Sag Harbor Branch

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sag Harbor Branch
Sag Harbor Train Station
Info
Type Passenger and Freight
Status Abandoned
Locale Southampton (town), New York
Terminals Bridgehampton (south)
Sag Harbor (north)
No. of stations 3
Operation
Opened 1869
Closed 1940(Bridgehampton-Sag Harbor)
1949(Manorville-Eastport)
Operator(s) Long Island Railroad
Technical
Line length 4.8 miles (7.7 km)
Road bed in the Long Pond Greenbelt
Road bed in the Long Pond Greenbelt

The Sag Harbor Branch was a branch of the Long Island Rail Road that was the eastern terminal on the south shore line of Long Island from 1869 to 1895 and then was a spur from Bridgehampton to Sag Harbor, New York from 1895 to 1940.

It originally continued west from Bridgehampton along the current Montauk Branch to Eastport and used what later became the Manorville Branch to the Main Line at Manorville.

Contents

[edit] History

The line was conceived and surveyed in 1854. In 1869 LIRR president Oliver Charlick wanted the branch to head off plans by the South Side Railroad to extend their line beyond Patchogue. The original plans called for the branch to leave the Main Line at Riverhead. But Riverhead refused to pay the LIRR for the benefits of being at a junction, so the west end was moved to Manorville in the pine barrens in 1869. During construction the Quogue station "on a Sunday morning" was moved by the village from its original and current location to a location on Old Depot Road.[1]

The Sag Harbor Line remained the furtherest point on the LIRR's south shore line until 1895 when the LIRR extended the road at Bridgehampton to Montauk leaving the Sag Harbor section a spur of the Montauk Line. During World War I, a freight spur was built onto the newly reinforced Long Wharf in Sag Harbor to deliver torpedoes for the E.W. Bliss Company for testing in the harbor.

The Sag Harbor branch was abandoned in 1940.[2] A former section of the line in Sag Harbor known as Wharf Street has been designated Suffolk County Road 81 and runs from NY 114 to the Sag Harbor Pier.[3] The rest of the road bed was transformed into the Long Pond Greenbelt. The road bed is now a hiking trail. The Sag Harbor train station now a plant store.

[edit] Manorville Branch

The Manorville Branch was a segment of the Sag Harbor Branch, running from Manorville on the Main Line southeast to Eastport on the Montauk Branch, which eventually became its own branch. A small portion of the right of way runs through what is today the Long Island Game Farm, while another segment runs through a Town of Brookahven compost facility. In Eastport, the line ran beneath a bridge under Suffolk CR 51, which no longer exists, then along the north end of Spadaro Airport, before merging with the Montauk Branch.

The Manorville Branch was abandoned in 1949. In the 1950s, Suffolk County Department of Public Works planned to transform the former branch into a four-lane highway called Suffolk County Road 91 (Manorville Branch Road), but this proposal was abandoned on June 24, 1986,[4] [5] and as with the Long Pond Greenbelt, this road bed is also now a hiking trail.

[edit] List of stations

Besides the existing and former stations along the current Montauk Branch, stations along the line included the following;

  • Manorville Branch:
    • Manorville (Main Branch)
    • Eastport (Montauk Branch)
  • Sag Harbor Branch:
    • Noyack Road Station [6]
    • Sag Harbor Station [7] both of which were in Sag Harbor.

[edit] References

[edit] External links