Title: Development of New York City Subways
1Development of New York City Subways
2- Images from New York City Transit Museum
(www.transitmuseumeducation.org) unless otherwise
noted
3Population 1860s and after
- Constant growth
- 1898 consolidation 3.5 million people
- 1900 New York was one of largest cities in the
world - Extreme density in certain neighborhoods like
Lower East Side
4Transit challenges 1860s 1880s
- Density overcrowded neighborhoods
- Traffic patterns Need to get people from where
they live to where they work - Physical Environment Geography of the city.
Also effects of weather on elevated and surface
lines.
5Transit challenges (continued)
- Cost related to density. Different systems
different costs. Usually - Extra features/comforts bring more riders
increase costs increase fares - Subways cost the most
- Surface rail next
- Buses using existing highways
6Transit challenges (continued)
- Environmental issues
- Coal and steam trains create pollution choke
passengers. - Pneumatic (air-powered/vacuum) huge costs
(tried 1870-73). - Need to use electricity.
- Next image crowded streets late 1800s
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8- Challenge how to move large numbers of people
through rapidly growing city on crowded streets - Horse-drawn streetcars by 1830s
- Operated in New York 1832-1917
- Next image Horse-drawn streetcar from late 1800s
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10Next step Elevated rails
- Proposals for subway system in 1860s after London
subway opened in 1863 - Delays due to expense, political fighting, and
technology - Elevated lines better option
- First part of elevated line opened to passengers
in 1868
11Elevated lines (continued)
- Built with private capital
- Operated under long-term contracts
- Multiple operators
- First line opened in 1870
- El owners Jay Gould Russell Sage JP Morgan
- Next image elevated line, early 1900s
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13Electricity
- Electric motors available in 1880s
- Streetcars began using electricity
- Blizzard of 1888 highlighted weather problem for
surface traffic - Next image streetcars, late 1800s
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15Overcrowding
- Next image Brooklyn Bridge Terminal and Brooklyn
Bridge - Note cable cars (streetcars that ran on tracks)
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17Subway proposals
- Real estate developers wanted faster transit to
make housing in outer boroughs more attractive - Progressives wanted mass transit to reduce
population densities - More real estate taxes help the city
- Unify the diverse boroughs
18Subway opposition and compromise
- El owners didnt want competition
- Some city leaders feared corruption if city ran a
mass transit system (Tammany Hall) - Compromise combination of public ownership,
private operation, and weak public supervision
19Subway Plans
- Plan using city funds to build a subway
overwhelmingly approved in 1894 - Bids reviewed
- Contract awarded to Rapid Transit Subway (RTS)
Construction Company with a 50-year lease
20RTS required to
- Keep the fare at five cents
- Pay annual rent the interest on the bonds and
other fees - Operate the lines at its own expense
- Next image Old subway strap and original
five-cent fare slot
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22IRT Lines
- 1902 Interborough Rapid Transit Company (IRT)
formed to operate the subway and given a second
contract to build another line - Owner August Belmont
- Next image City Hall Station, 1904
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24RTS and IRT
- Both systems working by 1908. First in the world
to have four-track service (express and local in
both directions) - Trains ran about 40 miles per hour
- Very profitable at first
- Increased urbanization in the Bronx, Queens,
Brooklyn
25More expansion needed, 1905 - 13
- Bitter struggle - how to extend routes
- Trains badly overcrowded neighborhoods
overcrowded - RTS and IRT oppose significant expansion
26Expansion needed (continued)
- 1913 city approved the dual system IRT and
Brooklyn Rapid Transit Company expanded and
organized as two networks - Next image 23rd St. Station (1915)
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28And more expansion
- 1913 rapid transit system carried 810 million
passengers - 1939 2049 million passengers
- Shuttle under 42nd Street added
- Lines extended through Queens, Brooklyn, the Bronx
29Bankruptcy/Reorganization
- Mayor John Hylan refused to allow an increase in
fares BRT went bankrupt between 1918-1923 - Reorganized as Brooklyn-Manhattan Transit Company
(BMC) - More East River crossings
30And still more expansion
- Hyland fiercely opposed private operators
- Approval in 1925 for Independent Subway System
(IND) more miles added, nearly all underground - IND especially encouraged development along
Queens Boulevard
31Subway in society and popular culture
32Next image Advertisement for the motion picture
Subway Sadie, 1926 (also Broadway stage hit) A
girl in a million straphangers who had
limousine longings and a subway salary. The
subway mixed genders and classesSome attracted
by this mix others appalled.
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34Next image Take the A Train
- Sheet Music, Take the A Train, 1941. Music by
Billy Strayhorn arranged by Duke Ellington - Helped to make the A line of the IND New Yorks
most famous subway route
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36Transit Workers Union (TWU)
- Transit Workers Union (TWU) formed fought for
salary increases and better working conditions
during 1930s - Next image Michael Quill addressing subway
workers in 1935 outside the IRTs 59th Street
powerhouse. The Transport Workers Union of
America, AFL-CIO.
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38Bankruptcy/Reorganization Again
- Financial problems of IRT and BMT worsened
through 1920s and 1930s - IRT bankruptcy in 1932 negotiations took 8
years - 1940 city bought operating rights, equipment,
and properties from IRT and BMT
39Bankruptcy/Reorganization continued
- Board of Transportation assumed operations
- Next image Subway Sun Unification, June 12,
1940. - Celebrates public ownership of the transit system
as Mr. Receiver (city official Thomas Murray)
hands over the IRT to Mr. Mayor (Fiorello
LaGuardia).
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41After WWII
- Opposition to city control of mass transit
- 1953 subways controlled by independent body
(Transit Authority) - 1951 Voters approved huge sale of bonds to
replace subway cars and lines some nearly 50
years old - 1951 plan appeared to include a subway planned
for 2nd Avenue still not built - Next image first Hagstrom subway map
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