Bushwick station explained

Bushwick
Style:LIRR former
Coordinates:40.7079°N -73.9385°W
Tracks:1
Opened:July 18, 1868
Closed:May 13, 1924
Other Services Header:Former services

Bushwick, also known as Bushwick Terminal, was a train station along the Bushwick Branch, and terminal of the Bushwick Branch of the Long Island Rail Road from February 29, 1876,[1] to May 13, 1924.[2] Bushwick Terminal was located at Montrose Avenue and Bushwick Avenue in East Williamsburg, Brooklyn. It opened on July 18, 1868,[3] and closed in 1924 with the end of passenger service on the Bushwick Branch. Steam engines served the station until 1913.[4] The station building made in brick survived until recently and was the last vestige of the passenger terminal of the Bushwick Branch. Before it was demolished, the building was used as an automobile repair shop.[5] [6] The terminal building was replaced by a building that was in the process of being built in October 2007,[7] and holds trucks.[8] [9]

Bushwick Yard

Bushwick Yard consisted of 13 tracks, and one run around track. One of the tracks led to Bushwick Terminal. Currently the site is mostly occupied by a lumber yard, and is blocked off from the rest of the Bushwick Branch by a fence.[10] Most of the tracks in the yard have been covered up by asphalt.

At Bushwick Place and Johnson Avenue, there was the Long Island Rail Road Bushwick Freight Terminal. It was abandoned by the LIRR and was leased out for other uses, including a meat packing facility, and most recently, to a manufacturer of styrofoam coolers as a warehouse for styrofoam pellets. The roof had collapsed following a fire set by the resident homeless in May 2003. The building had been completely disused for about twenty years, but was still full of bags of styrofoam pellets at the time of demolition.[11] The former LIRR freight office on Bushwick Place still stands.[12]

In 1924, a temporary connection was built from Bushwick Yard that ran via Montrose Avenue and then connected to the New York City Subway's BMT Canarsie Line under Bushwick Avenue, just near the Montrose Avenue station. This was done in order for the delivery of new BMT Standard subway cars for the then-isolated Canarsie Line.[13] The first of the cars were delivered by this ramp on June 18, 1924, and passenger service on the BMT Canarsie Line began on September 21 the same year.[14]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: South Side Railroad of Long Island History. trainsarefun.com.
  2. http://www.trainsarefun.com/lirrphotos/LIRR%20STATION%20HISTORY.pdf LIRR Station History (TrainsAreFun)
  3. Web site: SOUTH SIDE RAILROAD. arrts-arrchives.com.
  4. Web site: BUSHWICK BRANCH: LIRR in Brooklyn. forgotten-ny.com.
  5. Web site: LIRR/NYA Bushwick Branch Virtual Tour. oldnyc.com.
  6. http://www.trainsarefun.com/lirr/bushwick/photos/bushwick%20terminal%20auto.jpg Picture of Bushwick Terminal
  7. Web site: Google Maps. google.com.
  8. https://www.google.com/maps/place/40°42'28.4%22N+73°56'18.6%22W/@40.70778,-73.938558,3a,75y,72.68h,84.69t/data=!3m4!1e1!3m2!1sdyXpiLenjVV7KSnL5j7GGw!2e0!4m2!3m1!1s0x0:0x0 Terminal Building Replaced By
  9. Web site: Google Maps. google.com.
  10. Web site: LIRR/NYA Bushwick Branch Virtual Tour @ OldNYC.com. oldnyc.com.
  11. Web site: LIRR Bushwick Terminal. hopetunnel.org.
  12. http://www.hopetunnel.org/subway/lirr/030918/bushw6.jpg LIRR Freight Office
  13. Web site: Map of Bushwick. Trains Are Fun.
  14. Web site: BMT Canarsie Line Car Delivery. www.nycsubway.org.