The Southern Hempstead Branch was a branch of the
Long Island Rail Road from
Valley Stream
Valley Stream is a village in Nassau County, on Long Island, in New York, United States. The population in the Village of Valley Stream was 37,511 at the 2010 census.
The incorporated Village of Valley Stream is within the Town of Hempstead, ...
to
Hempstead. It was established in 1870 and abandoned in May 1879, and is not the same route as the current
West Hempstead Branch
The West Hempstead Branch is an electrified rail line owned and operated by the Long Island Rail Road (LIRR) in the U.S. state of New York. It runs between Valley Stream, New York, and West Hempstead, New York.
Route description
The branch se ...
.
History
Hempstead residents were annoyed with the bad service provided by the LIRR on their
Hempstead Branch
The Hempstead Branch is an electrified rail line and service owned and operated by the Long Island Rail Road in the U.S. state of New York. The branch begins at the Main Line at Queens Interlocking, just east of Queens Village station. It par ...
, and planned the New York and Hempstead Plains Railroad, which was to cross the
South Side Railroad at Valley Stream and end at the
65th Street Ferry in
Bay Ridge, Brooklyn
Bay Ridge is a neighborhood in the southwest corner of the New York City borough of Brooklyn. It is bounded by Sunset Park to the north, Dyker Heights to the east, the Narrows and the Belt Parkway to the west, and Fort Hamilton Army Base ...
, but only built east of Valley Stream. Prior to the establishment of the NY&H, the SSRLI established a short-lived subsidiary named the
Hempstead and Rockaway Railroad
Hempstead may refer to:
Places England
*Hempstead, Essex
* Hempstead, Kent
* Hempstead, near Holt, Norfolk
* Hempstead, near Stalham, Norfolk
*Hemel Hempstead, Hertfordshire
United States
* Hempstead, New York (disambiguation), multiple places i ...
designed to connect the
Far Rockaway Branch Railroad
The Far Rockaway Branch is an electrified rail line and service owned and operated by the Long Island Rail Road in the U.S. state of New York. The branch begins at Valley Interlocking, just east of Valley Stream station. From Valley Stream, ...
to the Southern Hempstead Branch. The H&R was dissolved in 1871. There were also plans to extend the line eastward into what is today
North Massapequa. Reliant on the South Side, the two companies often shared equipment. A railroad supplier named Pusey became president in 1871, but failed to do what he had promised and was soon discharged. Without notifying the company, the bondholders illegally appointed receiver
Seaman Snediker, a friend of Pusey's, under
foreclosure
Foreclosure is a legal process in which a lender attempts to recover the balance of a loan from a borrower who has stopped making payments to the lender by forcing the sale of the asset used as the collateral for the loan.
Formally, a mort ...
, and they took the railroad on January 8, 1872. The owners discovered this the next morning and took control of the railroad's only
locomotive and two cars had been taken away by bank creditors. The South Side leased the NY&HP in June 1873.
[Ron Ziel and George H. Foster, Steel Rails to the Sunrise, 1965]
The railroad left the South Side Valley Stream station at Fifth Street and struck out northeastward. It crossed Franklin Avenue, Malverne, close to the present little stream between Wheeler Avenue and Cornwell Avenue; here was situated the little hamlet and station of Bridgeport. The track then paralleled Cornwell Avenue exactly, crossing Hempstead Avenue, where was located the tiny settlement and station of Norwood. The Pine Brook was crossed on a little bridge only a foot or two above water level. At Woodfield Avenue and Oak Place was Woodfield depot. Immediately to the east the track crossed the Schodack Brook on an embankment and culvert about five or six feet above the stream bed. As the track approached Hempstead village, it crossed the Horse Brook or Rockaway Brook on a small bridge and then paralleled the brook a few blocks, terminating at a little station on the west side of Greenwich Street midway between Front Street and Prospect Street. Here there was a short stretch of double track but no turntable. Service was maintained with about six trains a day in each direction.
"The Long Island Rail Road: A Comprehensive History, Part One: South Side R.R. of L.I.," by Vincent F. Seyfried (1961); Chapter Five: The Hempstead Branch: The Tangled Affairs of the New York & Hempstead
/ref>
Stations
The entire line was abandoned in 1879.
References
External links
1873 Southern Hempstead Branch map (Unofficial LIRR History Website)
{{Long Island Rail Road
Predecessors of the Long Island Rail Road
Railroads on Long Island
Defunct New York (state) railroads
Railway companies established in 1870
Railway companies disestablished in 1879