The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Tracing the ‘secret’ history of America’s subways

- Jim Cameron COMMENTARY

A secret project, defying the government, helped build America’s first subway.

It only ran for three years but carried hundreds of thousands of passengers, even though it only spanned 312 feet. And it was powered by air.

In the 1860s, New York City was in a transporta­tion crisis. The streets were jammed with horsepulle­d trolleys and wagons, as many as 1,000 an hour passing a single point on lower Broadway. Pedestrian­s dodged the vehicles and mounds of horse manure.

By 1863, London solved a similar road chaos by opening the world’s first subway, The Undergroun­d.

But New York’s Tammany Hall wasn’t interested as Boss Tweed was making massive amounts of money from investment­s and kickbacks from the city’s street railroads.

But Tweed was interested in another London innovation: Mail transporte­d undergroun­d in pneumatic tubes. Seizing the moment, American inventor and Scientific American editor Alfred Beach obtained a city permit to construct a postal tube system on lower Broadway. Using $350,000 of his own money ($6.4 million in 2018 dollars), Beach’s plan was far grander and his “tube” would be far larger.

Working secretly at night in the sub-basement of Devlin’s Clothing Store near City Hall, Beach started digging his tunnel. In 58 days, it was complete, running one city block. All he needed was a “car” and a means of propulsion.

Given that his tube was only eight feet in diameter, Beach opted for a small, round passenger car that could carry 22 people.

The interior was posh and upholstere­d. And to lure riders fearful of subterrane­an lairs, he built a $70,000 station complete with chandelier­s, plush chairs, a goldfish pond and a piano player.

To power the train, he acquired a 50-ton ventilatio­n fan used in mining, nicknamed the Western Tornado. Sucking air from the streets above, the huge fan would blow the car down the track at 6 mph.

When the car reached the end of the tunnel, the fan was reversed, sucking it back into the station.

On March 1, 1870, the subway opened to the public. For 25 cents a ride ($4.50 in today’s money), thousands came to see transporta­tion’s future. Beach donated all of the fare revenue to charity.

Tweed was enraged, especially when Beach predicted he could transport up to 20,000 passengers a day five miles north to Central Park at speeds up to “a mile a minute.” The Boss had other plans.

He wanted to solve the street congestion by building up, not under. Of course, his plan for elevated railroads would make him a fortune. Coupled with the financial collapse in the Panic of 1873, Beach’s Pneumatic Transit system was doomed. The fans were shut off and the project was shuttered.

Beach’s tunnel was later used as a shooting gallery and wine vault before being sealed for good in 1874.

In 1912, workers digging the BMT Broadway Line dug into the old tunnel and found the car and old piano. Beach’s pneumatic mail system did survive serving customers until 1953.

Beach died in 1896. Eight years later, New York City’s first true subway opened, running from City Hall to Harlem.

 ?? Wikipedia Commons ?? Inventor Alfred Beach’s pneumatic transit project created a 300-foot tunnel and used a ventilatio­n fan to power a 22-passenger train one city block during the mid-1860s.
Wikipedia Commons Inventor Alfred Beach’s pneumatic transit project created a 300-foot tunnel and used a ventilatio­n fan to power a 22-passenger train one city block during the mid-1860s.
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