(Redirected from Harlem Line (Metro-North))Metro-North's 'Harlem Line', originally the
New York Central Railroad's
New York & Harlem Railroad, is an 82-mile (132 km)
commuter rail line running north from
New York City into eastern
Dutchess County. The lower 53 miles (86 km) from Grand Central to
Southeast, in
Putnam County, are
electrified with a
third rail and has two tracks; north of that point, trains use
electro-diesel locomotives on a single track. The diesel trains run as a shuttle on the northern end of the line except during rush hours, when they run as expresses to or from Grand Central. While the line has traditionally served to bring commuters from
Westchester County to jobs in the city, in recent years it has begun to see more "reverse commuting", as Bronx residents use it to reach jobs in
Southern Westchester where many stations are within walking distance of city centers. The northern reaches of the line are also close enough to
Western Massachusetts to enable residents of part of that region to commute to jobs in the city as well, albeit at a considerable expense in time and money.
With 41 stations, the Harlem Line has the most of any Metro-North main line. Its northern
terminal,
Wassaic, is the northernmost station in the system. It is the only Metro-North line used exclusively by that carrier (no use by
Amtrak, though
CSX services freight customers as far north as Mount Vernon) and the only one that uses the entirety of existing track. Metro-North has assigned it the
color code blue, used as trim on station signs and
spot color on printed
timetables. It is the only Metro-North line with this color.
History
Prior to becoming part of the Metro-North system, the line continued all the way north to
Chatham, New York on the
Boston and Albany Railroad, about 52 miles past the current terminal at
Wassaic. Passenger service from
Dover Plains to Chatham was abandoned in
1972, and the tracks were removed north of
Millerton shortly thereafter. A decade later, freight service between
Dover Plains and Millerton was abandoned, with tracks removed from Wassaic to Millerton. On
July 9,
2000, Metro-North restored service between Dover Plains and Wassaic, a move the railroad billed as its first service expansion since it was created in 1983.
The
Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) leased the line south of Dover Plains from
Penn Central on
June 1,
1972. Penn Central operated the last southbound passenger train between
Chatham and
Grand Central Terminal on
March 20,
1972, ending service in the middle of the day. With no scheduled return trip to Chatham, passengers who had gone south in the morning were left stranded, with service going only as far north as Dover Plains (52 miles shy of Chatham).
[1]
The segment of the line that ran from Wassaic to
Craryville, New York is now under control of the
Harlem Valley Rail Trail Associationwhich currently has trails operating from Wassaic to the former Millerton station and between Boston Corners and Hillsdale.
Future
With the entire existing track in use since service to Wassaic was restored in 2000, there is little talk of expansion or branching. For now, Metro-North and the MTA have focused on improving existing facilities on the line, particularly stations such as Brewster where increasing usage has caused growing pains.
Station stops
| State | Town/City | Milepost | Station | Connections |
|---|
| New York | Manhattan | 0.0 | Grand Central Terminal | NYC Transit 4, 5, 6, 7, Shuttle, Buses |
| 4.2 | Harlem-125th Street | NYC Transit 4, 5, 6, Buses |
| Bronx/Manhattan border |
|---|
| Hudson Line splits | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Bronx | 6.1 | Melrose | NYC Transit Buses |
| 7.9 | Tremont | NYC Transit Buses |
| 8.9 | Fordham | NYC Transit B, D, Buses, Bee-Line Buses |
| 9.5 | Botanical Garden | NYC Transit Buses |
| 10.5 | Williams Bridge | NYC Transit 2, 5, Buses |
| 11.8 | Woodlawn | NYC Transit 2, 5, Buses |
| New Haven Line splits |
|---|
| 12.6 | Wakefield | ||
| Bronx/Westchester County border | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Mount Vernon | 13.1 | Mount Vernon West | Bee-Line Buses |
| 14.3 | Fleetwood | Bee-Line Buses |
| Bronxville | 15.3 | Bronxville | Bee-Line Buses |
| Tuckahoe | 16.0 | Tuckahoe | Bee-Line Buses |
| 16.7 | Crestwood |
| Scarsdale | 19.0 | Scarsdale | Bee-Line Buses |
| Hartsdale | 20.6 | Hartsdale | Bee-Line Buses |
| White Plains | 22.3 | White Plains | I-BUS (Stamford), Tappan Zee Express, Bee-Line Buses |
| 23.8 | North White Plains | Bee-Line Buses |
| Valhalla | 25.5 | Valhalla | Bee-Line Buses |
| Hawthorne | 27.2 | Mount Pleasant |
| 28.2 | Hawthorne | Bee-Line Buses |
| Pleasantville | 30.5 | Pleasantville | Bee-Line Buses |
| Chappaqua | 32.4 | Chappaqua | Bee-Line Buses |
| Mount Kisco | 36.5 | Mount Kisco | Bee-Line Buses |
| Bedford Hills | 39.2 | Bedford Hills | Bee-Line Buses |
| Katonah | 41.2 | Katonah | HART Ridgefield-Katonah Shuttle, Bee-Line Buses |
| Goldens Bridge | 43.7 | Goldens Bridge |
| North Salem | 46.0 | Purdy's |
| 47.7 | Croton Falls | Coach USA Croton Falls Shuttle |
| Westchester County/Putnam County border |
|---|
| Brewster | 51.9 | Brewster | HART Danbury-Brewster Shuttle, PART |
| 53.2 | Southeast | PART |
| Electrified rail ends northbound, begins southbound |
|---|
| Patterson | 60.2 | Patterson | PART |
| Putnam County/Dutchess County border |
|---|
| Pawling | 63.7 | Pawling | Dutchess LOOP |
| | 65.9 | Appalachian Trail |
| Wingdale | 69.0 | Harlem Valley-Wingdale | Dutchess LOOP |
| Dover Plains | 76.2 | Dover Plains | Dutchess LOOP |
| Amenia | 80.0 | Tenmile River | Dutchess LOOP |
| 82.0 | Wassaic | Dutchess LOOP |
''Past Wassaic, the following stations once existed:''
★
Amenia
★
Sharon
★
Coleman's
★
Millerton
★
Mount Riga
★
Boston Corners
★
Copake Falls
★
Hillsdale
★
Craryville
★
Martindale
★
Philmont
★
Ghent
★
Chatham
Line description
The Harlem Line hews closely to roads along
river-based transportation corridors dating back to even pre-rail times. It follows three major
freeways closely from the Bronx northwards through Westchester: the
Bronx River Parkway (and a short portion that becomes the
Taconic State Parkway), the
Saw Mill River Parkway and
Interstate 684. In the last section it also begins to run close to
NY 22, the long north-south two-lane state highway that parallels the eastern border of the state.
In Westchester, it serves some of that county's most affluent communities as it slowly trends eastward.
Manhattan/Bronx
The Harlem Line begins at
Grand Central Terminal. The train tracks rise to ground level north of 97th Street in
Manhattan. After stopping at
Harlem-125th Street, the Harlem Line crosses the Harlem River at 135th Street in
Manhattan, entering the
Bronx.
In the
Bronx, the Harlem Line cuts through the neighborhoods of the southwest Bronx, with two stations:
Melrose, at 162nd Street, and
Tremont, at 177th Street. It then runs under the
Cross Bronx Expressway (
I-95).
Fordham station is next, at 190th Street, also known as Fordham Road. The Harlem Line then parallels the western edge of
Fordham University until the
Botanical Garden station at 200th Street, also known as Bedford Park Boulevard.
The Harlem Line then cuts northeast to join the Bronx River Parkway, which lies to the east of the tracks. The
Williams Bridge station is next, at 210th Street, also known as Gun Hill Road. After the Williams Bridge station,
Woodlawn Cemetery begins to the west of the tracks, with Webster Avenue in between the cemetery and tracks. The
Woodlawn station is at 233rd Street.
The Harlem Line then goes under a bridge for the parkway, and it remains to the west of the tracks until
Scarsdale station. The
Wakefield station at 241st Street concludes the
Bronx portion of the Harlem Line.
Westchester County
The
Westchester portion of the Harlem Line begins at
Bronx River Road in southeastern
Yonkers. After the
Mount Vernon West station, the Harlem Line runs along the on-ramp to the
Cross County Parkway eastbound, right before Fleetwood station. After the
Bronxville station, the Harlem Line parallels the
Bronx River Parkway all the way up to
White Plains.
From White Plains, the railroad winds its way through the city and passing through the yards at
North White Plains which until
1984 was the northern boundary of third-rail electrification. The stretch north of North White Plains is unique because it is the only electrified stretch of Metro-North's network that has
grade crossings, a byproduct of its existence pre-electrification.
Katonah and Brewster are located right next to grade crossings.
After North White Plains, there is one more stop,
Valhalla along the Taconic State Parkway, the successor to the Bronx River, and then the double-track railroad curves to follow the
Saw Mill River Valley and the eponymous parkway. Rail and road briefly separate at
Mount Kisco, but then remain close by at the last stop along the Saw Mill,
Bedford Hills (although the parkway cannot be seen from the station).
Past
Katonah, the railroad runs between the
Croton River and I-684.
Goldens Bridge and
Purdy's are both located very close to the interstate, although only the former can be seen from it. North of the latter, the tracks choose the river over the interstate to take them to
Croton Falls, and pick up Route 22 for the first time.
Putnam County
After Croton Falls station, the Harlem Line runs along
East Branch Reservoir and crosses into Putnam County. The landscape is increasingly rural. Above
Southeast station (formerly Brewster North), the railroad passes under
Interstate 84 and through the yards at Putnam Junction. This is the northern boundary of third-rail electrification. Diesel territory and single track begin here. The tracks finally follow their own course, away from any road or river, past the long-abandoned Towner's station up to
Patterson and into Dutchess County.
Dutchess County
Shortly before reaching
Pawling, the line enters the Harlem Valley from which it takes its name and begins to parallel Route 22, although not as closely as it did the roads further south (indeed, they even cross over a few times). A few miles north of Pawling the
Appalachian Trail crossing has earned
its own flag stop to allow
thru-hikers to take a break in the city and day hikers to visit the nearby
Pawling Nature Preserve.
The next two stops,
Harlem Valley-Wingdale and
Dover Plains, are roughly eight miles (13 km) apart, the longest distance between any two stops on the Harlem Line. Until 2000, Dover Plains was the last stop on the line, but then tracks remaining from the NYCRR era that had not yet been torn up were renovated and the line was extended to
Tenmile River and their new northern terminus,
Wassaic. A small
yard where diesel trains await their routes just past the station marks the end of the line.
Rolling stock
On the electrified portions of the line, M3s and M7s are usually used. The thirty remaining M1s (to be used for Yankee Stadium shuttle service in the future) are also occasionally used to serve passengers. And also as with the Hudson Line, diesels are driven by dual-mode
Genesis locomotives. However, in addition to Genesises in its own colors, Metro-North has leased some
Amtrak Genesis for use on the Harlem Line due to the age of some of the
FL9s and F10s in its own fleet. The FL9s and F10s are generally used on the upper Harlem Line for shuttle service between Southeast (where the third rail ends) and Wassaic, 29 miles north in Dutchess County.
External links
★
Map of the Putnam and Harlem Divisions of the New York Central Railroad
★
New York Central: Harlem Line