Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Montauk Branch is double-tracked from just east of Long Island City (where there is a short segment of single track) all the way through Babylon, becoming single track at Y Interlocking east of the Sayville station. Some Montauk Branch trains operate west to NYC via the diesel-only Central Branch, joining the Main Line east of Bethpage ...
Montauk is the terminus of the Montauk Branch of the Long Island Rail Road – as well as the easternmost railroad station on Long Island and in New York state. The station is located on Edgemere Street (CR 49) and Fort Pond Road, in Montauk, New York .
The Montauk Cutoff is an abandoned railway in Long Island City, Queens, New York City, that connected the Long Island Rail Road's Main Line and Lower Montauk Branch. Helicopter view of Long Island City. The overgrown Montauk Cutoff is visible at the bottom left. Cabin M bridge
Montauk Branch: 1875 1998 Railroad Avenue: Atlantic Branch: see Autumn Avenue Ralph Avenue: Atlantic Branch: Ramblersville: Rockaway Beach Branch: see Howard Beach The Raunt: Rockaway Beach Branch: 1888 1950 Rego Park: Main Line: 1928 1962 Republic: Main Line: 1940 1987 Richmond Hill: Montauk Branch: 1868 1998 Ridgewood: Montauk Branch: 1883 ...
Richmond Hill was the only station on the Lower Montauk Branch that was elevated with a high-level platform for passengers to wait for trains; the others were at ground level, with low-level platforms. The Richmond Hill station was originally built by the South Side Railroad of Long Island in 1869 as the Clarenceville station. After New York ...
The train then continues to Babylon either via the Montauk Branch or via the Main Line to Bethpage and Central Branch to Babylon, before following the Montauk Branch east to Montauk. [ 77 ] : 42 East of Y interlocking, located immediately east of Sayville station , the railroad is single-tracked with passing sidings , limiting capacity and ...
Bay Shore is a major railroad station on the Montauk Branch of the Long Island Rail Road, located on Park Avenue and Oak Street in Bay Shore, New York, to the north of Union Boulevard (CR 50) and west of Fourth Avenue. Ferries to Fire Island board from a nearby port located to the station's south. [3]
Massapequa station is typical of the elevated Babylon Branch stations that were rebuilt during the mid-to-late 20th century. It was originally built by the South Side Railroad of Long Island on October 28, 1867 as South Oyster Bay station, until May 1889. The second relocated depot was built May–June 1891, and razed in January 1953 as part of ...