Stations
Station/ location |
Station link |
Miles to Penn Station |
Connections/notes |
---|---|---|---|
For continuing service to Jamaica and points west, see Main Line | |||
Mineola Front Street and Mineola Boulevard. Mineola |
20.5 (33.0) | Transfer to Port Jefferson and Ronkonkoma branch trains Bus (Nassau Inter-County Express): n22, n23, n24, n40, n41 |
|
East Williston East Williston Avenue and Pennsylvania Avenue, East Williston |
21.8 | Bus (Nassau Inter-County Express): n22A, n27 Terminus of electrification. One electric train serves this station each weekday. |
|
Albertson I.U. Willets Road and Albertson Avenue, Albertson |
22.7 | Bus (Nassau Inter-County Express): n27 | |
Roslyn Lincoln Avenue and Railroad Avenue, Roslyn |
24.2 | Bus (Nassau Inter-County Express): n23, n27 | |
North Roslyn East Hills |
Originally named Wheatley Hills from 1898-1901. Closed 1924. Was located near where the current Pall Corp Headquarters is situated on Northern Boulevard |
||
Greenvale Off Helen Street, between Glen Cove Avenue and Glen Cove Road, Greenvale |
26.2 | Bus (Nassau Inter-County Express): n27 | |
Glen Head Glen Head Road and School Street, Glen Head |
27.4 | Bus (Nassau Inter-County Express): n27 | |
Sea Cliff Sea Cliff Avenue, east of Glen Cove Avenue, Glen Cove |
28.7 | Bus (Nassau Inter-County Express): n27 | |
Glen Street Cedar Swamp Road (Glen Street) and Elm Avenue, Glen Cove |
29.3 | Bus (Nassau Inter-County Express): n21, n27 1.5 car platform |
|
Glen Cove Duck Pond Road and Pearsall Avenue, Glen Cove |
29.8 | ||
Locust Valley Birch Hill Road and Elm Street, Locust Valley |
31.0 | Line becomes single-tracked east of station | |
Mill Neck Mill Neck |
Replaced 1889-1892 built Bayville Station. Opened November 1892; Closed March 16, 1998. | ||
Oyster Bay Off Maxwell Avenue, between Shore and Larabee Avenues, Oyster Bay |
35.0 |
Read more about this topic: Oyster Bay Branch
Famous quotes containing the word stations:
“A reader who quarrels with postulates, who dislikes Hamlet because he does not believe that there are ghosts or that people speak in pentameters, clearly has no business in literature. He cannot distinguish fiction from fact, and belongs in the same category as the people who send cheques to radio stations for the relief of suffering heroines in soap operas.”
—Northrop Frye (b. 1912)
“mourn
The majesty and burning of the childs death.
I shall not murder
The mankind of her going with a grave truth
Nor blaspheme down the stations of the breath”
—Dylan Thomas (19141953)
“After I was married a year I remembered things like radio stations and forgot my husband.”
—P. J. Wolfson, John L. Balderston (18991954)