I have a little confession to make – as much as I crack jokes about the younger generations of Vanderbilts and their amazing ability to spend their grandfather’s money, I must admit that despite all that some of them really have left their mark on the New York area. Outside of the railroad, Cornelius Vanderbilt II, grandson of the Commodore, had positions in all sorts of organizations. He held titles of Vice-President and director, was on the board of a few different hospitals, and was also a finance manager for a church or two. But one particularly noteworthy organization, of which he served as president, was the New York Botanical Garden. Vanderbilt, along with Andrew Carnegie and J. Pierpont Morgan also contributed monetarily to the gardens, which were formed in the 1890’s.


Postcard view of Botanical Garden station

The Botanical Garden station itself is located slightly less than ten miles from Grand Central, and mere steps from the gardens for which it was named. Although commuters do use the station, it is also frequented by tourists going to check out the gardens. Metro-North probably is one of the easiest ways to get to the gardens, and if you had any question about that, there is even a video on youtube that explains how easy it is to get there. The video does highlight the lack of consistency when it comes to the name of the station. All of the platform signs refer to it as “Botanical Garden” but the ticketing machines call it “Botanical Gardens”. I suppose it is not that big of a deal, but for the purpose of this post I am using Botanical Garden, as it is visible as such in my photos.


  

 

 

  

My longtime readers will recall the crazy idea that I had back in April or May of 2010, to photograph every Harlem Line station, and get at least one panorama photograph at each. I’ve spent the months since then photographing, and then posting a new station every week. Today my goal has finally been completed. Botanical Garden is the last station to be featured in my Tuesday Tour of the Harlem Line. Next week I’ll feature a little bonus, a station we all know. After that Tuesday posts will be on hiatus – but as soon as spring weather comes I can assure you that I’ll be out taking more photos.

7 Responses

  1. Tyler Trahan says:

    Congratulations on finishing your station-visiting project! It’s been fun to follow.

  2. Susan says:

    To the students at my school (Fordham Pre, just across the street) this station is commonly known as BoTan. Glad you found it, wish you’d had time to photograph the students in their travels to and from school! It gets crazy at 8:20 am and 3:17 pm M – F. PS – we met on the train, this is my 2nd visit to your blog.

    • Emily says:

      Thanks for visiting my site. Enjoy exploring it… I’ve been to all of the Harlem Line stations now, and you should be able to find pictures of them on here. I tend to steer clear of the students though, I had once before made comments about Fordham Prep kids getting into fights on the train, and the Iona Prep kids and their antics to attempt to ride free, and there was a minor war between them on here!

  3. ella biondi says:

    Brilliant blog. Mid Hudson bridge was superb. Thank you.

  4. Daniel says:

    Hi Emily. Accidentally found your site thru a Wikipedia link on the Botanical Garden Metro North Station. This station is near my parents Hardware Store (Bedford Hardware) which is owned by someone else now, but of course the Pizza Place and Cleaners are still there.

    Sometimes I would take the train to Grand Central when I would drive into my old Neighborhood (Use to live a house or two away from the Grand Concourse near the (D) & (4) Trains on Bedford Pk Blvd.) and it was a nice feeling not being in the Bronx, because it has a feel of Westchester Co. sometimes.

    But I never knew on the south platform there was a station house just like the style of the north platform. Here is some info I don’t know if you knew about.

    Before that bridge was built on the southern end of the platforms, there use to be a underground tunnel that would go from the apartment building side to the Botanical Garden and the other way around. Sadly they filled up both entrances with concreate because of the consistant drug users that would shoot up and the last time I made that trek a long time ago, you saw the needles on the ground.

    On the Bedford Park Blvd street/bridge you can see broken steps, so people use to walk towards the station back then. It’s still a fantastic station and so happy to see it still standing. Thanks for the pictures, they are awesome.

  5. Daniel says:

    Just to update, I was back in my old neighborhood getting a hair cut. Got a message on my phone that I was needed to be apart of a taping. Parked at the brand new Parking garage where Atlas Welding and a former Exxon gas station use to be.

    Love my old Metro North Station and I noticed on both sides of the platforms that only one station sign out of six or seven has “BOTANICAL GARDENS”, while the rest has “GARDEN” I guess Metro North decided not to touch the rest.

    But once again the revamping of the area with the new garage looks nice and cool. Love my old station.

  6. Bill Baldwin says:

    “Botanical Garden” — Congratulations, you saved the very best for last! I watched trains there from the summer of ’59, until the 3rd Avenue El came down in 1973-74. You should have seen it back then, with the awesome variety of NYC and NH motive power and cars, that ran on the Harlem Division through the Bronx. The period 1950 to 1960 was the best of it. My only regret is I didn’t catch it a decade earlier, when Fordham Freight Yard and the Bedford Park 3rd Ave El spur line were still in full operation, with the long 1902 wooden foot-bridge extending over the Harlem tracks, from the domed El station to Webster Avenue (between 197th and 198th Streets). That El spur and the pedestrian bridge came down in 1952. Before then, it was full-blown action, from every angle. As it still does, Botanical Garden’s station offers a mile-long straight-track view point ending in two sharp curves at Rose Hill, just north of Fordham Station, and 204th Street. The drama of great trains appearing around those curves and racing past the Botanical Garden station are memories that never fade. I saw my last trains there in August, 1980, before I moved to California. I sat for two hours on the new high level platform and watched some of the most boring commuter cars and repainted FL-9s (in their horrid MTA paint scheme) that I can remember. The loss made me sick. Sorry you missed the great days, when it was a mind-blowing train-watching experience with the low-level platform, smelly underground crossing between north and south bound tracks, the old station building (destroyed by an arson fire in 1973), the unpaved parking area amid the trees, and whiffs of creosote, diesel, and the ozone filling the air as the trains clicked-clack by on 40-foot sections of rail. It wasn’t a commuter line back then. It was a railroad!

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