Mike sent the following links to 1935 photos regarding the construction of the High Line:
wanswheel The High Line's crown jewel was the St. John's Park Terminal, a huge freight house at its southernmost point just above Spring Street. This 800-foot-long, three-story structure had eight railroad tracks with a capacity of 150 freight cars. Fourteen elevators transferred freight down to street-level docks with spaces for 127 trucks. At the south end of the building, a five-ton hoist handled especially heavy loads. Equipped with a sprinkler system, built of concrete, and virtually fireproof, St. John's Park Terminal was state-of-the-art for the era.
The High Line's crown jewel was the St. John's Park Terminal, a huge freight house at its southernmost point just above Spring Street. This 800-foot-long, three-story structure had eight railroad tracks with a capacity of 150 freight cars. Fourteen elevators transferred freight down to street-level docks with spaces for 127 trucks. At the south end of the building, a five-ton hoist handled especially heavy loads. Equipped with a sprinkler system, built of concrete, and virtually fireproof, St. John's Park Terminal was state-of-the-art for the era.
https://www.google.com/maps/place/550+Washington+St,+New+York,+NY+10014/@40.7293976,-74.0107639,3a,75y,180h,83.16t/data=!3m6!1e1!3m4!1si386cQ324-gue7MsTq3BgQ!2e0!7i13312!8i6656!4m13!1m7!3m6!1s0x89c259f261c22609:0xfa37d1ca1ccbac!2s550+Washington+St,+New+York,+NY+10014!3b1!8m2!3d40.7284286!4d-74.0098588!3m4!1s0x89c259f261c22609:0xfa37d1ca1ccbac!8m2!3d40.7284286!4d-74.0098588
Great posting! The two light coloured touring cars in Amelia's film are Marmon V-16s, if anyone is interested. "Gentleman" Jimmy Walker -what a guy!
It's hard to believe that Jimmy Walker actually took his position as Mayor of New York seriously at one time.
thanks great posting
Yes, they were designed to avoid spooking horses with some sucess.
wanswheel, , and more is always welcome!
Great stuff! What is the vehicle that looks like a streetcar but only has four widely spaced windows down the side? A closed in steam locomotive?
wanswheel: Ever notice the similarity of St. John's Chapel (where the HR RR had its freight house) and Center Church on the New Haven town green?
St. John's was a great loss, even if if was for a good cause (speaking, of course, as a railfan!).
The reason was the location of the LIRR facilities in the Sunnyside and Long Island City area that were to be tied in to the PRR effort. Look at an overall rail map of the area. Land was available for Sunnyside Yard expansion, and this was critical to the success of the project.
I should also point that the reduction in Manhattan's living populaton was accompanied by a huge increase in working populaton. Also, the living population is at lower density with the elimination of tenement housing. Hunts Point Market, The Bronx, served by CSX, is really the replacement for St. John's.
Was there a reason why Penn Station was built so close to the NYC 30th Street yard, or was it just coincedence?
Does anybody have a NYC, CR, or CSX track chart that shows where the crossovers, diamonds, and spurs were ? Friends of The Highline are good people but have very little historical RR info. Thanks.
A10
Actually, 54light15, it was wanswheel who posted that wonderful link which you seemed to enjoy as much as I did. Eddie Albert sure does read in a fine old Midwestern accent that sounds like a friend talking.
These days it sometimes seems that the art of public speaking is dead.
NKP guy, thanks for that. Hearing Eddie Albert speak was almost like listening to an old friend.
Don't forget that most of its run was under the Atlantic Avenue El, before it was torn down. The three-truck climaxes pretty much filled the entire space under the El structure.
http://www.gearedsteam.com/climax/images_t-v.htm
This was a freight railroad connecting North and South Stations with 98% of its track in public streets, mainly Causeway Street and Atlantic Avenue, with numerous sidings. It lasted well beyond WWII. GE made a promotion film on its dieselization. It had several in-street crossing with Boston Elevated - MTA streetcar tracks on Causeway Street.
daveklepper I feel stupid. I should have remembered that the boxed-in Shays were Shays and not oil-electrics. Intresting that they boxed them in. But I think this was to avoid scaring horses, not to disguise the fact that they were steam locomotives. Horse-drawn wagons were in use in New York's streets until after WWII.
I feel stupid. I should have remembered that the boxed-in Shays were Shays and not oil-electrics. Intresting that they boxed them in. But I think this was to avoid scaring horses, not to disguise the fact that they were steam locomotives.
Horse-drawn wagons were in use in New York's streets until after WWII.
I imagine you might recall that the New York,New Haven,& Hartford's Union Freight railroad subsidiary; a shortline that served Boston's waterfront area, had Climax locomotives that were similarly constructed. The line had boxed body 0-4-0 tank engines before that..
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steam_dummy
"I Often Dream of Trains"-From the Album of the Same Name by Robyn Hitchcock
A whippletree is also referred to as a whiffletree.
A thill is either of the two long shafts that are placed alongside the horse and that allow Dobbin to pull the shay. A felloe is that wooden part of the rim of a wheel into which the outer parts of the spokes are inserted. A whippletree is sometimes called an equalizer or leader bar and helps to more evenly distribute the weight of what's being pulled.
Doesn't everyone know this? What has happened to education and especially Drivers Education in our schools?
Not to hijack this thread but I'm not up on my horse-drawn nomenclature. I think a felloe is something to do with the wheel, but what is a thill or a whippletree? Anyone know?
@ChessieCat123: Somebody needs to put on record that it's the whole city that has 8,000,000-odd people (with the emphasis on "odd, in many cases--that's what makes it interesting). The island with the High Line has less than 2,000,000. Tiesenhausen
Thanks for the link and thanks for the pictures
Thanks, wanswheel. Great link; beautifully read.
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