DeKalb Avenue Line

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The DeKalb Avenue Line is a public transit line in Brooklyn and Queens, New York City, United States, running mostly along DeKalb Avenue, as well as eastbound on Lafayette Avenue (as part of a one-way pair), between downtown Brooklyn and Ridgewood, Queens. Originally a streetcar line, it is now the B38 DeKalb/Lafayette Avenues bus route, operated by the New York City Transit Authority.

At its east end, after crossing into Queens, the line turns southeast on Seneca Avenue and ends just short of Myrtle Avenue. A branch runs northeast on Stanhope Street to Linden Hill Cemetery.

[edit] B38 bus

The B38 bus route begins at a loop around Borough Hall in Downtown Brooklyn. It heads east on Fulton Street, splitting onto DeKalb Avenue (westbound) and Lafayette Avenue (eastbound). After crossing Broadway, eastbound buses return to DeKalb Avenue via Bushwick Avenue. The route crosses into Ridgewood, Queens and turns southeast on Seneca Avenue; every other bus turns northeast on Stanhope Street to a loop around Linden Hill Cemetery, while the rest continue along Seneca Avenue to just shy of Myrtle Avenue. Along the way, transfer can be made to the subway at Court Street–Borough Hall, Jay Street–Borough Hall, DeKalb Avenue (BMT Brighton and Fourth Avenue Lines), Classon Avenue (IND Crosstown Line), Kosciuszko Street (BMT Jamaica Line), DeKalb Avenue (BMT Canarsie Line), and Seneca Avenue (BMT Myrtle Avenue Line).

[edit] History

After a legal battle with the Coney Island and Brooklyn Railroad (Smith Street Line), which shared Water Street west of Main Street,[1] and in which it was decided that the CI&B would own two tracks and give the BC&N trackage rights over one,[2] the Brooklyn City and Newtown Rail Road opened the line to the public on January 28, 1862. The route stretched from Fulton Ferry east to stables at Throop Avenue and a depot at Marcus Garvey Boulevard (then Yates Avenue, later Sumner Avenue). Tracks were laid in Fulton Street, Front Street, Gold Street, Willoughby Street, University Plaza (then Debevoise Street), and DeKalb Avenue.[3][4][5][6] The eastbound track, in Water Street and Bridge Street rather than Front Street and Gold Street, was soon opened. By July, the line was extended northeast on DeKalb Avenue and southeast on Seneca Avenue to the Myrtle Avenue Park in Ridgewood, Queens.[citation needed][7]

In order to enable the company to avoid the narrow Debevoise Street and a dangerous westbound curve at Debevoise Street and DeKalb Avenue,[8][9] a law was passed in 1869 to allow a single track in DeKalb Avenue and Gold Street between Debevoise Street and Willoughby Street. The company laid a single track plus a "siding", but used both for revenue service, rerouting all trains in both directions to the new route in August 1869.[10] Eastbound trains were moved back to Willoughby Street and Debevoise Street once a single track was built to replace the two;[11] by then, the Hunter's Point and PRospect Park Railroad (Crosstown Line) was also using Willoughby Street.[12][13]

Starting on May 3, 1871, the Park Avenue Railroad's Vanderbilt Avenue Line shared the tracks between Fulton Ferry and Concord Street.[14] In March 1872, a law was passed to allow the BC&N to build in DeKalb Avenue west from Debevoise Street to Fulton Street, and use the Brooklyn City Rail Road's trackage in Fulton Street to Fulton Ferry.[15] After some opposition from the City Railroad,[16] the route was changed in April to turn off on Washington Street after passing City Hall.[17] Despite objections from Washington Street residents,[18] the new route, using Washington Street north to Front and Water Streets,[19] was opened on September 4, 1872.[20] The old route continued to be used by short-turn trains to Yates Avenue.[21] The BC&N stopped using the old route later that decade, but the Vanderbilt Avenue Line continued to use it until 1883, when it built a track in Concord Street west of Bridge Street in order to serve the new Brooklyn Bridge.[22][23][24]

The line was leased to the Coney Island and Brooklyn Railroad in 1897.[citation needed] The De Kalb Avenue and North Beach Railroad (also leased to the Coney Island and Brooklyn) built the branch on Stanhope Street.[citation needed] Buses were substituted for streetcars on January 30, 1949.[citation needed]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Brooklyn Daily Eagle, The Rival Railroad Companies, October 2, 1861, page 3
  2. ^ Brooklyn Daily Eagle, The Fight Between the Newtown and Coney Island Railroad Companies, February 12, 1862, page 2
  3. ^ Brooklyn Daily Eagle, The Newtown Railroad, January 2, 1862, page 2
  4. ^ Brooklyn Daily Eagle, City and Newtown Railroad Co., January 18, 1862, page 3
  5. ^ Brooklyn Daily Eagle, The Opening of the Newtown Railroad, January 27, 1862, page 3
  6. ^ Brooklyn Daily Eagle, The Newtown Railroad, January 28, 1862, page 2
  7. ^ Brooklyn Daily Eagle, The Brooklyn City and Newtown Railroad Company, March 11, 1869, page 2
  8. ^ Brooklyn Daily Eagle, Local Railroads, March 15, 1869, page 3
  9. ^ Brooklyn Daily Eagle, Change of Railroad Route, May 24, 1869, page 10
  10. ^ Brooklyn Daily Eagle, Corporate Sharp Practice, August 14, 1869, page 2
  11. ^ Brooklyn Daily Eagle, DeKalb Avenue Railroad, August 25, 1869, page 3
  12. ^ Brooklyn Daily Eagle, Cross Town Railroad, April 9, 1869, page 2
  13. ^ Brooklyn Daily Eagle, Travel, June 3, 1869, page 4
  14. ^ Brooklyn Daily Eagle, The Park Avenue Line of Cars, May 3, 1871, page 4
  15. ^ Brooklyn Daily Eagle, From Albany, March 28, 1872, page 4
  16. ^ Brooklyn Daily Eagle, Rival Railroads, March 20, 1872, page 4
  17. ^ Brooklyn Daily Eagle, From Albany, April 3, 1872, page 3
  18. ^ Brooklyn Daily Eagle, Railroad Matters, April 5, 1872, page 3
  19. ^ Brooklyn Daily Eagle, The Change of the DeKalb Avenue Railroad, July 16, 1872, page 4
  20. ^ Brooklyn Daily Eagle, Change of Route, September 4, 1872, page 3
  21. ^ David Rumsey Map Collection, J.B. Beers & Co., A new and complete street directory of Brooklyn, 1874; the following routes are listed for the "Dekalb Avenue R. R.":
    ROUTE NO. 1. Fulton Ferry to Montrose Avenue, via Water, Washington and Fulton Streets and Dekalb Avenue and Chestnut St., to City Line. Returning by same route to Front, thence through Front and Fulton Sts.
    ROUTE No. 2. Fulton Ferry to Yates Ave., via Water, Bridge and Willoughby Sts., Debevoise Place and Dekalb Ave. Returning by Dekalb Ave., Gold, Front and Fulton Streets.
  22. ^ Brooklyn Daily Eagle, Events in Brooklyn, June 10, 1883, page 5
  23. ^ Brooklyn Daily Eagle, Unused Tracks, October 2, 1883, page 2
  24. ^ Brooklyn Daily Eagle, The Board of Aldermen, June 10, 1884, page 2
Former streetcar lines in Brooklyn and other B&QT lines
2 Bergen - 3 Sumner - 5 St. Johns - 7 Tompkins - 9 Rockaway - 10 Ralph-Rockaway - 11 Ralph - 13 Gravesend-Church - 14 Wilson - 15 Crosstown - 16 Graham - 17 Greenpoint - 19 Nassau - 21 DeKalb - 24 Broadway - 25 Fulton - 26 Putnam - 27 Jamaica - 28 Erie Basin - 29 Meeker-Marcy - 30 Eighth - 31 86th - 32 Fifth - 33 Hamilton - 34 Bay Ridge - 35 Church - 36 Sea Gate - 37 Third - 38 West End - 41 Flatbush - 42 Holy Cross - 43/44 Nostrand - 46 Utica-Reid - 47 Franklin - 48 Lorimer - 49 Ocean - 50 Bushwick - 50 McDonald - 52 Greene-Gates - 53 Metropolitan - 54 Myrtle-Court - 55 Richmond Hill - 56 Union Av - 57 Flushing - 58 Flushing-Ridgewood - 59 Grand - 67 Seventh - 68 Smith-Coney Island - 69 McDonald-Vanderbilt - 71 Union St - 73 Norton's Point - 75 Smith St - 77 Fifteenth - 82 Bergen Beach - 83 Norton's Point Shuttle
Adams-Boerum - Brooklyn Bridge - Brooklyn & North River - Court - Furman - Hicks - Hoyt-Sackett - Hudson - Manhattan Bridge 3¢ - Montague - New Lots - Queensboro Bridge
Current bus routes in Brooklyn
B1 - B2 - B3 - B4 - B6 - B7 - B8 - B9 - B11 - B12 - B13 - B14 - B15 - B16 - B17 - B20 - B23 - B24 - B25 - B26 - B31 - B35 - B36 - B37 - B38 - B39 - B41 - B42 - B43 - B44 - B45 - B46 - B47 - B48 - B49 - B51 - B52 - B54 - B57 - B60 - B61 - B63 - B64 - B65 - B67 - B68 - B69 - B70 - B71 - B74 - B75 - B77 - B82 - B83 - B100 - B103 - B110