Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Winfield Junction (LIRR station)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Coordinates
  
Original Location

Tracks
  
2

Opened
  
June 1854

Fare zone
  
3

Owned by
  
LIRR

Station code
  
None

Platforms in use
  
2

Closed
  
1929

Winfield Junction (LIRR station) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Location
  
50th Avenue and 69th Street Maspeth, Queens

Line(s)
  
Port Washington Branch   Main Line (City Terminal Zone)

Similar
  
Canal Street, Haberman, Union Hall Street

Winfield Junction is a junction between the Main Line and Port Washington Branch of the Long Island Rail Road in the Woodside section of Queens, New York City. Between 1854-1929 a station of the same name stood on this site.

History

Winfield Junction station was originally opened in July 1854 by the New York and Flushing Railroad on the southeast corner of 50th Avenue and 69th Street. The junction's location was set the same year, when the NY&F's Main Line (now the Port Washington Branch) was built, crossing the LIRR's Main Line. By 1868 NY&F was consolidated by the Flushing and North Side Railroad, and the section west of Winfield was sold to the South Side Railroad of Long Island in 1869. This segment was abandoned in 1875. After further acquisition by the Flushing, North Shore, and Central Railroad in 1874, and then the Long Island Rail Road in 1876, the station was later moved to the junction in August 1876 where it also served the Main Line. A second station was built at some point, which was razed in 1915, and replaced with a third station the same year. Plans to close the station can be traced as far back as 1910, but the station was closed and then razed in 1929, making Woodside Station the transfer point between Main Line and Port Washington Branch trains.

References

Winfield Junction (LIRR station) Wikipedia