New York Transit Museum’s Holiday Nostalgia Train
Two Sundays remain this holiday season to catch the New York Transit Museum‘s annual tradition of Holiday Nostalgia Rides on their vintage 1930s R1/9 subway cars. Operating between 2nd Avenue – Houston Street on the uptown F line and 96th Street – 2nd Avenue on the Q line, the Holiday Nostalgia Train will transport New York City straphangers back in time.
The Holiday Nostalgia Train consists of eight cars from the 1930s that ran along lettered lines through the late-1970s. The vintage Independent Subway System (IND) cars were used by the first subway company operated by the City of New York.
Modern for their time, the R1/9s complemented the IND’s Great Depression era Art Deco aesthetic. Featuring rattan seats, paddle ceiling fans, incandescent light bulbs, roll signs, and period advertisements, these are the cars that inspired Billy Strayhorn’s “Take the A Train.” Today, they are preserved as part of the New York Transit Museum’s collection.
“Manhattan in December is a magical place,” says New York Transit Museum Director Concetta Bencivenga, “and catching the holiday spirit by catching the Holiday Nostalgia Train provides the perfect opportunity to travel back in time while traveling through town.”
Visit nytransitmuseum.org/HolidayNostalgiaRides for full route and schedule. Admission is free with subway fare.
Can’t make it to this year’s Holiday Nostalgia Rides? You can catch all the trains you missed at the New York Transit Museum in Downtown Brooklyn, where more than 20 different train cars are housed underground in an authentic 1936 subway station.
The New York Transit Museum is the largest museum in the United States devoted to urban public transportation history and one of the premier institutions of its kind in the world. Since its inception over forty years ago, the Museum – which is housed in a historic 1936 IND subway station in Downtown Brooklyn – has grown in scope and popularity.
For nearly 25 years, the Transit Museum has also operated a gallery and store in Grand Central Terminal. To learn more, visit nytransitmuseum.org.
Photo provided.
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