Everything about The Independent Subway System totally explained
The
Independent Subway System (
IND or
ISS), formerly known as the
Independent City–Owned Subway System (
ICOS) or the
Independent City–Owned Rapid Transit Railroad, was a
rapid transit rail system in
New York City that's now part of the
New York City Subway. It was first constructed as the "
Eighth Avenue Line" in
Manhattan in 1932.
One of three rail networks that became part of the modern New York City subway, the IND was intended to be fully owned and operated by the municipal government, in contrast to the privately operated or jointly-funded
Interborough Rapid Transit Company (IRT) and
Brooklyn–Manhattan Transit Corporation (BMT) companies. It was merged with these two networks in 1940.
The original IND service lines are the modern subway's
A through
G lines. In addition, the BMT's
R now runs partly on IND trackage, and the
Rockaway Park Shuttle and
V supplement the
A and
F, respectively. For operational purposes, the IND and BMT lines are referred to jointly as the
B Division.
Nomenclature
Initially it was known as the Independent City–Owned Subway System (ICOS), Independent Subway System (ISS), or Independent City–Owned Rapid Transit Railroad. It became known as the IND after unification of the subway lines in 1940; the name
IND was assigned to match the three-letter
initialisms of the IRT and BMT.
The first IND line was the
Eighth Avenue Line in
Manhattan, opened on
September 10,
1932; for a while the whole system was colloquially known as the
Eighth Avenue Subway. The original IND system was entirely underground in the four boroughs that it served, with the exception of a short section of the
IND Culver Line containing two stations spanning the
Gowanus Canal in the
Gowanus section of Brooklyn.
History
In the early 1920s, Mayor
John Hylan proposed a complex series of city-owned and operated rapid transit lines to compete with the BMT and IRT, especially their elevated lines. The
New York City Transit Commission was formed in 1921 to develop a plan to reduce overcrowding on the subways. The original plans included:
These lines were completely built as planned. All but a short portion of the Culver Line (over the
Gowanus Canal) are underground.
Opening and progress through 1933
On
September 10,
1932, the Eighth Avenue Line opened from
207th Street to
Chambers Street, inaugurating the IND. In February 1933 the
Cranberry Street Tunnel opened, along with the Eighth Avenue Line from
Chambers Street to
Jay Street–Borough Hall. On the northern end of the construction, in the Bronx, the connecting
Concourse Line opened on
July 1,
1933 from
205th Street to
145th Street.
The following month, the
Queens Boulevard Line opened from
Roosevelt Avenue–Jackson Heights to the lower level of
50th Street on the Eighth Avenue Line, connecting the Queens and Manhattan lines. In Queens, the
Crosstown Line opened from
Queens Plaza to
Nassau Avenue.
Finally, on
October 7,
1933, the Culver Line opened from Jay Street to
Church Avenue.
Second Manhattan trunk line, 1936–1937
On
January 1,
1936, the
Sixth Avenue Line opened from
West Fourth Street (where it splits from the Eighth Avenue Line) to
East Broadway.
On
April 9,
1936 the
Fulton Street Line opened from
Court Street to
Rockaway Avenue, along with connecting tracks from
Jay Street. The Sixth Avenue Line and
Rutgers Street Tunnel opened from East Broadway to Jay Street.
On
December 31,
1936, the Queens Boulevard Line was extended from Roosevelt Avenue to
Union Turnpike. In 1937, service was extended again to
169th Street.
On
July 1,
1937, the
Crosstown Line opened from
Nassau Avenue to
Bergen Street.
Expansion
A major expansion of the IND was first planned in 1929. It would have added over 100 miles of new routes in Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, and the Bronx, merging with, intersecting or extending the existing IND rights-of way. It was claimed that this expansion, combined with the operating IRT, BMT, and IND lines, would provide subway service within a half mile of anyone's doorstep. Pricing—excluding acquisition and equipment costs—was estimated at
US$438 million; the entire first phase had only cost US$338 million (
including acquisition and equipment costs). Not long after these plans were unveiled, the
Wall Street Crash of 1929 occurred and the
Great Depression was ushered in. The plans essentially became history overnight. Various forms of the expansion resurfaced in 1931, 1939, 1940, 1968, and 1972 but were never realized. This was the time when the IND had planned widespread elevated construction.
The
Second Avenue Subway, one of the main parts of the plan, is under construction as of 2007.
1940 Unification
On
December 15,
1940, the unbroken local tracks of the Sixth Avenue Line opened from its connection to the Eighth Avenue Line at
59th Street–Columbus Circle to
West Fourth Street–Washington Square, along with the express tracks north of
34th Street–Herald Square.
December 30, 1946: The Fulton Street Line opens from Rockaway Avenue to Broadway–East New York.
June 1, 1946: The Fulton Street Line spur to Court Street closes. (This spur would have been extended into lower Manhattan under 1939 plans.)
November 28, 1948: The Fulton Street Line opens from Broadway–East New York to Euclid Avenue.
December 11, 1950: The Queens Boulevard Line is extended from 169th Street to its current terminus at 179th Street.
October 30, 1954: The Culver Ramp opens, connecting the IND Culver Line to the BMT Culver Line at Ditmas Avenue. IND trains begin operating over the BMT Culver Line to Coney Island–Stillwell Avenue.
April 29, 1956: The Liberty Avenue Elevated, the easternmost section of the former BMT Fulton Street Line, is connected to the IND Fulton Street Line. IND service is extended from Euclid Avenue out to Lefferts Boulevard.
July 1, 1968: The Sixth Avenue Line is extended from 47th–50th Streets–Rockefeller Center to 57th Street. The Sixth Avenue Line express tracks open from 34th Street–Herald Square to West Fourth Street–Washington Square. The Chrystie Street Connection opens.
December 11, 1988: The IND Archer Avenue Line opens from Jamaica Center to Briarwood–Van Wyck Boulevard.
October 29, 1989: The IND 63rd Street Line—including the 63rd Street Tunnel—opens from 57th Street to 21st Street–Queensbridge.
December 16, 2001: The 63rd Street Line is extended from 21st Street to 36th Street, where it merges with the Queens Boulevard Line.
In the 1950s, the IND was extended over two pieces of elevated line that were disconnected from the original BMT system: the BMT Culver Line in 1954, and the Liberty Avenue extension of the BMT Fulton Street Line in 1956. The IND had surface running to and across Jamaica Bay, along with elevated tracks on the viaduct on the Rockaway Peninsula in Queens, the same year. The Queens additions occurred when the Rockaway Beach Branch of the Long Island Rail Road was added to the division after the 1950 fire on the trestle across Jamaica Bay.
The IND as built
The Bronx and Manhattan
Concourse Line: under the Grand Concourse from 206th Street south to 161st Street, then west under the Harlem River into Manhattan and south to the Eighth Avenue Line (parallel to the IRT Jerome Avenue Line)
Eighth Avenue Line: from 207th Street, south roughly under Broadway; under Saint Nicholas Avenue, Eighth Avenue, Greenwich Avenue, Sixth Avenue (with a junction with the Sixth Avenue Line/Houston Street Line), Church Street, and Fulton Street; under the East River via the Cranberry Street Tunnel into Brooklyn, to the Fulton Street Line (parallel to the IRT Ninth Avenue Line)
Sixth Avenue Line: from a split from the Eighth Avenue Line at 53rd Street, two blocks east to Sixth Avenue, then south under Sixth Avenue to a junction with the Eighth Avenue Line north of Houston Street, then east under Houston Street and south under Essex Street and Rutgers Street to the Rutgers Street Tunnel to Brooklyn - parallel to the IRT Sixth Avenue Elevated
Queens Boulevard Line: from the 53rd Street Tunnel from Queens, west under 53rd Street past a junction with the Sixth Avenue Line to merge with the Eighth Avenue Line - partly parallel to the IRT Sixth Avenue Elevated connection to the IRT Ninth Avenue Elevated along 53rd Street
East River Crossings
53rd Street Tunnel - along the Queens Boulevard Line
Rutgers Street Tunnel - connecting the Sixth Avenue Line to the Culver Line
Cranberry Street Tunnel - connecting the Eighth Avenue Line to the Fulton Street Line
Brooklyn and Queens
Queens Boulevard Line from 169th Street, west under Hillside Avenue, Queens Boulevard, Broadway, Northern Boulevard and 44th Drive to the 53rd Street Tunnel to Manhattan
Crosstown Line from the Queens Boulevard Line at Queens Plaza, south under Jackson Avenue, Manhattan Avenue, Union Avenue, Marcy Avenue and Lafayette Avenue, coming into the middle of the Fulton Street Line and connecting south into the Culver Line
Culver Line (originally the Smith Street Line, later the Coney Island Line) from the Rutgers Street Tunnel, south under Jay Street and Smith Street, coming to the surface and turning east over the Gowanus Canal at Ninth Street, then back underground, under Ninth Street, Prospect Park West, Prospect Avenue, Fort Hamilton Parkway and Mcdonald Avenue, ending at Church Street (later extended south along the BMT Culver Line)
Fulton Street Line from Court Street (now the New York Transit Museum) and the Cranberry Street Tunnel east under Fulton Street to Rockaway Avenue (later extended east along the BMT Liberty Avenue Elevated) - parallel to the BMT Fulton Street Elevated
The following extra extensions and connections were built after consolidation in 1940:
Queens Boulevard Line extended east to 179th Street
Archer Avenue Line from the Queens Boulevard Line at Van Wyck Boulevard south and east to Jamaica Center
60th Street Tunnel Connection, connecting the BMT's 60th Street Tunnel to the Queens Boulevard Line
63rd Street Line, connecting the Sixth Avenue Line and the Queens Boulevard Line through the 63rd Street Tunnel, and connecting to the BMT 63rd Street Line
Chrystie Street Connection, connecting the Houston Street Line under Second Avenue to the BMT lines over the Williamsburg Bridge (Nassau Street Line) and Manhattan Bridge (Manhattan Bridge Line)
Culver Line extended south along the ex-BMT Culver Line
Fulton Street Line extended east to and over the BMT Liberty Avenue Elevated
Service letters
Pre-Chrystie Street Connection service is shown here; for more details, see the individual service pages. Terminals shown are the furthest the line reached.
|
Line |
Routing |
Notes |
| A |
Washington Heights Express |
207th Street - Lefferts Boulevard or Rockaway Park or Far Rockaway (via Eighth Avenue) |
still exists |
| AA |
Washington Heights Local |
168th Street - Hudson Terminal (via Eighth Avenue) |
became K (no longer operative) |
| BB |
Washington Heights Local |
168th Street - 34th Street (via Sixth Avenue) (now continues to Brighton Beach Station) |
became B |
| C |
Bronx Concourse Express |
205th Street - Hoyt–Schermerhorn Street (via Eighth Avenue) |
no longer operated |
| CC |
Bronx Concourse Local |
205th Street - Hudson Terminal (via Eighth Avenue) |
became C |
| D |
Bronx Concourse Express |
205th Street - Coney Island (via Sixth Avenue) |
still exists |
| E |
Queens–Manhattan Express |
179th Street - Rockaway Park or Far Rockaway (via Eighth Avenue and Houston Street) |
still exists |
| F |
Queens–Manhattan Express |
179th Street - Hudson Terminal or Second Avenue (via Sixth Avenue) |
still exists |
| GG |
Queens Brooklyn Local |
Forest Hills - Smith–9th Streets (via Crosstown Line) |
became G |
| HH |
Schermerhorn Street Shuttle |
Court Street - Hoyt–Schermerhorn Street |
no longer operated |
| HH |
Rockaway Local |
Euclid Avenue - Rockaway Park or Far Rockaway |
became H, then S |
Further Information
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