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IRT Ninth Avenue Line

Former New York City rapid transit line

IRT Ninth Avenue Line

Former New York City rapid transit line

FieldValue
nameIRT Ninth Avenue Elevated
other_nameWest Side and Yonkers Patent Railway
West Side and Yonkers Patent Elevated Railway Company
Westside Patented Elevated Railway Company
Ninth Avenue El
imageNYC Elevated RR 110thSt.png
image_width300px
captionThe Ninth Avenue El's "suicide curve" at 110th Street, in 1896
planopen
open
yearcommenced
yearcompleted
close(South of 155th Street)
event11868
event1labelCable railway
event2February 14, 1870
event2labelRegular Service
event31903
event3labelElectrification
characterelevated railway
tracks2–3
gauge
electrificationDC third rail
map{{switcher
from1IRT Sixth & Ninth Avenue Lines (South Ferry to Morris Street).map
from2IRT Ninth Avenue Line.map
map_statecollapsed

West Side and Yonkers Patent Elevated Railway Company Westside Patented Elevated Railway Company Ninth Avenue El (North of 155th Street) |{{maplink-road |Show interactive map | |Show route diagram

The IRT Ninth Avenue Line, often called the Ninth Avenue Elevated or Ninth Avenue El, was the first elevated railway in New York City. It opened in July 1868 as the West Side and Yonkers Patent Railway, as an experimental single-track cable-powered elevated railway from Battery Place, at the south end of Manhattan Island, northward up Greenwich Street to Cortlandt Street. By 1879 the line was extended to the Harlem River at 155th Street. It was electrified and taken over by the Interborough Rapid Transit Company in 1903.

The main line ceased operation in June 1940, after it was replaced by the IND Eighth Avenue Line which had opened in 1932. The last section in use, over the Harlem River, was known as the Polo Grounds Shuttle. It closed in August 1958. This portion used a now-removed swing bridge called the Putnam Bridge, and went through a still-extant tunnel with two partially underground stations.

The line had the worst accident in the history of New York City elevated railways, on September 11, 1905, when a train derailed and fell to the street. Of the 61 casualties, 13 were killed and 48 were injured.

History

West Side and Yonkers Patent Railway

West Side and Yonkers Patent Railway test run, 1867

The predecessor of the Ninth Avenue Elevated was the West Side and Yonkers Patent Railway, which was built on Greenwich Street by Charles T. Harvey and ran in experimental operations beginning July 1, 1868, and for public use from June 15, 1870 through August of that year. The line used multiple one-mile-long (1.6 km-long) cable loops, driven by steam engines in cellars of buildings adjacent to the track. Each loop was started when a car neared it and stopped when it had passed. The cables were equipped with collars that the car connected to with "claws". As the claws could not be "slipped" the car was jerked each time it moved to the next cable. The system proved cumbersome, broke down several times and eventually the company ran out of money and the system was abandoned. The new owners replaced the cable cars with steam locomotives, and begun operations anew on April 20, 1871.

In 1885, the first demonstration of an electric traction engine in New York took place on the Ninth Avenue El.

Extension

The Ninth Avenue Elevated was extended up Greenwich Street and Ninth Avenue by 1891. The Ninth Avenue El and several other lines of the Manhattan Railway Company were taken over with a 99-year lease by the Interborough Rapid Transit Company on April 1, 1903. The Ninth Avenue Elevated extended over 100 ft above the street at "Suicide Curve", where the line made two 90-degree turns above 110th Street to travel from Columbus Avenue to Eighth Avenue. On September 11, 1905, the worst accident in the history of New York's elevated railways took place at a curve at 53rd street, resulting in 13 deaths and 48 serious injuries. The rebuilding project was extended all the way north to 116th Street, creating Manhattan's first three-track elevated, although center-track express service did not begin until 1916.

The line began at South Ferry and ran along Greenwich Street from Battery Place to Gansevoort Street in lower Manhattan, Ninth Avenue in midtown (joining with the Sixth Avenue El at 53rd Street, continuing along Columbus Avenue in upper Manhattan between 59th Street and 110th, turning east on 110th and running north on Eighth Avenue (Central Park West and Frederick Douglass Boulevard) until the Harlem River.

In January 1917, the installation of a third track was completed. The third track allowed the IRT to begin running express trains on the line in July 1918, from 125th Street to 155th Street; trains began using the new express station at 145th Street for the first time. At the same time, the line was extended to 162nd Street in the Bronx, and stations were opened at Sedgwick Avenue and Anderson–Jerome Avenues.

As of 1934, the following services were being operated:

  • 9th Avenue Local — South Ferry to 155th Street all hours, extended Sundays and late nights to Burnside Avenue via Jerome Avenue Line.
  • 9th Avenue Express — Rector Street to Burnside Avenue via Jerome Avenue Line weekdays and Saturdays daytime, extended to Fordham Road weekday rush periods, also Saturday morning rush and afternoon thru PM peak. These trains ran express south of 155th Street southbound until noon and northbound after noon, and made all stops in the opposite direction.

Closing and Polo Grounds Shuttle

Most of the line was closed June 11, 1940, and dismantled, following the purchase of the IRT by the City of New York. Service ended in August 1958 as a result of the departure of the New York Giants baseball team, which had relocated to San Francisco, and the ending of passenger service on the New York Central's Putnam Division.

Station listing

From north to south, the stations were:

StationTracksOpening dateClosing dateTransfers and notes
Anderson–Jerome AvenuesExpressJuly 1, 1918August 31, 1958Still exists in ruins; continued north via the Jerome Avenue Line to 167th Street, and later to Woodlawn on January 2, 1919
Sedgwick AvenueExpressJuly 1, 1918August 31, 1958Still exists in ruins; transfer point with NYC Putnam Division
155th StreetExpressurl=http://www.columbia.edu/~brennan/beach/chapter18.htmlarchive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161013210008/http://www.columbia.edu/~brennan/beach/chapter18.htmlarchive-date=October 13, 2016access-date=November 13, 2022title="The two roads are in perfect accord" 1878-1879first=Josephlast=Brennan}}August 31, 1958Built next to NYC Putnam Division southern terminus, former transfer point until Putnam Division service to Manhattan ended in 1918
151st StreetLocalNovember 15, 1917June 11, 1940
145th StreetExpressDecember 1, 1879June 11, 1940
140th StreetLocalSeptember 27, 1879June 11, 1940
135th StreetLocalSeptember 27, 1879June 11, 1940
130th StreetLocalSeptember 27, 1879June 11, 1940
125th StreetExpressSeptember 17, 1879June 11, 1940
116th StreetExpressSeptember 17, 1879June 11, 1940
110th StreetLocalJune 3, 1903June 11, 1940
104th StreetLocalJune 21, 1879June 11, 1940
99th StreetLocalJune 21, 1879June 11, 1940
93rd StreetLocalJune 21, 1879June 11, 1940
86th StreetLocalJune 21, 1879June 11, 1940
81st StreetLocaldate=June 10, 1879title=The Manhattan Company — Opening of the West Side to Eighty-first Street — The Sunday Trainsurl=https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1879/06/10/80757413.pdfaccess-date=February 11, 2009newspaper=New York Timespage=8}}June 11, 1940
72nd StreetLocalJune 9, 1879June 11, 1940
66th StreetExpress1901–1902June 11, 1940
59th StreetLocaldate=1876-01-17title=BY STEAM TO CENTRAL PARKurl=https://www.newspapers.com/article/new-york-tribune-by-steam-to-central-par/187703748/access-date=2025-12-29work=New-York Tribunepages=8}}June 11, 1940Transfer to Sixth Avenue Elevated established on June 9, 1879
50th StreetLocalJanuary 18, 1876June 11, 1940
42nd StreetLocalNovember 6, 1875June 11, 1940
34th StreetExpressJuly 30, 1873June 11, 1940
30th StreetLocalDecember 10, 1873June 11, 1940
29th StreetJuly 3, 1868December 10, 1873Original northern terminus
23rd StreetLocaltitle=New York Citydate=1877publisher=Edsall, D.A. & Co.publication-place=New Yorkurl=https://www.davidrumsey.com/luna/servlet/detail/RUMSEY~8~1~228359~5507634:New-York-City}}June 11, 1940
21st StreetLocalOctober 21, 1873Before 1879
14th StreetExpress1875June 11, 1940
Little West 12th StreetLocalJune 17, 1872March 15, 1875
11th StreetJune 14, 18751879
Christopher StreetExpress1880June 11, 1940
Houston StreetLocalNovember 3, 1873June 11, 1940
Watts StreetLocalMay 6, 18721879Sometimes referred to as the Canal Street station
Desbrosses StreetExpress1880June 11, 1940
Franklin StreetLocalJanuary 21, 1873June 11, 1940
Warren StreetExpress1875June 11, 1940
Barclay StreetLocal1880June 11, 1940
Dey Streetlast=Walkerfirst=James Blainetitle=Fifty Years of Rapid Transit, 1864-1917publisher=Law Print. Companyyear=1918url=https://books.google.com/books?id=lpEgAAAAMAAJ }}1874Original southern terminus
Cortlandt StreetExpressMay 25, 1874June 11, 1940Sometimes referred to as the Liberty Street station
Rector StreetLocal1880June 11, 1940
Morris StreetLocalAugust 15, 1872
April 15, 1877March 19, 1873
September 27, 1879
7 BroadwayJanuary 4, 18731877Yard terminus, converted to a siding on closing
Battery PlaceExpressJune 5, 1883June 11, 1940Sixth Avenue Line
South FerryExpressnowrapApril 5, 1877nowrapJune 11, 1940 (9th Avenue)
December 22, 1950 (other services)Second, Third and Sixth Avenue Lines; various ferries

References

References

  1. (October 26, 2011). "Remembering the 9th Avenue El". MTA.info.
  2. [https://www.angelfire.com/fl/mainframeconsole/polo_grounds_shuttle/el9end.jpg Ninth Avenue Elevated Closure Poster]
  3. (June 12, 1940). "Two 'El' Lines End Transit Service". [[New York Times]].
  4. "imagejpg1_zpse1f8a458.jpg Photo by JavierMitty – Photobucket". Photobucket.
  5. (June 14, 1958). "Image 8282". nycsubway.org.
  6. "Image 8296". nycsubway.org.
  7. Walsh, Kevin. (December 25, 1999). "When Is a Subway Not a Subway?". Forgotten NY.
  8. Shaw, Robert B.. (1961). "Down Brakes: A History of Railroad Accidents, Safety Precautions and Operating Practices in the United States of America". P. R. Macmillan.
  9. Reed, Robert C.. (1978). "The New York Elevated". Barnes.
  10. Brennan, Joseph. (2005). "Beach Pneumatic".
  11. (December 1956). "New York's El Lines: 1867-1955". Electric Railroads.
  12. (August 23, 2012). "9783642304842". Springer Science & Business Media.
  13. Feinman, Mark S.. "Continuing the Story of the 9th Avenue El".
  14. Walker, James Blaine. (1918). "Fifty Years of Rapid Transit, 1864-1917".
  15. History, Bloomingdale. (September 13, 2013). "The Ninth Avenue El".
  16. (1935). "The Red Book: New York". Interstate Map Co..
  17. Senate, New York (State) Legislature. (1917). "Documents of the Senate of the State of New York".
  18. (July 2, 1918). "Open New Subway To Regular Traffic — First Train On Seventh Avenue Line Carries Mayor And Other Officials — To Serve Lower West Side — Whitney Predicts An Awakening Of The District — New Extensions Of Elevated Railroad Service". New York Times.
  19. (December 11, 1921). "An Improvement in Service for Passengers on the Jerome Avenue Line North of 167th Street". Interborough Rapid Transit Company.
  20. Norwood, Stephen. (2018). "New York Sports: Glamour and Grit in the Empire City". University of Arkansas Press.
  21. Sansone, G.. (2004). "New York Subways: An Illustrated History of New York City's Transit Cars". Johns Hopkins University Press.
  22. (October 1959). "Annual Report For The Year Ended June 30, 1959". New York City Transit Authority.
  23. (2012). "The 9th Avenue Elevated-Polo Grounds Shuttle". nycsubway.org.
  24. Brennan, Joseph. ""The two roads are in perfect accord" 1878-1879".
  25. (June 10, 1879). "The Manhattan Company — Opening of the West Side to Eighty-first Street — The Sunday Trains". New York Times.
  26. "Map of New York City: showing portions of Brooklyn, Jersey City, and Westchester Co. South section - NYPL Digital Collections".
  27. Matthews, J. N.. (1902). "A Richly Detailed Map of Manhattan and the Bronx". Blanchard Press.
  28. (1876-01-17). "BY STEAM TO CENTRAL PARK". New-York Tribune.
  29. (1877). "New York City". Edsall, D.A. & Co..
  30. (1879). "Atlas of the Entire City of New York". G.W Bromley & E. Robinson.
  31. Walker, James Blaine. (1918). "Fifty Years of Rapid Transit, 1864-1917". Law Print. Company.
  32. (June 5, 1883). "A Station at Battery Place". New York Times.
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