Continued from Part 1

Back in March 2000 I set out with a band of urban explorers that walked the old LIRR Rockaway Branch from Rego Park to Woodhaven. The group included the late photographer and urban chronicler Bernard Ente and the MTA’s Mark Wolodarsky. I recently rescanned the pictures I took that day, and will insert them in appropriate spots in this post.

GOOGLE MAP: ROCKAWAY LIRR BRANCH

There were two station stops along the Rockaway Branch between the main line and Woodhaven. The first of these was Parkside, which was located between Alderton and Selfridge Streets north of Metropolitan Avenue. We’re still about a mile north of Forest Park, so the station was unusually named. Note the wood-planked station walkway and four sheds, two enclosed, two open. Station illumination consisted of simple incandescent bulbs. Parkside opened in 1927 and was in service until Rockaway Branch service ceased in 1962.

Looking east along Metropolitan Avenue at the Rockaway Branch overpass. The Parkside station was past the left side of the picture. Metropolitan Avenue was built as a toll road, the Williamsburg and Jamaica Turnpike, in the 1810s connecting the Kings County waterfront with the town of Jamaica, and after the toll was removed after the Civil War the road was renamed Metropolitan Avenue.

In 2000 our group had to carefully negotiate the Rockaway Branch’s crossing of another LIRR line, the Montauk tracks, which connect the LIC terminal at Hunters point with the Jamaica station along the main line. I’ve referred to the Monauk a great deal — it carried passenger traffic until the 2000s, and had several active stations until March 1998, by which time the stations were just clearings along the unelectrified tracks.

The Rockaway appeared to cross the Montauk on a wood trestle. I’m not sure if there was ever an active connection between the two lines. The Montauk is still used for freight and to move passenger cars, but there’s no passenger service these days, as all service from LIC is now routed through the Hunters Point Avenue station and the Sunnyside Yards.

I used Woodhaven Boulevard to cross the Montauk tracks, since I hadn’t in a while, and now I know why: with its endless laborious walkway ramps, it’s a pain in the neck (though the ramps are still largely lit by yellow sodium lamps which are quickly disappearing elsewhere). What I could have done was cross Woodhaven at Metropolitan, walked Met Ave. to 88th Street, turned left and crossed the tracks using 88th Street’s simple grade crossing, which is on this FNY page along with views of the Montauk tracks. Next time…

The Rockaway Branch is also trestled over Union Turnpike, which runs from Myrtle Avenue in Glendale east to New Hyde Park. Unlike Metropolitan Avenue the road was largely built in the early 20th Century and, despite its name, it was never a toll road. I don’t have any photos of our group crossing it in March 2000 — however, once we did get across, we were met with a surprise.

Pedestrians can use the Union Turnpike walkway to get across the Rockaway tracks. Looking south from the walkway, you see not the tracks, but a parking lot! When the massive Forest View Crescent condo complex was built as a regular apartment building in the late 1960s, the Rockaway Line, which went out of business in 1962, was paved over and the parking lot built in its place. Therefore, any plans to rebuild passenger train service or build a High Line-style park here would have to purchase the land from the condo board. I doubt anything like that will happen.

Forest View Crescent is a very large building and easily dominates views from the surrounding neighborhood. The building is seen from a small piece of Trotting Course Lane below Union Turnpike. The lane is a laftover piece of Woodhaven Boulevard from before the 1920s when the road was straightened and widened. The lane leads straight into Forest Park.

Forest Park is up there among NYC’s biggest parks, with over 500 acres stretching between the cemetery belt, Kew Gardens, Union Turnpike and Glendale and Park Lane South in Woodhaven and Richmond Hill. It forms a natural boundary between communities in northern Queens (Glendale and Forest Hills) and their southern cousins in Woodhaven and Richmond Hill.

Forest Park was actually created by the city of Brooklyn in 1895, with the city’s Parks Department buying up acres of forested, pretty much unused property, hence the name. It’s among the more ‘natural’ of our big parks, with about 165 acres left as woodland, interspersed with marked trails.

The park was surveyed by Frederick Law Olmsted, the co-developer of Central and Prospect Parks and much like the parks and natural reserves of Staten Island, Forest Park contains several nature trails ‘blazed’ or marked for the ease of hikers, and also boasts a bridle path.

The park was surveyed by Frederick Law Olmsted, the co-developer of Central and Prospect Parks and much like the parks and natural reserves of Staten Island, Forest Park contains several nature trails ‘blazed’ or marked for the ease of hikers, and also boasts a bridle path.

Rockaway Tracks

In an occurrence that still surprises me somewhat the old tracks of the Rockaway Branch are available for all to explore in an open section of Forest Park entered at Trotting Course Lane north of Margaret Place. The tracks are not part of the park trail system and anyone exploring them does so at their own risk. There hasn’t been active rail service since 1962 and the rails are not electrified, but the footing is not good and it would be an easy thing to trip and fall or twist an ankle on the uneven footing. Walk the tracks here with caution.

I made my way along the park paths to Forest Park Drive, which is also bridged over the tracks. The drive runs the width of the park, but is only open to auto traffic west of Woodhaven Boulevard. I went past Victory Field, named shortly after WWI to mark the Allied victory over Germany; Staten Island’s Victory Boulevard is named similarly.

Attaining Woodhaven Boulevard again, I quickly turned left on 98th Street, which curves south along the Rockaway Line right of way, entering Woodhaven. On old maps this section of 98th Street between Woodhaven Boulevard and Park Lane South is called Diamond Street.

Here, Park Lane South, which skirts the southern end of Forest Park, is crossed by the Rockaway Branch as it enters Woodhaven.

The former red brick tobacco pipe factory on Park Lane South and 101st Street, along the Rockaway Branch right of way, has intrigued me for the 26 years (as of 2019) I have lived in Queens and I always entertained moving in, but it’s a long way from the LIRR Port Washington Branch, which your auto-free webmaster has always used as a lifeline. So, about once or twice a year, I bike or walk by and look at it the way a cat looks through the glass at the fishmonger’s. How can I resist a complex that comes complete with a watchtower.

Here briar was turned and polished to manufacture Frank Medico smoking pipes. Built at a time when every man could afford a pipe and conversations centered on which shape burned coolest to the taste. The old factory was converted to condos in the 1990s. The adjacent Rockaway LIRR may have had a siding where goods could be loaded right from the factory.

Woodhaven has some intriguing architecture, like this residence at the corner of 85th Road and 101st Street across from the DeMuth factory.

The venerable Romanesque PS 66, 85th Road and 102nd Street, is one of Queens’ most beautiful school buildings. It is one of three public schools built in the early 20th Century in a real estate development called Brooklyn Manor. Its bell tower called children to school when much of the surrounding neighborhood was made up of farmland. The school honors Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, the widow of John F. Kennedy whose advocacy helped save Grand Central Terminal from the wreckers’ ball.

Woodhaven will surprise you with a lot of housing stock in close to its original condition. 101st Street runs on the east side of the Rockaway Line’s right of way, and many of its older houses will have ancient roofline and above window detailing.

A second local station along the Rockaway Branch was at Brooklyn Manor, just north of Jamaica Avenue (you can see the elevated trestle just ahead). Pictured in 1931, the station opened in 1910 and closed when the line did, in 1962. Note the Wrigley’s Spearmint Gum ad on the right, as well as the keystone-style station sign. The Pennsylvania Railroad owned the LIRR from 1900 to about 1960 and keystone imagery played a role on elevated trestles, signs and even plates on the noses of locomotives.

I wish I had gotten more of a panoramic shot of the Rockaway Line passing under Jamaica Avenue. We did not find any traces of the Brooklyn Manor station, but that wasn’t true of the next station south, as you will see.

Hook & Ladder 143/Engine 294, Jamaica Avenue and 101st Street. Architectural information is usually sketchy regarding firehouses, but this one appears to be early 20th Century. Interesting paneling in the arches above the second floor windows.

Here the Jamaica Avenue el carrying the J train (and the Z during rush hour) crosses over the Rockaway Line. It’s not the only abandoned passenger LIRR line the el passes over—it also bridges the Montauk Branch at Lefferts Boulevard, a mile or so to the east.

Jamaica Avenue itself is an ancient road, evolving as the Jamaica Plank Road in the early 1800s, beginning at the confluence of Broadway, Fulton Street and Pennsylvania Avenue. It extended east into Suffolk County as Jericho Turnpike and today, as Route 25, extends to the east end of Long Island. The name “Jamaica” has nothing to do with the Caribbean but was originally a name the Lenape Indian tribe, original Queens inhabitants, gave themselves (Jameco). The two names evolved the same name and pronunciation separately.

Seen from 98th Street, the Rockaway Branch passes over 91st Avenue.

Woodhaven Station

In 2000 our group found the platforms of the Woodhaven station on the Rockaway line relatively intact. This station was the relative new kid on the block, having been built in 1942 just after the Brooklyn branch of the LIRR had been placed in a tunnel under Atlantic Avenue. The underground Woodhaven Junction station closed in 1976, 14 years after the above-ground Rockaway Line closed.

If you look closely you can see the trademark diamond pattern the LIRR used on its concrete station platforms. The Woodhaven station is a time capsule from 1962, the last year LIRR trains stopped here. Original station lighting mastarms are still in place…

…while one of the lamps has its original reflector dish.

This staircase, now blocked up on street level, led to an entrance/exit on Atlantic Avenue.

Woodhaven Station remains in place in 2019, unchanged in most aspects from when we encountered it in 2000.

The now-abandoned LIRR substation is present on the south side of Atlantic Avenue west of the elevated line.

As we noted in 2000 a portion of the Rockaway Line has become school bus parking. The ramp is on the west side of the tracks; this is a view from 100th Street on the east side.

Here the Rockaway Branch is bridged across 97th Avenue.

At 101st Avenue (the main commercial strip of Ozone Park) one of the remaining Rockaway Line signal towers can be seen; we are getting closer to the junction with the Liberty Avenue elevated, south of which the right-of-way is active again with A train service, which has used it since 1956.

These are the remains of the old Ozone Park LIRR station just south of 101st Avenue at 100th Street. This was once a very important transfer point on the LIRR. The present remains of the old Ozone Park station date to 1930, when the elevated concrete station replaced the grade-level tracks. Service ceased on this line on June 8, 1962.

Herbert George, whose book Change At Ozone Park describes the various LIRR lines that extended to the Rockaway Peninsula, describes the Ozone Park station:

Ozone Park station was set up to enable passengers from Pennsylvania Station and Flatbush Avenue to reach the Rockaway Park area or Far Rockaway section simply by changing trains (“Change At Ozone Park!”) At certain times, the trains would stack end-to-end, and passengers would transfer back and forth on the platform. Of course, operation in the reverse direction also occurred. Due to street restrictions below, which limited the right-of-way width above, platforms were on the outside of the four track right-of-way, making an across-the-platform exchange impossible. To accommodate this, the platforms were made exceptionally long, so that non-rush hour length MU trains could stack end-to-end and allow passengers to transfer. A set of crossovers from the outside tracks to the inner tracks were at the east end of the station, to permit trains stopping at Ozone Park to run express after the station stop, or to perform the reverse move.

Sources: Herbert George, Change At Ozone Park, © 1993 RAE Publishing

At Liberty Avenue, the A train elevated rises high over the LIRR Rockaway Branch. Here, A trains proceed east to Lefferts Boulevard or turn south along the Rockaway ROW, cross Jamaica Bay, and serve the communities of Broad Channel and Far Rockaway. A shuttle S train can be boarded at Broad Channel that proceeds to Rockaway Park. When service over Jamaica Bay is suspended, A train service sometimes runs east-west on the peninsula, connecting Rockaway Park and Far Rockaway.

Liberty Avenue is rumored to take its name that when first built, it was never tolled, hence was always “free” of charge. The avenue runs from Brownsville in Brooklyn east to St. Albans in Queens.

The elevated train here is actually the east end of the old Brooklyn Fulton Street El. It was cut back in the most part in the 1940s, with the IND Fulton Street subway connected to the el trackage at the east end in the 1950s. West of the 80th Street station, the el was torn down along Fulton Street and Pitkin Avenue by the mid-1940s.

The Martian tripod stands ready to lay waste to Ozone Park! What’s that you say? It’s only a cell phone tower. It stands in front of a building decorated with the double-snaked staff of Asclepius and the phrase “Nemo Medicanical Science.” Nemo was an early 20th Century corset factory; these days the building is mixed-use.

The ubiquitous Injury Lawyers are ready to take acer of things if I wind up with a problem on the way home from the A train Rockaway Boulevard station, which proceeded without mishap.

Check out the ForgottenBook, take a look at the gift shop, and as always, “comment…as you see fit.”

6/2/19