Loading descriptions...
This program chronicles the challenges faced by the engineer,
workers and residents of New York as that city's subway
system was built.
Ever since its grand opening in 1904, New York City's subway has
remained the largest subway system in the world, with more than 700
miles of track and a billion passengers per year. This feat of
modern engineering started as the brainchild of Alfred Beach, who
built an experimental subway in 1868 to respond to New York's
growing population and incredibly crowded streets. Local
politicians who had a monetary interest in the current
transportation system halted his progress and the tunnel was
closed. The city continued overcrowding the streets until 1888,
when a major blizzard shut down the city and Mayor Hewitt proposed
building the system that transformed New York forever. Backed by a
financier and an engineer, work began on the subway. This program
chronicles the challenges faced by the engineer who designed the
subway between a maze of buildings and through a river; by the
miners and immigrants who risked their lives to build the tracks
and tunnels; and by the city's residents, who endured years of
blasting and construction.