Uncover the incredible 1870 true story of Alfred Beach, who secretly excavated a wind-powered, luxury subway line directly beneath the streets of New York City to bypass corrupt politicians.
How does a visionary inventor manage to excavate and build a fully functional, luxurious subway line directly beneath the busiest street in New York City without the corrupt politicians who ran the city ever finding out? The 1870 Beach Pneumatic Transit system is an incredible story of covert engineering and Victorian ambition.
Frustrated by the deadly, gridlocked horse-drawn traffic of Broadway, publisher Alfred Ely Beach envisioned an underground train propelled entirely by wind. Knowing that the notoriously corrupt "Boss" Tweed of Tammany Hall would block the project to protect his surface transit monopolies, Beach secured a permit for a tiny "postal tube." Under the cover of night, he secretly excavated a massive tunnel instead. When he finally unveiled the project to a stunned public, it was a marvel: a grand, frescoed waiting room with a grand piano, leading to a plush, 22-passenger car blown down a 300-foot track by a massive 48-ton industrial fan.
This captivating architectural history unearths the forgotten origins of the metropolis. It explores the fascinating physics of pneumatic engineering, the brutal political war that ultimately starved the project of funding, and the eerie rediscovery of the perfectly preserved station decades later when the modern subway was built.
Descend into the forgotten tunnels. The Secret Subway is a testament to the ingenuity required to build the future when the politics of the present refuse to allow it.
Frank Guzman
Author
alfred ely beach pneumatic transit victorian new york history secret subway nyc engineering history tammany hall corruption urban infrastructure origins