Oyster Bay (LIRR station)

Oyster Bay

Oyster Bay's old LIRR station, currently being restored.
Location Shore & Maxwell Avenues
Oyster Bay, NY
Owned by MTA / Town of Oyster Bay
Line(s)
Platforms 1 side platform
Tracks 2
Connections Oyster Bay Taxi
Construction
Parking Yes; Free
Disabled access Yes
Other information
Fare zone 7
History
Opened June 25, 1889
Rebuilt 1902
Traffic
Passengers (2006) 225[1]
Services
Preceding station   LIRR   Following station
Oyster Bay BranchTerminus
Current and former locations
Mill Neck station Oyster Bay Branch
Oyster Bay Long Island Rail Road Station
Location Railroad Avenue,
Oyster Bay, New York, USA
Coordinates 40°52′29.97″N 73°31′53.77″W / 40.8749917°N 73.5316028°WCoordinates: 40°52′29.97″N 73°31′53.77″W / 40.8749917°N 73.5316028°W
Architectural style Tudor Revival
Governing body Local
NRHP Reference # 05000666
Added to NRHP July 6, 2005[2]

Oyster Bay is the terminus on the Oyster Bay Branch of the Long Island Rail Road. The station is located off Shore Avenue between Maxwell and Larabee Avenues. It is a sheltered concrete elevated platform that stands in the shadows of the original station, which was accessible from the ends of Maxwell, Audrey, and Hamilton Avenues. Both stations exist along the south side of Roosevelt Park.

The original Oyster Bay station was built on June 25, 1889 and remodeled in 1902. At one point there were plans to extend the line east towards the Port Jefferson Branch. There was also a large pier built to facilitate the loading of passenger cars onto a short-lived ferry to Wilson's Point in South Norwalk, Connecticut that is now owned by the Flowers Oyster Company. The former Oyster Bay Station and the Oyster Bay Long Island Rail Road Turntable were both listed separately on the National Register of Historic Places on July 6, 2005.[3] Efforts are under way to transform the former station into a railroad museum.[4]

No bus access is available for the station, however local taxicabs do stop.

Platform and track configuration

1   Siding (no passenger service)
  Oyster Bay Branch toward New York (Locust Valley)

This station has one high-level side platform, that is six cars long, located south of the tracks. The Oyster Bay Branch has two tracks at this location. The north track, not adjacent to the platform, is a passing siding leading to a seven-track yard just beyond the station. The old station building lies just east of the new station.

The Theodore Roosevelt Memorial Park is just to the north of the siding track.

History

In 1889, the Oyster Bay Extension Railroad, a subsidiary of the Long Island Railroad, extended the terminus of its rail line from Locust Valley to Oyster Bay and constructed this beautiful Victorian train station on land donated by Col. Robert Townsend. The original station had a large wooden platform and an elegant porte cochere, a covered porch large enough for horse-drawn carriages to pass through.

In 1891, the Long Island Rail Road connected the land to the sea via a 1,000-foot-long (300 m) wharf that enabled rail cars full of passengers to be loaded onto a ferry. This ferry, called the Cape Charles would take passengers to Connecticut where the railways would be connected to the Housatonic Railroad and continue on to Boston. This unique service from New York to Boston ceased operations when a land route across Connecticut was built.

On September 9, 1891, Locomotive No. 113 exploded while idling in the station awaiting passengers. People as far away as East Norwich felt the force of the blast; three crewmen were killed.[5]

When Theodore Roosevelt became President of the New York City Police Board in 1895, he commuted regularly through this station, and when he became President of the United States in 1901, a huge expansion of the station was planned to accommodate the expected rise in visitors to the hamlet. Those 1902 renovations included the removal of the porte cochere and the addition of 400-foot-long (120 m) weather sheds. Inside the station, a large fireplace and tiled hearth were added, and on the exterior a special stucco was used that contained real oyster shells.

The architect for the 1902 renovations was Bradford Lee Gilbert. This is the architect who designed the 1898 renovations to Grand Central Station. That building was demolished in 1910 to make room for the construction of the present day Grand Central Terminal. Two cast iron eagles from the old Grand Central Station are at the main entrance to the Vanderbilt Museum in Centerport, NY.

At the end of the 20th century, the station fell into a state of disrepair. To accommodate double-decker trains, a new station and platform were built nearby.

Railroad museum

The Oyster Bay Railroad Museum, a NYS Historical/educational Not for Profit Museum is working on the Museum under the Town of Oyster Bay. The original LIRR Oyster Bay railroad station is now owned by the Town of Oyster Bay, rather than the LIRR and currently is not accessible to the public while undergoing various engineering and architectural studies and reviews in order to start the restoration into a museum. The Oyster Bay Railroad Museum Preview Center is now open at 102 Audrey Ave. a few hundred feet from the station building near Oyster Bay Town Hall. (516-558-7036)

The Oyster Bay Railroad Museum has begun work to transform the station into the new home of the Oyster Bay Railroad Museum.[6]

Turntable

Oyster Bay Railroad Museum
Oyster Bay Station Turntable (behind chainlink fence).
Location Railroad Avenue, Oyster Bay, New York, USA
Built 1902
Architectural style No Style Listed
Governing body Local
NRHP Reference # 05000667
Added to NRHP July 06, 2005[2]

Oyster Bay is the location of one of few remaining Long Island Rail Road stations with an original turntable on site. The turntable was built in 1902 to replace a smaller one that had been relocated from the Locust Valley station.[7] The turntable, which is listed on the National Register of Historic Places separately from the station, is a Town of Oyster Bay Landmark, and a featured site on the Oyster Bay History Walk audio walking tour.

See also

References

  1. Average weekday, 2006 LIRR Origin and Destination Study
  2. 2.0 2.1 "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. 2008-04-15.
  3. National Register of Historic Places Listings; July 15, 2005
  4. Karppi, Dagmar Fors (2007-07-17). "Oyster Bay Railroad Museum Brings Tourists to Oyster Bay". Oyster Bay Enterprise Pilot. Retrieved 2009-09-18.
  5. Long Island Rail Road Wrecks (TrainsAreFun.com)
  6. "Introduction". Oyster Bay History Walk. Oyster Bay Main Street Association. 2009-04-08.
  7. Hammond, John E. (2009). Oyster Bay. Images of America. Charleston, SC: Arcadia. p. 85. ISBN 0-7385-6590-3.

External links

Media related to Oyster Bay (LIRR station) at Wikimedia Commons