Clark–Tillary Streets (BMT Fulton Street Line)

Clark–Tillary Streets
Former New York City Subway rapid transit station
Station statistics
Address Fulton Street, Clark and Tillary Streets, Brooklyn, NY
Borough Brooklyn
Locale Brooklyn Heights, Downtown Brooklyn
Line BMT Fulton Street Line
BMT Brighton Line
Services None
Structure Elevated
Platforms 2 side platforms
Tracks 2
Other information
Opened April 24, 1888 (1888-04-24)
Station succession
Next north Fulton Ferry (Ferry)
Sands Street (Brooklyn Bridge)
Next south Court Street

Clark-Tillary Street was a station on the demolished BMT Fulton Street Line, located on Fulton Street (now Cadman Plaza West) at Clark Street and Tillary Street in the Borough of Brooklyn, and also gained service on what evolved into the BMT Brighton Line.

The station was one of the original BMT Fulton Street Line stations opened by the Kings County Elevated Railway on April 24, 1888.[1] Eastbound trains would stop at Clark Street, while westbound trains would stop at Tillary Street. Both stations were located at a junction where the Fulton Street Line split between the Fulton Ferry and the Brooklyn Bridge into Manhattan. In 1896, the BMT Brighton Line joined the stations between the Brooklyn Bridge and Franklin Avenue. The stations and the line were acquired by the Brooklyn Rapid Transit Company in November 1899 and Brooklyn Union Elevated on May 24, 1900.

The next stop to the west was Fulton Ferry for some trains and Sands Street for the rest. The next stop to the east was Court Street. In late-November 1901, the station was one of six that were proposed for abandonment by the BRT.[2] The others planned for closing were Boreum Place, Lafayette Avenue, Cumberland Avenue, and Vanderbilt Avenue. The four stations mentioned survived well into the abandonment of the Fulton El west of Rockaway Avenue, but the Clark Street Station and Tillary Street Station didn't. The control tower was the only surviving remnant of the station, after it closed. The site of the former elevated station is located within the vicinity of the southwest end of the Brooklyn War Memorial Park, and the northwest corner of the Korean War Veterans Plaza in Cadman Plaza.

References

  1. ‹The template Cite BDE is being considered for deletion.› "Trains to Run". Brooklyn Daily Eagle. Brooklyn, NY. April 21, 1888. p. 6.
  2. Western Electrician, Volume 29 (Page 361)


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