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Haberman station

New York railroad station From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Haberman stationmap
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Haberman was a station along the Long Island Rail Road's Lower Montauk Branch that was located at the intersection of Rust Street and 50th Street in Maspeth, Queens.[2] The station is named after the Haberman Steel Enamel Works in Berlin village.[2]

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Haberman opened in September 1892[2] (by some accounts[3] effectively replacing Laurel Hill station, which had until then been situated only a short distance to west) to serve the Haberman Manufacturing Company;[4] service was furnished by the Long Island City–East New York rapid-transit trains. Around 1910 the station had low-level wooden platforms,[5] but there never was a station building.[2] The station still had manual railroad crossing gates and a guard shack as recently as 1973. Average daily westbound ridership at the station in 1997 having been 3,[1] it was closed on March 16, 1998, along with Penny Bridge, Fresh Pond, Glendale, and Richmond Hill stations.[6] In January 2018, Haberman was one of 8 stations on the Lower Montauk Branch that were considered for reopening in a study sponsored by the New York City Department of Transportation.[1]

On some maps, presumably as a result of error in digitizing a USGS map, Haberman mistakenly appears as the name of a neighborhood, corresponding to an industrialized area of Maspeth.[7] Google Maps removed the name in 2019.[4]

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