was entirely inadequate was
demonstrated in a few minutes after the exchanges began yesterday
morning.
It was in the early commission hours, and the throngs
forcing their way in opposite directions up and down these narrow
stairways were so dense that it took half an hour of violent effort to
cross from one train to another. Sometimes for several minutes the
crowd would be so wedged that movement became impossible. .... But as
the morning's crowding and annoying had been, that of the evening
commission hours were worse.
The stairways had not been wide enough for the
requirements upon them in even those mid-day hours when travel is
lightest. Only wide enough for one full grown man to pass up or down
at a time, they were at 5 o'clock besieged by hundreds not only of
stout men, but of women some of whom carried infants, children,
mechanics with boxes of tools, person holding boxes, travelers with
valises going to the railway depot. Not only was the bridge covered
by a dense mass unable to move, and the narrow stairways jammed full
of people who could go neither backward nor forward, but they were
packed upon the northern end of the Second Avenue depot platform and
the southern end the Third Avenue depot platform hundreds of
exasperated, perspiring, struggling men and women. Pickpockets got
into the crowd and made a thriving business while the jam lasted, a
score of men losing valuable watches, and many, both men and women
being robbed of pocketbooks. Dresses were torn, buttons ripped
off,....hats mashed, ribs savagely elbowed, and fights threatened.
Every now and then men would jump down on the tracks and
make a dash to cross the track from one platform to the other and
narrowly risking their lives every time they did so, but several burly
employees of the roads occupied the debatable ground, and drove them
all back. Had there been stairs from the Second Avenue depot down to
the street the matter would not have been so bad, but there were none.
At 6 o'clock Superintendent Stewart got a Third Avenue
down-bound train switched off to the South Ferry; holding the upward-
bound trains from the City Hall in check until they passed and the
switch was relocked. At .... it got back having made the run from the
South Ferry without a stop, and was started from the Chatham Square
station up the Third Avenue line, the Second Avenue downward trains
being held on Division Street and the upward trains from the City Hall
checked until it got away and the switches were locked. That train's
departure.... broke the deadlock then started on the bridge, and gave
a chance for the squad of police who had been sent for to form the
passengers into lines on the stairway. It was not, however, until
long after the commissions hours were past that that crossing the
bridge was made without great difficulty, or with a speed more rapidly
than at a snail's pace....
Note: Pictures of
Chatham Square are on their own page.
 (image 45173) (215k, 1024x595) Country: United States City: New York System: New York City Transit Line: 2nd Avenue El Location: 50th Street Car: Manhattan El Photo by: George Votava Collection of: Joe Testagrose Date: 5/7/1940 Viewed (this week/total): 27 / 6229
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 (image 45174) (173k, 1024x618) Country: United States City: New York System: New York City Transit Line: 2nd Avenue El Location: Near Houston St. Car: Manhattan El Photo by: George Votava Collection of: Joe Testagrose Date: 3/25/1940 Viewed (this week/total): 37 / 6063
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 (image 45171) (137k, 1024x505) Country: United States City: New York System: New York City Transit Line: 2nd Avenue El Location: 50th Street Car: Composite Photo by: George Votava Collection of: Joe Testagrose Date: 3/20/1940 Viewed (this week/total): 23 / 4768
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 (image 45985) (163k, 1024x568) Country: United States City: New York System: New York City Transit Line: 2nd Avenue El Location: 92nd Street Car: MUDC Photo by: George Votava Collection of: Joe Testagrose Date: 3/20/1940 Viewed (this week/total): 23 / 2149
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 (image 45944) (163k, 1024x607) Country: United States City: New York System: New York City Transit Line: 2nd Avenue El Location: 34th Street Car: Manhattan El 1576 Photo by: George Votava Collection of: Joe Testagrose Date: 3/14/1939 Viewed (this week/total): 19 / 3476
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 (image 45972) (204k, 1024x611) Country: United States City: New York System: New York City Transit Line: 2nd Avenue El Location: 34th Street Car: Manhattan El 827 Photo by: George Votava Collection of: Joe Testagrose Date: 3/14/1939 Viewed (this week/total): 18 / 3199
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 (image 15501) (200k, 1024x643) Country: United States City: New York System: New York City Transit Line: 2nd Avenue El Location: 34th Street Car: Composite 2072 Photo by: Ed Watson/Arthur Lonto Collection Collection of: Joe Testagrose Date: 12/1937 Viewed (this week/total): 23 / 7815
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 (image 17423) (191k, 1024x669) Country: United States City: New York System: New York City Transit Line: 2nd Avenue El Location: Queensborough Bridge Collection of: Joe Testagrose Date: 1937 Viewed (this week/total): 24 / 14293
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 (image 17415) (150k, 1044x695) Country: United States City: New York System: New York City Transit Line: 2nd Avenue El Location: 57th Street Photo by: Frank Goldsmith Collection of: David Pirmann Notes: Looking north toward Queensborough Bridge spur Viewed (this week/total): 24 / 12466
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 (image 17417) (146k, 1024x667) Country: United States City: New York System: New York City Transit Line: 2nd Avenue El Location: 92nd Street Car: Composite 2073 Photo by: Frank Goldsmith Collection of: Joe Testagrose Viewed (this week/total): 16 / 8706
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 (image 17412) (117k, 1044x702) Country: United States City: New York System: New York City Transit Line: 2nd Avenue El Location: 121st Street Photo by: Frank Goldsmith Collection of: David Pirmann Viewed (this week/total): 14 / 7538
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 (image 17413) (181k, 1024x679) Country: United States City: New York System: New York City Transit Line: 2nd Avenue El Location: 23rd Street Car: MUDC 1731 Photo by: Frank Goldsmith Collection of: Joe Testagrose Viewed (this week/total): 13 / 7981
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 (image 17414) (159k, 1024x682) Country: United States City: New York System: New York City Transit Line: 2nd Avenue El Location: 23rd Street Car: MUDC 1771 Photo by: Frank Goldsmith Collection of: Joe Testagrose Viewed (this week/total): 10 / 6218
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 (image 31263) (123k, 790x1149) Country: United States City: New York System: New York City Transit Line: 2nd Avenue El Location: 23rd Street Car: MUDC Photo by: Robert C. Marcus Collection of: David Pirmann Viewed (this week/total): 14 / 6420
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 (image 41141) (130k, 790x1173) Country: United States City: New York System: New York City Transit Line: 2nd Avenue El Location: 23rd Street Car: MUDC Photo by: Robert C. Marcus Collection of: Ed Davis, Sr. Viewed (this week/total): 8 / 3570
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 (image 43567) (206k, 1024x718) Country: United States City: New York System: New York City Transit Line: 2nd Avenue El Location: 111th Street Car: Manhattan El 1354 Photo by: T. Daughtery Collection of: Joe Testagrose Viewed (this week/total): 14 / 3399
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 (image 43875) (79k, 1044x589) Country: United States City: New York System: New York City Transit Line: 2nd Avenue El Location: Queensborough Bridge Car: Manhattan El Collection of: David Pirmann Viewed (this week/total): 22 / 5367
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 (image 45943) (155k, 1024x465) Country: United States City: New York System: New York City Transit Line: 2nd Avenue El Location: 92nd Street Car: Manhattan El 1534 Photo by: George Votava Collection of: Joe Testagrose Viewed (this week/total): 15 / 1305
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 (image 45945) (135k, 1024x503) Country: United States City: New York System: New York City Transit Line: 2nd Avenue El Location: 92nd Street Car: MUDC 1799 Photo by: Kevin Farrell Collection of: Joe Testagrose Viewed (this week/total): 12 / 1162
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 (image 45986) (214k, 1024x677) Country: United States City: New York System: New York City Transit Line: 2nd Avenue El Location: Queensborough Bridge Car: MUDC Photo by: Joseph Frank Collection of: Joe Testagrose Viewed (this week/total): 20 / 5211
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