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Staten Island
Railway
North Shore
line
Arlington to
St. George
By Peggy
Darlington
overview
The Staten Island Railway is
the lone commuter rail service in the borough of
Staten Island. This service operates 24
hours a day/7 days a week between Tottenville
and Saint George along 14 miles and 21 stations
from end to end and is double tracked. At the
St. George terminal, the schedules are
coordinated with the arrival and departures of
the Staten Island Ferry,
most trains arrive 5 to 7 minutes before a boat
departs. Likewise, when a boat is
scheduled to arrive, the connecting SIR train
departs St. George about 5-7 minutes later as
well. The fleet is comprised of
retrofitted R44 cars to conform to FRA
regulations and have been in service since they
arrived in 1971, replacing 50 year old Baltimore
& Ohio railcars . Trains make all local stops
(see exceptions on Nassau and Richmond Valley
stations below), while there are peak direction
trains that skip some stops, all AM and PM rush
trains bypass Tompkinsville and Stapleton
stations because of the close proximity to St.
George terminal.
History
The Staten Island Railway’s
original name was Staten Island Rapid Transit,
and was along from the old Baltimore and Ohio
Railroad company that assumed ownership of the
RR and inaugurated the first train from
Tottenville to Tompkinsville on 7/31/1884.
Most of the original ROW between Clifton and
Tottenville actually predates back to the
1850’s. A year later after the 1884
opening, the greatest extension from
Tompkinsville, and the framework for the 1898
consolidation of New York City was achieved with
the opening of Saint George station. Over
time in the late 1880’s, the North Shore and
South Beach lines were open for business as well
as the B&O freight connection to Cranford NJ,
via. a bridge over the Arthur Kill. (The
ROW from Arlington Yard and tracks are still
active, they pass underneath the Goethals Bridge
at the New Jersey end.). The trains would
run from the North Shore line and would either
terminate at St. George or continue along the
mainline or South Shore branches.
But misfortunes plagued the
B&O Railroad, it was saddled into debt and had
to file for bankruptcy. Eventually sold at
auction, the B&O was purchased by CSX railroad
in 1899, but survived long enough to operate the
railroads and even the old ferry boats to the
Whitehall Terminal. However, a 1901
boating accident changed all that, and 4 years
later the City of New York took over the ferry
operations in 1905 (Amazingly, the accident
claimed only 5 lives). The B&O now only
had to hang on to the SIRT. Decades later,
the roaring 20’s and other forces beyond their
control, forced the BRT to merge operations with
the BRT’s “Dual Contract” program, and scrap
plans for a tunnel connection from the SIRT main
line, to the “new” 4th Ave Line in
Brooklyn. The proposed line was to have a
double junction from both legs of the SIRT
mainline at a point near the present location of
Victory Blvd, run as a tunnel to Brooklyn and
along 67th Street to 4th
Ave. The bad luck continued with the
advent on the 1929 Great Depression, the new age
of faster and more efficient GMC Old Look buses
replacing the antiquated trolley lines, and the
lack of a direct connection in any form from
Staten Island to Brooklyn over the decades made
things worse. The Saint George terminal
suffered a fire that nearly gutted the entire
station on 6/25/1946, a year later the Great
Blizzard of 1947 crippled the SIRT for days,
since most of the RR was built at grade back
then. The newer and faster buses also put
a stranglehold on the B&O in operating the
railroad, which the B&O was threatening to end
all service in Staten Island. Ridership
continued to be on the decline as bus fares were
cheaper than SIR. Eventually, the city
intervened and entered into an agreement with
B&O to subsidize the current SIRT line (main
line) from Saint George to Tottenville to keep
rail service operating. Service to the
North Shore and South Beach branches closed on
March 31st, 1953. Another fire
on SIRT property happened on April 5, 1962, this
time 7 cars were lost at the Clifton Shop and
Yard. The 1964 opening of the world’s
longest suspension bridge (at the time of
opening), the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge, brought
a population explosion to Staten Island within
the next 20 years as one of the fastest growing
counties in U.S. history. The automobile
would be a mainstay from now on in Staten
Island, spurring new construction. But the
SIRT was still struggling with aging equipment
and soaring costs. Finally, the final
grade crossings and station at Jefferson Ave in
1966 were eliminated, marking the first time in
SIRT history that the entire line was converted
from at grade, to grade separated. In
1971, the MTA took over the SIRT operations from
the B&O railroad, and replaced the entire fleet
in 1973 with sixty-four retrofitted R44 cars to
meet Federal Railroad Administration (FRA)
regulations, these cars would replace the B&O
SIRT cars that were in service since the 1925
electrification of the 3 lines. The entire
SIR is FRA regulated because of the track
connections to freight service to New Jersey.
In the early 1990’s the T in SIRT was dropped by
the MTA and NYCT, converting the name from
Staten Island Rapid Transit to MTA Staten Island
Railway.
Arlington had two tracks
and an island platform. No further information
is available
Harbor Road had two
tracks and an island platform. No further
information is available
Mariner's Harbor had two
tracks and an island platform. No further
information is available
Lakew Avenue had two
tracks and two side platforms. No further
information is available
Elm Park had two tracks
and two side platforms. No further information
is available
Tower Hill had two tracks
and an island platform. No further information
is available
Port Richmond had two
tracks and an island platform. No further
information is available
West Brighton had two
tracks and two side platforms. No further
information is available
Livingston had two tracks
and two side platforms. No further information
is available
Snug Harbor had two
tracks and two side platforms. No further
information is available
New Brighton had two
tracks and two side platforms. No further
information is available
Saint George (Bay
Street and Richmond Terrace, inside Staten
Island Ferry Terminal and parking lot.)
This station is considered open cut, since
the tracks are depressed, while the 4 lane bus
terminal and parking lot are both above us.
The terminal has 5 active platforms and 10
tracks; each numbered #1 through 10 from east to
west. There is also a sixth platform to
the west that is now a passageway to the North
Municipal Parking Field on Richmond Terrace, and
towards Richmond County Ballpark, one of two
access points to this station.
The track ballast is present
through this construction zone. The main
access point is inside the St. George Ferry
Terminal, on main level, with 17 steps down from
ferry terminal to station mezzanine. The
station is ADA accessible by means of an
elevator, though hard to find with the current
construction going on. The current
staircase will be replaced by an expanded and
slightly relocated staircase, which can be seen
to the right of the existing staircase.
Going down this staircase, you can see the
original MTA SIRT logo that was most likely
there since the 1971 acquisition from B&O.
The mezzanine area has separate
fare control areas, east side for entering
passengers, and west side for exiting.
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