My fascination continues with the so-called “special posts” that lurked under elevated trains in the early 20th Century, especially in Manhattan. They seemed to be found most often under the older els constructed in the late 1800s. Later els, built in the early 1900s, as often as not featured pendant lamps suspended from the el structure. In the mid-20th Century, on the surviving els, all received Dwarf versions of octagonal poles, and in the late 20th, “Brownie” posts with large luminaires resembling gumballs. The Brownies are still in place, but many are receiving LED fixtures or davit-style replacements.
Here’s a fairly wild example at Bleecker and West Broadway, which is now known as LaGuardia Place at this intersection. The shaft is abbreviated and the mast is oddly angled, most likely to get around an el structure or a staircase. The photo was taken in 1940 and the elevated train, in this case, was the 6th Avenue El, which ran up West Broadway, turned left at West 3rd, and then headed up 6th. It was torn down in 1938; its replacement is the A/C/E IND subway. It’s likely that this particular pole was replaced shortly thereafter by a regulation Corvington or Bishop Crook post.
Look closely and you’ll see other anachronisms, like a delivery truck for The Sun and a cop walking the beat.
Check out the ForgottenBook, take a look at the gift shop, and as always, “comment…as you see fit.”
7/8/19