By Raanan Geberer--originally published in Chelsea-Clinton News/Our Town/West Side Spirit
Ninth Avenue in Chelsea is a
pleasant street, with restaurants, bakeries, several important housing
developments, a supermarket, the Church of the Holy Apostles, two diners
directly across from each other. Further up the avenue, north of the Port
Authority Bus Terminal, the avenue is filled with young people going to bars
and restaurants.
Now, picture the same avenue with a
noisy elevated train line overhead. Hard to do? That was the reality of Ninth
Avenue for seven decades, when the Ninth Avenue El was as much a part of
people’s day-to-day reality as Penn South, Gristedes and the Rail Line Diner
are today.
In the mid-19th century, horse-drawn
street traffic in Manhattan was becoming unbearable. Charles T. Harvey, in
1866, formed a “West Side and Yonkers Patent Railway Company” and in 1868
finished construction on an overhead line from Dey Street to 29th Street along
Greenwich Street and Ninth Avenue. The line was powered by a cable-car
mechanism.
According to “The New York Elevated”
by Robert C. Reed (A.S Barnes & Co., 1978), Harvey planned to connect his
el to the Hudson River Railroad’s (the ancestor of today’s MetroNorth Hudson
Line) old terminal at West 30th Street. But malfunctions of the cable mechanism
and lawsuits doomed the scheme. In 1870, the el was bought by new investors,
who soon replaced the cable mechanism with steam engines pulling wooden cars.
By 1880, the el stretched from South
Ferry to 155th Street. Other els sprung up along Second, Third and Sixth
Avenues. Indeed, the Sixth Avenue line eventually swung west on 53rd Street and
linked up with the Ninth Avenue El. By 1903, all four Manhattan els were
absorbed into the Interborough Rapid Transit Company (IRT), which was then
building the city’s first subway. In 1918, the Ninth Avenue line was extended
into the southwest Bronx, where it joined with the IRT’s Lexington-Jerome
Avenue line at 167th Street.
From the very beginning, the els
were highly criticized, especially by newspapers. Critics said they blocked
sunlight from the street, created noise, frightened horses and made buildings
shake. Cinders from their steam engines, they said, fell on pedestrians and
blackened the façade of nearby buildings. When the steam engines were replaced
by electric power after the turn of the century, things improved — a little.
The worst disaster in the history of
the Manhattan els involved the 9th Avenue line on Sept. 11, 1905. According to
Wikipedia, a downtown Ninth Avenue train mistakenly switched onto the curve for
the Sixth Avenue line. The train was going 30 mph, nearly 20 mph faster than
recommended for that portion of the track. The motorman realized his error and
slammed on the brakes, throwing the second car down to the street. The third
car came to rest against the front of a nearby apartment building, and some of
the passengers were able to escape through the windows. Thirteen people were
killed, with 48 seriously injured.
What was it like to ride on the Ninth
Avenue El? The “classic” el cars were 19th century century wooden “gate cars.”
They had open platforms at both ends, protected by gates. At each station, a
conductor had to open and close the gates for the passengers. In the early
1920s, some of these cars were retrofitted with enclosed vestibules and sliding
doors. The stations were built in Victorian, “gingerbread” style. And in the
winter, they were heated by pot-bellied stoves.
For years, civic reformers had
sought the removal of the Manhattan els – both to give nearby residents a break
and to raise property values along the avenues, according to the “Encyclopedia
of New York City.” When the city’s own Eighth Avenue subway opened a block away
from the Ninth Avenue El in 1932, the writing was on the wall. The City of New
York purchased the IRT in June 1940 and ended service on the el. A small
section from 155th Street to the Bronx was preserved as the ‘Polo Grounds
Shuttle,” but that, too, was discontinued after the baseball Giants left the
Polo Grounds for San Francisco.
A masterful depiction of the Ninth
Avenue El can be found in Henry Roth’s novel “A Diving Rock on the Hudson” (St.
Martin’s Press, 1996), based on his experiences as a high school student and
college freshman in the ‘20s. Taking the el uptown to his friend’s house near
Yankee Stadium, Roth and his friend daringly stood on the outside platform at
the rear of the last car, which was “windier than windy.” The two chums had
“their fedoras jammed down on their heads, topcoats buttoned up to the collar”
as they strained to talk to each other above the howling wind and as the train
clattered up the West Side. Rest in peace, Ninth Avenue El.