Central Railroad of Long Island is a former railroad on Long Island built by Alexander Turney Stewart, who was also the founder of Garden City. The railroad was established in 1871, was merged with the Flushing and North Side Railroad in 1874 to form the Flushing, North Shore, and Central Railroad, and was finally acquired by the Long Island Rail Road in 1876, and divided into separate branches. Despite its short existence, the CRRLI had a major impact on railroading and development on Long Island.
Alexander T. Stewart was a wealthy Irish born entrepreneur, who had made a fortune in retail and real estate. He chartered the Central Rail Road of Long Island (CRRLI) in 1871 and built his mainline from Flushing, at junction with the Flushing and North Side Railroad (FNSRR) called Great Neck Junction, all the way through Central Queens (including the part that was later to become Nassau County) to his Bethpage Brickworks in present-day Old Bethpage (then known as Bethpage), crossing northward over the tracks of the Long Island Rail Road. From the junction of the two lines, an extension was soon built south-eastward into Suffolk County terminating at the Babylon shoreline along a part of the mainline referred to as the Babylon extension. The line from Flushing east to Hempstead Crossing along with a branch line to Hempstead opened on January 8, 1873 with the rest of the line opening in 1874. In Flushing, Stewart entered into an agreement with the FNSRR gaining tracking rights for his trains to continue west from Flushing and onto Long Island City. The railroad was to serve many purposes. Stewart wanted to develop a planned community and in 1872 started building Garden City in the western Nassau (then Queens County). The CRRLI was designed to provide residents of the new community with train service to Long Island City where they could then catch ferries into Manhattan, and summer excursion service to the Babylon shoreline. Additionally the CRRLI would provide the materials that aided in the construction of Garden City by carrying them between the Bethpage brickworks and the Garden City construction site. The railroad would also be used to provide freight service between the various docks in Babylon and Long Island City.
In 1874 Stewart merged the CRRLI with FNSRR forming the Flushing, North Side, and Central Railroad. Also in 1874, the CRRLI also purchased the Southern Railroad of Long Island (SRRLI). Just before Stewart's death in 1876, a financial backer of the CRRLI, rubber baron Conrad Poppenhusen, bought a majority share of the LIRR, with each of the newer railways leased to the LIRR. Declaring bankruptcy in 1877, the LIRR was placed in receivership that October. Austin Corbin bought possession of the system in 1881, and consolidated all the railroads on Long Island under the LIRR, forming the railroads intricate system of rail lines. In consolidating the lines the CRRLI would be fragmented into several branch lines that throughout the 1900s would serve the LIRR in a number of different ways. In 1893 the LIRR bought out all remaining claims to the Stewart Line from Flushing to Bethpage Junction.[1]
After the takeover by the LIRR, the CRRLI mainline from Flushing through Floral Park (then called Hinsdale) was deemed redundant and no longer needed, mainly because the rest of the Central mainline east of Floral Park was to be connected to the LIRR's mainline at the location of the newly built Park Interlocking (today the connection is at Queens Interlocking). This connection afforded the Central access to Long Island City through the LIRR's major hub, Jamaica Station. Thus right of way between Flushing and the National Rifle Range, later to become Creedmoor Psychiatric Hospital, was abandoned in 1879, although it was not torn up until World War I. The Central between Floral Park and Babylon was placed into service as the LIRR's Central Branch. What was left between Floral Park and Creedmoor was deemed the Creedmoor Branch by the LIRR.
The Creedmoor branch originally served passengers for a few short years traveling to the National Rifle Range, which predated the Creedmoor Psychiatric Hospital. The branch was poorly situated, however, in that it had no direct connection to Jamaica Station. Passengers traveling east from Jamaica to Creedmoor had to change at Floral Park then backtrack on a shuttle train to Creedmoor. Eventually the branch was downgraded to a secondary track and was mostly used throughout the twentieth century as a freight branch for Creedmoor Hospital with daily coal deliveries. The branch, however, was important enough for the LIRR to undertake several grade crossing elimination projects along the line, most notably with the construction of a large steel trestle, built in the 1930s, to take the branch over Jamaica Avenue/Jericho Turnpike. The line was used for this nominal service until the late sixties when finally it was put out of service. The tracks were pulled up around 1973 with the trestle over Jamaica Avenue/Jericho Turnpike being dismantled in 1980. The right of way was absorbed by many of the homeowners who were given an opportunity to buy the land that adjoined their properties.
By the late 20th century there were few remains of the branch. Much of the Kissena Park corridor was built on former railroad property. A section of rail, that had been paved over, still exists on the Creedmoor property. Stewart Avenue and the uniquely angled street pattern in the Glen Oaks area of Queens, which was built around the branch near Winchester Boulevard, still mark the path of the right of way. In addition, a section of the right-of-way between Jericho Turnpike and South Tulip Street is an all-handicapped parking space for Floral Park station that requires either a daily fee or a Village of Floral Park Resident/Non-Residential permit.
The segment that became the Hempstead Branch includes part of the CRRLI from Floral Park, New York to Garden City, New York, and part of the original Hempstead Branch which ran south of the LIRR Main Line ran from Mineola, ending just west of the current terminal in Hempstead.[2] It opened on July 4, 1839 as the first branch of the LIRR.[3] The main line was extended east from Hempstead Crossing opened May 26, 1873.[4] The Central Railroad's successor, the FNS&C, was leased to the LIRR on May 3, 1876, and in June a connection at Hempstead Crossing was built, allowing trains from Mineola to use the ex-Central's Hempstead Branch, which ran parallel to the LIRR's Hempstead Branch track south of the Central.[5] The original LIRR Hempstead Branch was abandoned south of Hempstead Crossing.[6]
The old Central main line through Hempstead was named the Central Branch by the LIRR, while the line from Mineola on the LIRR's Main Line south past Hempstead Crossing to Hempstead was the Hempstead Branch.[7] The New York Bay Extension Railroad opened the current West Hempstead Branch in 1893,[8] resulting in a realignment of the Hempstead Branch back to the LIRR's original Hempstead Branch from Hempstead Crossing south to Meadow Street to better connect to the new line.[9] The former CRRLI's Hempstead Branch that ran parallel track was abandoned in 1907.[5]
The current route of the Hempstead Branch, from Queens Village east along the Main Line and Central Branch and south along the Hempstead Branch to Hempstead, was electrified on May 26, 1908.[10] The then-Hempstead Branch north to Mineola was electrified on October 20, 1926, along with the West Hempstead Branch.[11] The line north of Hempstead Crossing last saw passenger service on September 14, 1935,[12] and was abandoned for freight in 1965.[13] This meant that all Hempstead Branch trains now left the main line at Queens Village, and at some point the old Central Branch west of Hempstead Crossing was renamed as part of the Hempstead Branch.
The CRRLI mainline continued past Garden City through the vast open Hempstead Plains in central Nassau County at the location of the current day Nassau Coliseum, and on through what is today Eisenhower Park until Bethpage Junction. From there, one branch, the Bethpage Branch, turned north to Stewart's brickworks in present-day Old Bethpage. A second branch turned south-east to Babylon via the Babylon extension. The only areas of this CRRLI line that were very populated were around Hempstead and Babylon, and low ridership led to financial difficulties and a reduction in service. A bright spot for this Stewart line came in 1918 when Mitchel Field, an Air Force base, opened up in the Hempstead Plains. After the war ended, passenger usage again declined, but the line continued to be used for freight from Mitchel Field along with the other industries that opened up around the field.
In 1925 the Montauk Branch along southern Long Island between Jamaica and Babylon was electrified, providing more efficient and faster service to Babylon, thus further hurting ridership on the Stewart line. Also in 1925, the connection with Babylon was severed when the Bethpage Junction was reconfigured to connect the Main Line with the Montauk Branch. The Babylon Extension was fully rebuilt and became known as the current-day LIRR Central Branch. The portion of the line from Garden City to Plainedge/Bethpage came to be referred to as the Central Extension.
In 1939 the Central Extension between Garden City and the end of line in Bethpage was abandoned for regular passenger service. During World War II the eastern portion of the rail was removed and sold for scrap. After World War II a portion of the track was rebuilt to move materials for the construction of Levittown. For a while the LIRR ran a shuttle service between Garden City and Island Trees/Plainedge area (the right of way past Plainedge to Bethpage Junction was not rebuilt) for both the Levitt construction and to service Mitchel Field. However, by the early 1950s the Levitt construction gradually came to an end and Mitchel Field began to gradually curtail its operations as the surrounding areas began their suburban development. The LIRR had initially wanted to rebuild the entire branch to serve the new community of Levittown, however, Levitt did not want the railroad running through the town. Shuttle service to Plainedge thus ended in 1953 with the rails being pulled up again to just west of the Meadowbrook Parkway. For a while a few passenger trains ran down the remaining portion of the line to service the old Roosevelt Raceway until the 1960s.
The LIRR continued to use the line in its freight service, officially giving the line its current name the Garden City-Mitchell Field Secondary. A large freight yard remained in Garden City servicing some local industries such as A&P, General Bronze, and Newsday. Many plans were developed by the LIRR during the fifties and sixties to use the remaining portion of trackage and build a "Nassau Hub" that would service the many new retail outfits that sprung up in the area such as Roosevelt Field Mall, as well as the newly built Nassau Coliseum, and Nassau Community College, which was built on part of the Mitchel Field site. However, lack of resources (at the time the bankrupt LIRR was in the process of being bought by the MTA from the Pennsylvania Railroad), as well as community opposition from residents in Garden City shelved those plans. As the years went on the remaining freight customers along the line also disappeared.
In 1997 the LIRR decided to privatize its freight services by contracting them out to a newly developed short line the New York and Atlantic Railway (NYAR), however, NYAR has no customers using the line. Today the line is primarily used for the Ringling Brothers Barnum and Bailey Circus train, which uses the secondary and the Garden City yard to store its trains when the circus makes its yearly visit to Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum. During the rest of the year, the line remains rather dormant except for a couple of equipment moves by the LIRR.
Today the right of way east of Meadowbrook Parkway can still plainly been seen as the Long Island Power Authority has lined the right of way with utility poles. Part of the embankment of the old R.O.W. east of Eisenhower Park can also still be seen. The Clinton Road station and its low level platforms still exists along the R.O.W of the secondary with the station house being used for the Garden City Fire Department. In recent years there have been calls to reactivate passenger service on the remaining portion of the line to serve as part of the formerly proposed Nassau Hub which would service the area around Nassau Coliseum, Nassau Community College, and the Roosevelt Field and Fortunoff shopping malls.
The Long Island Motor Parkway ran mostly parallel north of this line in the section east of Meadowbrook Parkway, and the land there is presently a right-of way for Long Island Power Authority lines.
The Bethpage Branch was the source of construction of Garden City, New York. The line was originally built by the CRRLI in June 1873, primarily for the purpose of serving Stewart's local brick manufacturing plant, known as Bethpage Brickworks, and also served a pickle factory. It ran north from a station at the present-day split between the Ronkonkoma Branch and Central Branch (then called the Bethpage Junction and now called Bethpage Interlocking) to a station then called Bethpage. The branch became part of the LIRR, when it bought the CRRLI. Designated a siding as of May 24, 1909,[14] it was abandoned on November 10, 1942. Since 1963, the former Bethpage Branch and station has been located within the Old Bethpage Village Restoration[15] in what is now called Old Bethpage.
The remaining segment of the Central Branch is now owned and operated by the Long Island Rail Road. It connects the Main Line's Ronkonkoma Branch at Beth Interlocking southeast of the Bethpage station with the Montauk and Babylon Branches at Belmont Junction west of the Babylon station, allowing several Montauk Branch trains that begin or end east of Babylon to use the Main Line from Bethpage to Jamaica. The branch is colored as part of the Ronkonkoma Branch on some LIRR maps,[16] but these trains are shown on Babylon and Montauk Branch timetables.[17][18]
Much of the line runs parallel to New York State Route 109. The last station that existed along this branch of track was South Farmingdale Station.[19] A sheltered platform existed there as recently as 1974, when the station was discontinued.[20]
Station/ location |
Station link |
Miles (kilometers) to Penn Station |
Current Connections/notes | History |
---|---|---|---|---|
Great Neck Junction | Also known as Central Junction. Shared by the Main Line of the Flushing and North Side Railroad(now Port Washington Branch of the LIRR), and Central RR of Long Island. | Opened July 1873; Abandoned April 30, 1879. Located west of Flushing-Main Street (LIRR station) near Whitestone Expressway | ||
Hillside | Opened April 1874; Abandoned April 30, 1879 | |||
Kissena | Listed on some timetables as Kissena-Flushing, Flushing-Kissena, or Kissena Park. | Opened June 1873-August 1876. Re-opened June 1877, and abandoned on April 30, 1879. Moved to a private location, but burned on May 8, 1918. | ||
Frankinston | On 73rd Avenue east of Clearview Expressway, now occupied by Cunningham Park | Opened June 1873; Closed April 30, 1879. | ||
Creedmoor | Listed on some timetables as National Rifle Range. Also served Creedmoor Psychiatric Hospital. | Opened January 8, 1873; Closed 1881. | ||
Hinsdale | Also a former name of nearby Floral Park Station. | Opened January 8, 1873; Closed April 30, 1879. Moved to a private location in April 1883. | ||
Connection from to Main Line from Creedmoor Wye, and Hempstead Branch from bridge over Main Line |
Station/location | Station link | Miles to Penn Station | Current Connections/notes | History |
---|---|---|---|---|
Connection from Creedmoor Branch to Main Line from Creedmoor Wye | ||||
Floral Park Tulip Avenue and Atlantic Avenue, Floral Park |
[1] | 16.9 | ||
Bridge between Creedmoor Branch and Hempstead Branch | ||||
Hyde Park New Hyde Park Road and Manor Road, Garden City |
[2] | 18.3 | Bus (MTA Long Island Bus): N25 | Opened in 1873, later renamed Hyde Park Central. Reopened in 1909 as Stewart Manor |
Nassau Boulevard Nassau Boulevard and South Avenue, Garden City |
[3] | 19.3 | Opened in 1907, 41 years after the death of Stewart. | |
Garden City 7th Street between Hilton and Cathedral Avenues, Garden City |
[4] | 20.4 | Bus (MTA Long Island Bus): N40, N41 |
Station/location | Station link | Miles to Penn Station | Current Connections/notes | History |
---|---|---|---|---|
Hempstead Crossing had connections from Hempstead Branch, West Hempstead Branch, and Oyster Bay Branch | ||||
Washington Street | Low platforms in service for LIRR’s shuttle service with battery cars | |||
Clinton Road | Now a firehouse, owned by the Garden City Fire Department. | Originally built in 1915, and used as a ticket office for Camp Mills in World War One. Closed on May 15, 1953. | ||
Newsday | Built for the original headquarters of Newsday. | Opened June 1949, closed May 15, 1953 | ||
A&P Bronze | Built around 1928 for the A&P Warehouse as A&P Station. Combined with General Bronze Corporation station in 1949. Closed May 15, 1953. | |||
General Bronze | Built in 1949 for the General Bronze Corporation. Combined with A&P Warehouse. Closed May 15, 1953. | |||
Mitchel Field | Wooden shelter for Mitchel Air Force Base | Closed May 15, 1953. | ||
Meadowbrook-Roosevelt Raceway | Built to serve Roosevelt Raceway in Westbury. | Opened 1939, Closed 1961. | ||
Meadowbrook | Opened 1873, Closed 1939. | |||
Newbridge Road | ||||
Central Avenue | ||||
Salisbury Plains | [21] | Wooden shelter shed built c. 1916. Used to store lumber during construction of 2nd Depot, which was opened on December 10, 1923. Closed approximately in 1940. Depot privately owned, then razed sometime in the 1990s. | ||
Island Trees | ||||
Central Park/ Jerusalem/ Plainedge |
Stop located at east side of Stewart Avenue in Plainedge, New York, about 0.75 miles south of present Bethpage (LIRR station). | First listed on the timetable of May 1873, and last listed on CRRLI table in October 1876. Agent used one of the rooms in his own house for a public waiting room. Side track was installed for freight cars in January 1874. Shows as "Plainedge" in 1942 employee timetables. | ||
Bethpage Junction | See: "Existing Central Branch" below | |||
Connections to Main Line and Bethpage Branch |
Station/location | Station link | Miles to Penn Station | Current Connections/notes | History |
---|---|---|---|---|
Bethpage Junction | See: "Existing Central Branch" below | |||
Bethpage | Passenger stop appears to have been at Winding Road and Battle Row (just north of old Stewart brickworks) in present-day Old Bethpage, New York. Northern terminus of Bethpage Branch. | Passenger service opened as an accommodation to farmers November 9, 1874, with one round-trip a day. During 1876 and 1877, summer service only was provided. No evidence any station was ever built. |
Station/location | Station link | Miles to Penn Station | Current Connections/notes | History |
---|---|---|---|---|
Connections from Ronkonkoma Branch and Bethpage Branch | ||||
Bethpage Junction | A transfer point between LIRR and CRRLI at current LIRR Beth Interlocking site, where Bethpage Branch headed north. | First listed on timetable in June 1873; abandoned by CRRLI October 1, 1877. Appears on 1924 LIRR schedule for Central Extension. Reconfigured in 1925. No known depot building. | ||
South Farmingdale | Opened as "Farmingdale Station" in May 1873; Closed in either March 1875 or June 1876. Reopened again by LIRR in June 1936; Closed 1974. | |||
Breslau | East of Wellwood Ave, North Lindenhurst, NY | Breslau was also a former name for Lindenhurst (LIRR station) on what is today the Babylon Branch of the Long Island Railroad. LIRR may have had a stop here after 1925 called "North Lindenhurst". | ||
Belmont Junction | ||||
Babylon | Bus (Suffolk County Transit): S20, S23, S25, S27, S29, S40, S42, S47 Bus (MTA Long Island Bus): N19, N72 Bus (Trailways Transportation System): Adirondack Trailways, Pine Hills Trailways |
Built on October 28, 1867 by the SSRRLI as Seaside Station. Renamed Babylon Station two years later and still exists today. | ||
Babylon | at Fire Island Avenue. Mostly unused after CRRLI acquired SSRRLI just 11 months after station opened |
|