Nassau Electric Railroad

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The Nassau Electric Railroad was an electric street railway company in the U.S. state of New York. The company operated throughout the borough of Brooklyn, as well as over the Brooklyn Bridge and Williamsburg Bridge into Manhattan.

The company was formed by real estate developer Patrick H. Flynn, who owned land on Fifth Avenue south of 25th Street, where the Atlantic Avenue Railroad's Fifth Avenue Line ended. He went to the Atlantic Avenue Railroad and Brooklyn City Rail Road, asking them to extend their lines to serve the area, but the Atlantic Avenue refused because the area was not built up, and the Brooklyn City refused because they had agreed to leave Fifth Avenue to the Atlantic Avenue. Faced with the lack of a railroad connection to his planned subdivision, Flynn incorporated the Coney Island, Fort Hamilton and Brooklyn Railroad, the Union Railroad, the Kings County Electric Railway, and finally the Nassau Electric Railroad to absorb them all.[1]

The CIFH&B was chartered by the New York State Legislature on June 7, 1890 to build from the 39th Street Ferry through New Utrecht to Coney Island and Fort Hamilton. Soon the Atlantic Avenue was also interested in extending its Fifth Avenue Line through Flynn's land to 36th Street, which it had a franchise to build to.[2][3] In 1892, Flynn took over the Union Railroad, which had been chartered on May 6, 1884 and incorporated June 19 by other parties to connect Hamilton Ferry with Prospect Park along Union Street. Flynn's plan was to build the Union Street Line and a connection along Second Avenue to the CIFH&B, allowing the RIFH&B to reach Hamilton Ferry.[4][5] Flynn also planned to extend the Union Street Line east via East New York to City Line.[6] The Kings County Electric Railway was incorporated by Flynn on November 29, 1892 to build a crosstown line from the 39th Street Ferry east along Church Avenue and New Lots Avenue to City Line, and to build from Canarsie Landing north to the city line on the west side of the Cemetery of the Evergreens, crossing the east-west line at Brownsville and the Union Street Line extension at East New York.[7]

Flynn then incorporated the Nassau Electric Railroad on March 13, 1893 in order to raise more capital for the system[8] and with the right to use the tracks of the other three companies.[9] In the next few years, most of the system's franchised lines, totalling about 100 miles (160 km), were built:[10]


Flynn incorporated the East River and Atlantic Ocean Railroad on November 16, 1895 to gain access to the Brooklyn Bridge, Long Island City, and other places.[11] However, the Nassau leased the Atlantic Avenue Railroad on April 4, 1896, thus gaining Fifth Avenue and other streets north to the bridge, a lease on the Brooklyn, Bath and West End Railroad (West End Line), and several other lines,[12] and the ER&A was no longer necessary.[13]

The Canarsie Depot, at the intersection of Hegeman Avenue (Church Avenue and New Lots Avenue Lines) and Rockaway Avenue (Wilson Avenue Line), stored cars.

[edit] References

  1. ^ "History of the Nassau Road", Brooklyn Daily Eagle, April 16, 1899, p. 31. 
  2. ^ "Both on Deck", Brooklyn Daily Eagle, February 15, 1892, p. 6. 
  3. ^ "His Fine Hand", Brooklyn Daily Eagle, February 16, 1892, p. 6. 
  4. ^ "Light Thrown Upon It", Brooklyn Daily Eagle, May 29, 1892, p. 1. 
  5. ^ "Bold Schemes", Brooklyn Daily Eagle, June 4, 1892, p. 6. 
  6. ^ "Pet Railroad Schemes", Brooklyn Daily Eagle, August 5, 1892, p. 5. 
  7. ^ "Another Surface Road", Brooklyn Daily Eagle, November 30, 1892, p. 10. 
  8. ^ "Flynn's Railroad Schemes", Brooklyn Daily Eagle, March 14, 1893, p. 1. 
  9. ^ McGraw Publishing Company, McGraw Electric Railway Manual, 1908, page 206
  10. ^ Brooklyn Daily Eagle, New Railroad for Brooklyn and Its Suburbs, March 18, 1894, page 23
  11. ^ "Flynn Wants Franchises", Brooklyn Daily Eagle, November 16, 1895, p. 1. 
  12. ^ "Roads to Coney Island", Brooklyn Daily Eagle, July 31, 1898, p. 22. 
  13. ^ "Not Nassau Franchises", Brooklyn Daily Eagle, December 1, 1897, p. 2.