Interesting story. As a current resident of upper west side Manhattan, I often, when I am on Columbus Ave. try to picture what this must have looked like when it was all under the 9th Ave. El. Must have been grungy, to say the least. Today it is a beautiful "historic district" --- with the same old buildings remaining from el days, now all restored. It's almost the closest thing you can find in Manhattan to a neighborhood like Paris, lots of cafes and boutiques, etc.
My only contact with the "old" Manhattan els was one ride on the 3rd Ave. that my dad took me on when I was about 9, a year or so before its abandonment. Then when I was a student at Fordham in The Bronx in the 60s I of course had many rides on the remaining Bronx portion of that line.
BTW I live literally on the site of NYC 60th St. yard, and our building is literally on the "West side freight line" tracks, which is of course Amtrak's Empire corridor now. Gives me the opportunity to tell people (truthfully) I have 12 inch scale trains in the basement!
BTW Dave if you were a little kid on the UWS in the 30s you must have some slight memories of the "burying" of the NYC underneath Riverside Park which occurred about 1937
I sure do! I had my first train ride when I was about 2-1/2. Parents and I visited a sick relative at a hospital somewhat south of Hartford on the Connecticut River. We went there by a friend's auto, and my memory sticks seeing the streetcars emerging from the end of elevated subway at 24st and White Plains Avenue as we used the "Post Road' north. And then seeing the tracks in New Rochelle, where they left the pavement and went to the side of the road, but without wire, because the NY & Stamford had been abandoned and the Third Avenue Railway's local operation to Rye? Beach followed afterward. But coming back we waited for the southbound New Haven train at Hartford, and I was scared by the steam locomotive's noise but resolved to get over my fright. Then that fall, my nurse (with Mom busy as nurse in Dad's medical office) would take me in a stroller to Riverside Park, and I would watch the construction train with its derrick and the steel beams (painted orange in my memory?) being used to construct the tunnel. Nurse couldn't exlain what was going on. But then Mom took me and she exlained it in a going-on three-year-old's terms. So when on a subsequent visit to the park, I was lost, and when a freindly woman helped me find Mom, I described her as "The Lady Engineer." Actually, Mom was a pharmacist, and the story was told by family members for years afterward. So I did watch the whole process of the line being covered.
Much later, in grade school, my class had a field trip to the Bordon milk processing plant which had a freight siding. Possibly this was off the "High Line".
I did get to ride Amtrak out of Penn before moving to Israel. A number of times. Always tried to sit on the west side of the coach to enjoy the view of the Hudson. But the move made train watching and photography at 125th and Park Avenue slightlly less interesting. Still a good spot though. I had one photo published in TRAINS in my lifetime (so far): "P-motor coupling up" At Harmon with some kids framed by the coach diaphragm.
You can get a feel as what life was like under the Ninth Avenue el. Just visit Jerome Avenue or Broadway between 225th and 242nd Streets. And we did have a friend, an elderly woman, who lived in an apartment on Columbus Avenue south of 84th Street with her window level with the tracks. Enjoyed the visits but in retrospect don't understand how she slept nights. While the el was running, I could hear it in the distance in my own bedroom, located on 85th Street about 3/4 a long block away. But also could hear the noise of the 40-passenger gas buses on Central Park West.
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