- IRT Sixth Avenue Line
The IRT Sixth Avenue Line, often called the Sixth Avenue Elevated or Sixth Avenue El, was the second
elevated railway inManhattan inNew York City , following the Ninth Avenue Elevated. In addition to its transportation role, it also captured the imagination of artists and poets.The line ran south of
Central Park , mainly along Sixth Avenue. Beyond the park, trains continued north on the Ninth Avenue Line.History
The elevated line was constructed during the 1870s by the Gilbert Elevated Railway, subsequently reorganized as the Metropolitan Elevated Railway. By June 1878, its route ran north from the corner of Rector Street and Trinity Place up Trinity Place / Church Street, then west for a block at Murray Street, then north again on West Broadway, west again across West 3rd Street to the foot of Sixth Avenue, and then north to 59th Street. The following year, ownership passed to the Manhattan Railway Company, which also controlled the other elevated railways in Manhattan. In 1881, the line was connected to the largely rebuilt Ninth Avenue Elevated; it was joined in the south at Morris Street, and in the north by a connecting link running across 53rd Street.
Due to its central location in Manhattan and the inversion of the usual relationship between street noise and height, the Sixth Avenue El attracted artists; in addition to the
John French Sloan work shown here, it was also painted byFrancis Criss and others. [http://www.mountainx.com/ae/1998/0708art.php]As with all elevated railways, the Sixth Avenue El made life for those nearby difficult. It was noisy, it made buildings shake, and it bombarded pedestrians underneath with dropping ash, oil, and cinders. Eventually, a coalition of commercial establishments and building owners along Sixth Avenue campaigned to have the El removed, on the grounds that it was depressing business and property values. The Sixth Avenue El was closed on
December 4 ,1938 and razed during1939 , paving the way for the replacement undergroundIND Sixth Avenue Line , which opened between1936 and1940 .When the El was taken down, much of the
scrap metal was sold to theJapan ese. It became a common thought duringWorld War II that some of this metal was being used in armaments against Americans, and was so remarked upon inE. E. Cummings ' well-known 1944 poem "plato told"::plato told::him:he couldn't:believe it [...] ::(he didn't believe it, no::sir) it took:a nipponized bit of:the old sixth::avenue:el:in the top of his head: to tell::him
The footings for the El were again rediscovered in the early 1990s during a Sixth Avenue renovation project. [http://www.americancityandcounty.com/mag/government_nyc_rehabilitates_sixth/]
tation listing
References
*Jackson, Kenneth T. (ed.), "The Encyclopedia of New York City", "Elevated Railways", Yale University Press, 1995. ISBN 0-300-05536-6.
External links
* [http://www.nycsubway.org/lines/6thave-el.html nycsubway.org - The 6th Avenue El]
* [http://nycsubway.org/perl/caption.pl?/maps/historical/irt-1920.gif1920 track map]
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