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Stations on the electrified portion that have the heaviest traffic include [[Mineola (LIRR station)|Mineola]], [[Hicksville (LIRR station)|Hicksville]], and [[Huntington (LIRR station)|Huntington]]. On the non-electrified portion, the heaviest traffic tends to be to the Stony Brook station where the [[State University of New York at Stony Brook]] is located.
Stations on the electrified portion that have the heaviest traffic include [[Mineola (LIRR station)|Mineola]], [[Hicksville (LIRR station)|Hicksville]], and [[Huntington (LIRR station)|Huntington]]. On the non-electrified portion, the heaviest traffic tends to be to the Stony Brook station where the [[State University of New York at Stony Brook]] is located.

===Electrification===
In 1970, [[Railway electrification system|electrification]] was extended from [[Mineola (LIRR station)|Mineola]] to [[Huntington (LIRR station)|Huntington]], the eastern limit of electrification on the branch. Since then, the LIRR has aspired to extend electrification eastward. In the 1980s, the railroad prepared to extend electrification to at least [[Northport (LIRR station)|Northport]], or [[Smithtown (LIRR station)|Smithtown]], although electrification of the [[Ronkonkoma Branch]] on the [[Main Line (Long Island Rail Road)|Main Line]] was seen as a higher priority, in part because the Main Line's central location in [[Suffolk County, New York|Suffolk County]] would benefit a larger number of people. Bruce McIver, president of the LIRR at the time, estimated in 1986 that electrification of the branch would cost $320 million, including new rolling stock. He argued that the limited amount of funds the railroad had set aside for electrification would be better spent on other improvements such as improved signaling near Penn Station. Financial constraints acted as another obstacle to electrification to Northport.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.nytimes.com/1985/11/24/nyregion/pulling-the-plug-on-electrification.html |title= Pulling the Plug on Electrification |author=John T. McQuiston |date=1985-11-24 |accessdate=2016-01-05 |publisher=New York Times }}</ref> McIver also did not want to electrify the branch in a [[piecemeal]] fashion and wanted to wait until the railroad had the funds to electrify the entire segment from Huntington to Port Jefferson all at once. In anticipation of electrification, the LIRR built full-length high-level platforms at all stations between Huntington and Port Jefferson; the 12-car platforms are unique in the LIRR's diesel territory, as stations platforms along the [[Montauk]], [[Ronkonkoma Branch|Greenport]] and [[Oyster Bay Branch|Oyster Bay]] diesel branches are much shorter. Instead of electrification, the LIRR ultimately pursued [[electro-diesel locomotives|dual-mode locomotives]] that could switch between diesel power and electric power to serve Penn Station (where diesel emissions are banned). Senator Norman Levy said that "The people who ride the line would have just about all the positive aspects of electrification with this proposal."<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.nytimes.com/1986/02/23/nyregion/lirr-electrification-new-delays-new-plans.html |title= L.I.R.R. Electrification: New Plans, New Delays |author=John T. McQuiston |date=1986-02-23 |accessdate=2016-01-05 |publisher=New York Times }}</ref>

The LIRR's [[EMD DE30AC and DM30AC|dual mode locomotives]] debuted in the late 1990s, providing two round trips during weekday rush hours between Penn Station and Port Jefferson. <ref>{{cite web|url=ttp://www.nytimes.com/1997/05/31/nyregion/the-4-49-to-port-jefferson-a-sporadic-promise-of-modernity.html |Title= The 4:49 to Port Jefferson: A Spoardic Promise of Modernity |author=Bruce Lambert |date=1997-05-31 |accessdate=2016-01-05 |publisher=New York Times}}</ref> In 2015, the [[Port Jefferson, New York|Village of Port Jefferson]] passed its support for electrification, renewing calls for action. The LIRR has not yet acted, although it has listed electrification eastward as a long-term goal.<ref>{{cite web|url=web.mta.info/mta/capital/pdf/TYN2015-2034.pdf#page=70|title=MTA 2015-2034 20-Year Capital Needs Assessment, page 70 |accessdate=January 5, 2016}}</ref>


===New Electric Yard===
===New Electric Yard===

Revision as of 04:15, 6 January 2016

Port Jefferson Branch
DE30AC #400 enters Stony Brook station westbound from Port Jefferson in 2008.
Overview
StatusOperational
OwnerLong Island Rail Road
LocaleNassau and Suffolk County, New York, USA
Termini
  • Floral Park
  • Port Jefferson
Stations10
Service
TypeCommuter rail
SystemLong Island Rail Road
Services
Operator(s)Metropolitan Transportation Authority
History
Opened1854-1873
Technical
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm)
Route map

9.3 mi
15 km
Jamaica
"E" train​​"J" train"Z" train
Zone 3
Zone 4
Hempstead intermediate stops
14.9 mi
24 km
Floral Park
16.2 mi
26.1 km
New Hyde Park
17.3 mi
27.8 km
Merillon Avenue
18.6 mi
29.9 km
Mineola
Zone 4
Zone 7
20.4 mi
32.8 km
Carle Place
21.4 mi
34.4 km
Westbury
24.8 mi
39.9 km
Hicksville
Landia (closed)
29.1 mi
46.8 km
Syosset
Zone 7
Zone 9
31.9 mi
51.3 km
Cold Spring Harbor
34.7 mi
55.8 km
Huntington
37.4 mi
60.2 km
Greenlawn
39.6 mi
63.7 km
Northport
Zone 9
Zone 10
43.4 mi
69.8 km
Kings Park
47.1 mi
75.8 km
Smithtown
49.9 mi
80.3 km
St. James
Flowerfield (closed)
53.1 mi
85.5 km
Stony Brook
Setauket (closed)
57.5 mi
92.5 km
Port Jefferson
57.5 mi
92.5 km
Wading River
Extension
57.5 mi
92.5 km
Wading River
Extension
Distances shown from Long Island City

The Port Jefferson Branch is a rail line and service owned and operated by the Long Island Rail Road in the U.S. state of New York. The branch splits from the Main Line just east of Hicksville and runs northeast and east to Port Jefferson. Several stations on the Main Line west of Hicksville are served primarily by trains bound to/from the Port Jefferson branch, so LIRR maps and schedules for the public include that part of the Main Line in the "Port Jefferson Branch" service.

The Port Jefferson Branch is one of the busiest branches of the LIRR, with frequent electric service to Huntington where electrification ends, and diesel service east of Huntington to Port Jefferson. The MTA also refers to the line as the "Port Jefferson/Huntington Branch", "Huntington Branch" or the "Hicksville/Huntington Branch".

Service and Infrastructure

Service

Port Jefferson Branch service (as distinct from the piece of railroad called the Port Jefferson Branch) extends east from Floral Park, where the Hempstead Branch separates from the Main Line. The line west of Huntington is electrified and double tracked. Electrification extends to a point east of Huntington before Greenlawn station on a layup track for electric trains. East of there the line is single track with passing sidings at Greenlawn, east of East Northport, Kings Park, Smithtown and Stony Brook allowing trains traveling in opposite directions to pass each other.

Most Port Jefferson electric trains operate the full route from Penn Station to Huntington. Supplemental service is provided on Ronkonkoma Branch trains to Mineola and Hicksville. Additional service to Mineola is provided by Oyster Bay Branch trains, and some Patchogue-bound Montauk Branch trains also stop at Mineola and Hicksville on weekdays. Also, one Montauk-bound train makes a stop at Hicksville overnight on weeknights. During off-peak hours, including weekends, a diesel shuttle runs between either Hicksville or Huntington and Port Jefferson. During rush hours, there is extra service, including through service to Atlantic Terminal, service to Penn Station that bypasses Jamaica, and direct service to Hunterspoint Avenue, Long Island City, or Penn Station from stations east of Huntington.

Stations on the electrified portion that have the heaviest traffic include Mineola, Hicksville, and Huntington. On the non-electrified portion, the heaviest traffic tends to be to the Stony Brook station where the State University of New York at Stony Brook is located.

Electrification

In 1970, electrification was extended from Mineola to Huntington, the eastern limit of electrification on the branch. Since then, the LIRR has aspired to extend electrification eastward. In the 1980s, the railroad prepared to extend electrification to at least Northport, or Smithtown, although electrification of the Ronkonkoma Branch on the Main Line was seen as a higher priority, in part because the Main Line's central location in Suffolk County would benefit a larger number of people. Bruce McIver, president of the LIRR at the time, estimated in 1986 that electrification of the branch would cost $320 million, including new rolling stock. He argued that the limited amount of funds the railroad had set aside for electrification would be better spent on other improvements such as improved signaling near Penn Station. Financial constraints acted as another obstacle to electrification to Northport.[2] McIver also did not want to electrify the branch in a piecemeal fashion and wanted to wait until the railroad had the funds to electrify the entire segment from Huntington to Port Jefferson all at once. In anticipation of electrification, the LIRR built full-length high-level platforms at all stations between Huntington and Port Jefferson; the 12-car platforms are unique in the LIRR's diesel territory, as stations platforms along the Montauk, Greenport and Oyster Bay diesel branches are much shorter. Instead of electrification, the LIRR ultimately pursued dual-mode locomotives that could switch between diesel power and electric power to serve Penn Station (where diesel emissions are banned). Senator Norman Levy said that "The people who ride the line would have just about all the positive aspects of electrification with this proposal."[3]

The LIRR's dual mode locomotives debuted in the late 1990s, providing two round trips during weekday rush hours between Penn Station and Port Jefferson. [4] In 2015, the Village of Port Jefferson passed its support for electrification, renewing calls for action. The LIRR has not yet acted, although it has listed electrification eastward as a long-term goal.[5]

New Electric Yard

The branch has no yard to store electric trains; east of Huntington, a single layup track with room for three trainsets is used for storage. Because of this lack of space, electric trains must deadhead from as far away as the West Side Yard in Manhattan for rush-hour service. Construction of a new electric yard would rectify this issue and allow the LIRR to increase branch service when East Side Access is completed and service to Grand Central Terminal begins. In the early 2000s, the MTA performed environmental studies evaluating over a dozen sites between Huntington and Smithtown for usage as a yard.[6] Electrification of the line would have to be extended if a site beyond Huntington was chosen; a site near Huntington would eliminate this need. Communities near the sites opposed the MTA's efforts to advance work on a new yard, arguing that the MTA was too secretive and that the increased train service and train movements would hurt their communities and decrease their quality of life. One commenter asserted that a yard would turn the communities along the line into the MTA's "storage closet" for East Side Access. Some opponents of the plan also argued that the MTA should extend electrification to Port Jefferson to utilize the existing diesel rail yard there, however, a full electrification of the line would add an extra layer of expenses to the project.[7][8] The MTA neglected to provide any funding for the project in its 2005-2009 Capital Program, deferring it until 2015, when the agency budgeted $8 million in its 2015-2019 Capital Program to conduct new environmental studies, create new designs and acquire land for a new electric yard. Construction would be funded in a future Capital Program.[9][10]

Third track between Queens Village and Hicksville

To accommodate an expected increase in Long Island Rail Road ridership once the East Side Access project to Grand Central Terminal is completed and to expand local and reverse peak service, the Metropolitan Transportation Authority has proposed to build a third Main Line track from Queens Village to Hicksville in the future.[11][12] Components of the project include purchasing properties in the track's right of way, eliminating grade crossings (in conjunction with NYSDOT), relocating existing stations, and reconfiguring Mineola Station. The project has been stalled by fierce opposition from the villages of Floral Park, New Hyde Park, and Garden City,[13][14][15] which say the construction and the resulting increased train service will reduce the quality of life in their neighborhoods. These villages support station improvements and the elimination of grade crossings in lieu of third track expansion; however, the MTA has long insisted that a third track is a necessary component of LIRR's East Side Access expansion.[16] In 2015, LIRR president Patrick Nowakowski declared that the LIRR would not proceed with the project without the support of the local communities.[17]

Small segments of the third track have been built already or will be built, however. One segment is between Merillon Avenue and Mineola, built in the vicinity of Herricks Road during the grade crossing elimination project that took place in 1998.[18] Another segment will be built as part of the upcoming station renovation at Hicksville. This construction will connect Track 1 at Hicksville station to the North Siding track located about 3,000 feet west of the station. This short segment, when completed, will essentially serve as the eastern end of the future third track; it will also allow for a slight increase in peak-hour service.[19][20] The MTA has also left provisions for a third track in construction of other infrastructure along the line, such as the Mineola Intermodal Center located adjacent to Mineola station, the railroad bridge over Roslyn Road in Mineola, and the replacement Ellison Avenue Bridge over the Main Line in Westbury.[21][22][23][24]

History

The line from Hicksville to Syosset was chartered in 1853 as the Hicksville and Syosset Railroad and opened in 1854. The LIRR later planned to extend to Cold Spring Harbor, but Oliver Charlick, the LIRR's president, disagreed over the station's location, so Charlick abandoned the grade and relocated the extension south of Cold Spring, refusing to add a station stop near Cold Spring for years. Another argument at Huntington led to the line bypassing the town two miles (3 km) to the south, though a station was built. The line was extended from Syosset past Huntington to Northport in 1868,[25] and in 1873 the 1870-chartered Smithtown and Port Jefferson Railroad opened from a mile south of Northport to Port Jefferson,[26] turning the old line into Northport into the Northport Branch, the result of another argument between Charlick and Northport.[27]

The Port Jefferson Branch formerly extended to Wading River in 1895, and was once slated to continue eastward and rejoin the Main Line at either Riverhead or Calverton. From 1905 to 1928, Wading River was also the site of an LIRR Demonstration farm. The other one was east of Medford station on the Main Line. The line east of Port Jefferson was abandoned in 1938. The right-of-way is now owned by the Long Island Power Authority and used for power lines but there are plans to create a rail trail for bicycling, running, and walking.[28] The Port Jefferson Branch was electrified to Huntington Station in 1970. The former Northport Branch was abandoned in 1985, and the Kings Park Psychiatric Center spur (see below) was abandoned in 1988.

Ever since the branch was electrified to Huntington, the LIRR has always planned on electrifying the rest of the line all the way to Port Jefferson. In the mid-1980s all the stations east of Huntington had hi-level platforms installed for anticipation of the electrification. However, it has not happened, but since 2008 the project has gotten the go ahead. However, it will be delayed due to the LIRR budget, and it is likely that the project will not begin anytime soon. The MTA has said that electrifying the tracks from Huntington to Port Jefferson would cost at least $414 million.[29] Still, the town of Port Jefferson supports electrifying the 23 miles of the line east of the Huntington station.[30]

Kings Park Psychiatric Center Spur

Kings Park Psychiatric run-off also known as KPPC is an abandoned spur off the Port Jefferson Branch for the Kings Park Psychiatric Center. This spur started just west of Kings Park station, ran north of the station house, crossed Indian Head Road(Suffolk CR 14) and then curved north to cross New York State Route 25A, where it ran along the western edge of the hospital property, and ended at the Hospital's coal power plant.

This spur was first used in the 1890s for coal and passenger use on Sundays. The route was the second largest spur in the Long Island Rail Road system when it was first completed. The route came to an end during the late 1980s.[31] Nowadays, this abandoned route is a Right-of-way for biking and is open to the public today. Also, today, only small fragments of rail remain as it most of it was removed during the demise of the complex.[32]

On a small note, electrification reached from Mineola to Hicksville & Huntington in 1970. For 15 years from Amott Interlocking east of Syosset Station to west of Huntington it was single-tracked. In 1985, they constructed a second electrified track in that area to avoid the single track bottle neck, this included Cold Spring Harbor adding a second platform.

Grade crossing eliminations

The Port Jefferson Branch has also been known to have the most hazardous grade crossings in the country. In 1982, a van was struck by a diesel train at the Herricks Road crossing in between Mineola and Merillon Avenue. The crossing for many years was dubbed by the NTSB as "The most dangerous crossing in the U.S." In 1998, after a complicated project, the crossing was finally eliminated, with the tracks now going over the road on a bridge. Other crossings eliminated along the branch include: Mineola Boulevard in Mineola (1930), crossings within Hicksville when the station was elevated in the early 1960s, and Charlotte Avenue in Hicksville (1973). Ten years later Roslyn Road also in Mineola was eliminated in the same fashion.

Other hazardous crossings along the branch west of Huntington are Robbins Lane & Jackson Avenue in Syosset, School Street & Urban Avenue in Westbury, Willis Avenue & Main Street in Mineola, and New Hyde Park Road, 12th Street, and Covert Avenue in New Hyde Park. East of Huntington, Main Street in Port Jefferson is considered quite hazardous. There are plans, after a third track is added, for the branch will be fully elevated and grade separated from Hicksville Westward just like the Babylon Branch.

Stations

Zone Station Miles (km)
from NYP[33]
Date
opened
Date
closed
Connections / notes
1 For continuing service west of Jamaica, see City Terminal Zone
3 Jamaica Disabled access 10.8 (17.4) 1836 LIRR; Atlantic, Belmont Park, Far Rockaway, Hempstead, Long Beach,
Montauk, Oyster Bay, Port Jefferson, Ronkonkoma, and West Hempstead Branches
NYC Subway: "E" train​​"J" train"Z" train (at Sutphin Boulevard – Archer Avenue – JFK Airport)
Bus transport NYCT Bus: Q20A, Q20B, Q24, Q30, Q31, Q43, Q44, Q54, Q56
Bus transport MTA Bus: Q6, Q8, Q9, Q25, Q34, Q40, Q41, Q60, Q65
Bus transport NICE Bus: N4
AirTrain JFK: Jamaica Station Route
Queens / Nassau county line
4
Hempstead Branch diverges
Floral Park 16.7 (26.9) 1878 LIRR: Hempstead Branch. Limited service for Main Line trains.
Originally Plainfield, then Stewart Junction, then Hinsdale, then East Hinsdale
New Hyde Park Disabled access 18.0 (29.0) c. 1837 Bus transport NICE Bus: N24, N25
Originally Hyde Park
Merillon Avenue Disabled access 19.1 (30.7) 1837 Originally Clowesville, then Garden City
Mineola Disabled access 20.3 (32.3) 1837[34] LIRR: Ronkonkoma, Montauk, and Oyster Bay Branches
Bus transport NICE Bus: N22, N22X, N23, N24, N40, N41
Originally Hempstead, then Branch or Hempstead Branch
Oyster Bay Branch diverges
7 Carle Place Disabled access 22.2 (35.7) 1842[35] Bus transport NICE Bus: N22
Originally Carll Place
Westbury Disabled access 23.2 (37.3) 1837[34] Bus transport NICE Bus: N22, N35
New Cassel 1875 1876
Hicksville Disabled access 26.6 (42.8) 1837[34] LIRR: Ronkonkoma Branch
Bus transport NICE Bus: N20, N22, N48, N49, N50, N73, N74, N78, N79, N80, N81, N87
Main Line (Ronkonkoma Branch) diverges
Landia 1952 1973
Syosset Disabled access 30.9 (49.7) 1854
Woodbury 1875 c. 1901 Replaced by Cold Spring Harbor in the early-20th Century
Nassau / Suffolk county line
9 Cold Spring Harbor Disabled access 33.7 (54.2) c. 1901
Huntington Disabled access 36.5 (58.7) 1868 Bus transport Suffolk County Transit: S1
Bus transport Huntington Area Rapid Transit: H10, H20 (.5 miles south of station)
Terminus of electrification
Greenlawn Disabled access 39.2 (63.1) c. 1868 Bus transport Huntington Area Rapid Transit: H30
Originally Centreport
Former Northport Branch diverges
Northport Disabled access 41.4 (66.6) 1873 Bus transport Suffolk County Transit: S41
Bus transport Huntington Area Rapid Transit: H40
Originally New Northport, then Northport East
10
Former Kings Park Hospital Branch diverges
Kings Park Disabled access 45.2 (72.7) 1872 Bus transport Suffolk County Transit: S56
Originally St. Johnsland
Smithtown Disabled access 48.9 (78.9) 1872 Bus transport Suffolk County Transit: S45, S56, S58
St. James Disabled access 51.7 (83.2) 1873
Flowerfield 1910 1958
Stony Brook Disabled access 54.9 (88.4) 1873 Bus transport Suffolk County Transit: 3D, S60, S69, S71, S76
Bus transport SBU Transit: Outer Loop, Railroad Routes 1 & 2
Setauket 1873 c. 1980
Port Jefferson Disabled access 59.3 (95.4) 1873 Bus transport Suffolk County Transit: 5A, S60, S61, S62, S69, S76
Bridgeport & Port Jefferson Ferry to Bridgeport, CT
The following stations were on the former Wading River Branch which was abandoned on October 3, 1938
Miller Place 60.5 (97.4) 1898 1938
Rocky Point 64.4 (103.6) 1898 1938 Freight house still exists as a lumber yard
Shoreham 65.7 (105.6) 1900 1938
Wading River 68.7 (110.6) 1895 1938

References

  1. ^ Long Island Rail Road (May 14, 2012). "TIMETABLE No. 4" (PDF). p. V. Retrieved August 4, 2022.
  2. ^ John T. McQuiston (1985-11-24). "Pulling the Plug on Electrification". New York Times. Retrieved 2016-01-05.
  3. ^ John T. McQuiston (1986-02-23). "L.I.R.R. Electrification: New Plans, New Delays". New York Times. Retrieved 2016-01-05.
  4. ^ Bruce Lambert (1997-05-31). New York Times [ttp://www.nytimes.com/1997/05/31/nyregion/the-4-49-to-port-jefferson-a-sporadic-promise-of-modernity.html ttp://www.nytimes.com/1997/05/31/nyregion/the-4-49-to-port-jefferson-a-sporadic-promise-of-modernity.html]. Retrieved 2016-01-05. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help); Unknown parameter |Title= ignored (|title= suggested) (help)
  5. ^ [web.mta.info/mta/capital/pdf/TYN2015-2034.pdf#page=70 "MTA 2015-2034 20-Year Capital Needs Assessment, page 70"] (PDF). Retrieved January 5, 2016. {{cite web}}: Check |url= value (help)
  6. ^ https://web.archive.org/web/20051219110814/http://www.mta.info/mta/planning/portj/scope.pdf
  7. ^ John Rather (2000-08-27). "L.I.R.R. Expansion: The Other Shoe Drops". New York Times. Retrieved 2016-01-05.
  8. ^ John Rather (2003-11-30). "Proposed L.I.R.R. Yard Draws Fire". New York Times. Retrieved 2016-01-05.
  9. ^ https://web.archive.org/web/20080411174812/http://www.mta.info/mta/planning/portj/
  10. ^ "MTA 2015-2019 Capital Program, pages 24, 97 and 208" (PDF). Retrieved January 5, 2016.
  11. ^ "MTA - Planning Studies". mta.info.
  12. ^ Main Line Corridor Improvements Project brochure
  13. ^ Stephanie Mariel Petrellese (2005-11-11). "Floral Park Mayor To Address LIRR Expansion". The Garden City News. Retrieved 2006-12-23.
  14. ^ Carisa Keane (2005-06-24). "Residents: MTA/LIRR Needs to Get on Right Track". New Hyde Park Illustrated News. Retrieved 2006-12-23.
  15. ^ Stephanie Mariel Petrellese (2006-12-15). "Village Meets With LIRR On "Third Track" Project". The Garden City News. Retrieved 2006-12-23.
  16. ^ CAROLYN NARDIELLO (2008-09-16). "Third-Track Plan Isn't Dead, L.I.R.R. Insists". The New York Times. Retrieved 2012-07-31.
  17. ^ ALFONSO A. CASTILLO (2015-03-03). "3rd track plan conditional on community support, LIRR chief says". Newsday. Retrieved 2015-10-20.
  18. ^ Robert Gearty (1998-04-22). "END'S NEAR FOR A KILLER LIRR X'ING". New York Daily News. Retrieved 2015-11-02.
  19. ^ "Governor Cuomo Announces Final Design for Revitalized Hicksville Station". Metropolitan Transportation Authority. 2015-02-24. Retrieved 2015-11-02.
  20. ^ "LIRR finalizes Hicksville Station design; includes East Side Access work". Newsday. 2015-02-24.
  21. ^ "$24.3 MILLION LIRR ROAD CROSSING ELIMINATION PROJECT IN MINEOLA COMPLETED". New York State Department of Transportation. 2008-12-31. Retrieved 2015-11-04.
  22. ^ "National Steel Bridge Alliance 2009 Bridge Prize Competition" (PDF). Retrieved 2015-11-04.
  23. ^ "Application for Transportation Investment Generating Economic Recovery (TIGER) Funds Ellison Avenue Bridge Reconstruction, page 3" (PDF). Metropolitan Transportation Authority. Retrieved 2015-11-02.
  24. ^ "40,000 Customers Facing Delays This Weekend, Oct. 24-25, as LIRR Installs a New Bridge in Westbury". Metropolitan Transportation Authority. 2015-10-22. Retrieved 2015-11-02.
  25. ^ Template:PDFlink, June 2004 Edition
  26. ^ Template:PDFlink, February 2005 Edition
  27. ^ Ziel, Ron; Foster, George H. (1987). Steel Rails to the Sunrise. Mattituck: Amereon House. pp. 13–14. ISBN 0-8488-0368-X.
  28. ^ Rather, John (2009-04-10). "Agreement Moves Rails-to-Trails Project Forward". New York Times. Retrieved 2009-10-15.
  29. ^ Rich Murdocco (9 March 2015). "Now Is Not the Time to Electrify More LIRR Tracks". Long Island Press. Retrieved 3 May 2015.
  30. ^ Alfonso Castillo (15 February 2015). "Port Jefferson backs electrification of LIRR line". Newsday. Retrieved 3 May 2015.
  31. ^ Mileposts 43-44 Kings Park (Bob Emery Map; September 1957; TrainsAreFun.com)
  32. ^ Kings Park State Hospital Spur (Train Web)
  33. ^ Station pages linked from LIRR Stations
  34. ^ a b c Brooklyn Advocate, Long Island Rail Road, February 1837
  35. ^ Template:Cite BDE