Forgotten New York

THE LOST CANARSIE SHUTTLE

THE BMT Canarsie Line (popularly, the L train), like its cousin mostly completed the same year, the Flushing Line (#7 train) was built out mostly in 1928. However, some sections opened earlier, some later. Stations between 6th Avenue and Montrose Avenue in Bushwick opened in 1924; between Morgan Avenue and Broadway Junction in 1928; and a one top extension west to 8th Avenue (that curiously employed IND tile styling until a 1990s renovation) in 1931. Meanwhile, Brooklyn Rapid Transit purchased a surface steam railroad to Canarsie Pier in 1906. The BRT later placed it on an overhead trestle along Van Sinderen Avenue by 1920, eliminating most grade crossings except for East 105th Street…which persisted all the way to 1973.

That was one of a number of oddities on the line, another of which was the use of R-7/R-9 cars all the way to 1977. In the 1970s I still rode few trains other than my home RR 4th Ave/Broadway line. I was attending a party in Bushwick in 1975 and was amazed to board an “Arnine” complete with incandescent bulb lighting and overhead whirring fans.

However while you can be excused for thinking that the Canarsie Line has always ended at Rockaway Parkway, there was an approximately 1.5 mile section that has been utterly, er, um, forgotten. Through service on this section south to Canarsie Pier (which featured an amusement park for awhile) continued through 1920, with stops at Flatlands Avenue, Avenue L, and Canarsie Pier, and a one-track trolley line in a separate right of way between East 95th and 96th Street operated as a trolley shuttle until November 1942.

This “Canarsie Shuttle” ran for 22 years even though it completely duplicated a two-way trolley line on Rockaway Parkway two blocks away. That trolley was shut down in 1951, to be replaced by the present B42 bus, which runs between the BMT Canarsie terminal and Canarsie Pier, which has become a substantially large park over the years. A free transfer between bus and subway has existed for decades.

On this aerial shot of Canarsie taken in 1924, I have marked in red the route of the Canarsie Shuttle just east of East 95th Street, and you can see the curving right of way between Rockaway Parkway and Flatlands Avenue on the north end.

That curving right-of-way is still visible on this Google Maps aerial from 2022, though the Shuttle hasn’t run for over 80 years now.

Unfortunately I have no photos of the Canarsie Shuttle in action; a few must exist (are you reading, Bill Mangahas?) However, the line is hinted at in some tax photos from 1940. You can see utility poles along the line at Avenue K and the Shuttle here.

Bill Mangahas ( I religiously acquire his subway calendars every year) came through with this photo of the Canarsie Shuttle crossing Rockaway Parkway north of Glenwood Road. The still-existing Jerry Building is in the background; Armando’s Pizza is on the right side of the building.

A pair of tax photos from 1940 at Avenue L, along with much of Flatlands Avenue the main east-west commercial route in Canarsie, where the Shuttle had a stop. Naturally there were cigar stores/newsstand close at hand.

The two low-rise buildings in the center stand atop the old Shuttle right of way today.

Tangible remnants of the Canarsie Shuttle included, until 1920, some trolley poles at the busway at the Rockaway Parkway terminal. In recent years they carried electric wire and street lighting. In 2020 these were removed and replaced with new streetlamp poles.

On Glenwood Road west of Rockaway Parkway, the Canarsie Shuttle right of way is marked by a slanted building and a tilted trolley pole.

A second pole can be found on the Shuttle right of way as it crossed East 96th Street. To this day the property is still owned by the MTA!

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7/8/23

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