Loading descriptions...
Monday, February 4, 9-10 pm ET
Experience the dramatic story of the construction of one of America’s greatest architectural and technological monuments: New York City's Grand Central Terminal.
On the morning of January 8, 1902, a southbound commuter train
traveling through a smoky, congested tunnel in New York City's
Grand Central Depot slammed into the rear of another train,
instantly killing 17 people and injuring 38. Screams filled the
darkened tunnel as firemen arrived on the scene to search for
survivors. The tragedy in New York that day, and a self-taught
engineer's innovative response to the crisis that ensued,
ultimately gave birth to one of America's greatest architectural
and technological monuments: Grand Central Terminal. This program
recounts the dramatic story of the famous landmark's construction.
When Grand Central Terminal opened on February 12, 1913, the press
heralded it as the greatest railway terminal in the world. By 1947,
more than 65 million people - the equivalent of 40 percent of the
population of the United States - had traveled through the station.
Today, it remains one of New York's and America's most famous
spaces and a living monument to the nation's great railway age.