Railroad Eagles Page
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Updated:  16 Mar 2006, 15:45  ET
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RAILROAD EAGLES

The EAGLES which decorate(d)
RAILROAD STATIONS
and TERMINALS

Largely courtesy of DAVID D. MORRISON

Page provided by S. Berliner, III
Consultant in Ultrasonic Processing

This site has now been visited times since the counter was installed.


INDEX:


This Page:

    GRAND CENTRAL TERMINAL EAGLES.

    PENNSYLVANIA STATION EAGLES.

    Other Pennsylvania Station Statuary.

    RAILROAD EAGLES MISCELLANY.

See also S. Berliner, III's Railroad page, et seq., his

    Pennsylvania Railroad Page

with THE SOUTH PENN RR, and his

    Long Island Rail Road page, et seq.


GRAND CENTRAL TERMINAL EAGLES

David D. Morrison was the Long Island Rail Road's Branch Line Manager for the Port Jefferson, Oyster Bay, and Patchogue-to-Montauk Branches (retired 2001), and was active in the Long Island Rail Road Historical Society and is active in the Long Island-Sunrise Trail Chapter of the National Railway Historical Society.

He is also well-known as, firstly, the unofficial historian of the Pennsylvania Station eagles and as, secondly, the unofficial historian of the Grand Central Terminal eagles.

He also is the author of:  "Long Island Rail Road Steam Locomotive Pictorial.

A collection of photographs compiled by David D. Morrison"
Sixty 8 x 10 black and white photographs.
Photos from the collections of:  Winn A. Boerckel, Gene Collora, F.R. Dirkes, Art Huneke, Norman Kohl,
George E. Votava, Jeffrey Winslow, Benjamin T. Young, Jr., Frank G. Zahn, and Ron Ziel
Title page drawing by John Hehman
Published in 1987, still available through:
Cannon Ball Publications, P.O.Box 405, Plainview, New York  11803
ISBN 0-945089-00-7
Price:  $9.95 plus $3.00 shipping and handling (plus taxes as applicable)

Mr. Morrison has written a book about the great cast-iron Grand Central Terminal eagles:

"The Cast Iron Eagles of Grand Central Station"

by David D. Morrison
Cannonball Publications
P. O. Box 405
Plainview, New York  11803

ISBN 0-945089-01-5

Foreword by Lorraine B. Diehl, author of  "The Late, Great Pennsylvania Station"

$4.95 plus $2.00 shipping and handling

(as of 08 Sep 01)
(plus taxes as applicable)

32 pages - 40 color photographs

Dave gives the history of the predecessor Madison Square Station and its successor two Grand Central Terminals and documents the ten (10) known surviving eagles which graced the 1898 rebuild to the second station (the first GCT), which were removed in the 1910 demolition that made way for the current structure:

 1.  The North Tarrytown/Philipse Manor Eagle.

 2.  The Mount Vernon Eagle (1st), now in Shandaken, NY.

 3.  The Mount Vernon Eagle (2nd), missing.

 4.  The Garrison Eagle, at the Capuchin Seminary*
      (going back to Grand Central, via Harmon - where?)

 5.  The Cold Spring Eagle (1st), St. Basil's Academy.

 6.  The Cold Spring Eagle (2nd), St. Basil's Academy.

 7.  The Vanderbilt Museum (Centerport) Eagle (1st).

 8.  The Vanderbilt Museum {Centerport} Eagle (2nd).

 9.  The Kings Point Eagle, Edwin S. Marks private estate.

10.  The Bronxville Eagle (going back to Grand Central
      above the new Lexington Avenue entrance!)

      (there may even be an eleventh around!)

What I (SB,III) find most interesting is that all ten are still in New York State, with Tarrytown, Garrison/Harmon*, Cold Spring, and Bronxville along the Hudson River; remember that the New York Central RR has always run up along the Hudson River.  Mount Vernon is on Long Island Sound across from Kings Point on Long Island and Centerport is further out on the North Shore of Long Island.  The Centerport eagles are at the entrance to the Vanderbilt Museum, which was formerly the estate of William K(issam). Vanderbilt, Jr., and are marked with a plaque reading*:

ORIGINAL EAGLES ERECTED
ON THE GRAND CENTRAL DEPOT,
NEW YORK CITY, 1898.
TRANSPORTED TO NORTHPORT
IN 1910 BY W. K. VANDERBILT. JR.

The book is heavily, and very well, illustrated, with old engravings and architectural renderings and rare photos.

Here are the Vanderbilt Museum eagles; as one drives up to the Museum on Little Neck Road from Fort Salonga Road (Route 25A, "Northern Boulevard") and turns right into the Museum grounds through a magnificent gate, there they are (viewed looking eastward):

G.C. Eagles at Vand. Mus.
(Photo 07 Aug 00 by and © 2000 - S. Berliner, III - all rights reserved)
[Thumbnail image; click on picture for larger image.]

These photographs had to be artificially processed to overcome total shadow on jet-black statues
(I should have used a fill flash).

These are the north (left) and south (right) eagles:

No. G.C. Eagle at Vand. Mus.  So. G.C. Eagle at Vand. Mus.
(Photos 07 Aug 00 by and © 2000 - S. Berliner, III - all rights reserved)
[Thumbnail images - click on the photos for larger images]

Here are the north (left) and south (right) plaques, at about one-third (on a 14" diagonal monitor screen) of actual size:

No. G.C. Eagle Plaque Vand. Mus.  So. G.C. Eagle Plaque Vand. Mus.

* - Note that the village was Northport then (or the plaques are wrong) and that William K. Vanderbilt's honorific is noted, after a period instead of a comma, as "Jr." instead of "II" (he changed it after his father's death).   rev.gif (16 Mar 06)

Lastly, this is a side view of the north eagle:

No. G.C. Eagle at Vand. Mus.
(Photos 07 Aug 00 by and © 2000 - S. Berliner, III - all rights reserved)

* - Dave Morrison reported on 10 May 01 that "Metro-North has obtained another Grand Central Station eagle.  They obtained the eagle that was overlooking the Hudson at Garrison.  The eagle is presently being stored in an outside yard area at Harmon known as the Lagoon."  Dave states (but doesn't believe) that the final destination of this eagle is not yet certain and that "funding has not yet been allocated for the restoration."  Here is a photo that he took of it that day and one of him with the eagle:   rev.gif (16 Mar 06)

Garrison Eagle at Harmon 10 May 01 DM/Garrison Eagle at Harmon 10 May 01
(10 May 01 photos courtesy of D. Morrison - all rights reserved
lost left photo replaced 16 Mar 06 - yes - that's Dave in the right one!)
  new.gif (16 Mar 06)

Dave expected that more would develop on this story and promised to keep us informed, as he became informed.  Well, on 11 Aug 01, that's just what he did; Metro-North's second eagle was moved on Friday, 03 Aug 01, by Architectural Iron Company from Harmon to their plant in Milford, Pennsylvania, for restoration and Dave sent this photo of the eagle traveling across the Bear Mountain Bridge:

Garrison/Harmon Eagle on Br Mtn Br 03 Aug 01
(03 Aug 01 photo courtesy of Architectural Iron Company, via D. Morrison - all rights reserved
lost photo replaced 16 Mar 06)

What I did NOT know is that this all transpired a while ago and "the eagle was hoisted to its aerie atop Grand Central Terminal on Oct. 18, 1999, resting on its original golden globe" (per Daily News OnLine - emphasis mine).


The Winterthur Museum in Delaware displays a wooden eagle claimed to have come "from the first New York Central Station in Manhattan" (per Dave's Grand Central book); this might date to the 1871-1898 building, but it is apparently not documented.


PENNSYLVANIA STATION EAGLES

Mr. Morrison is writing a book about the twenty-two (22) great stone Pennsylvania Station eagles, carved in 1910 by sculptor Adolph A. Weinman and weighing in at 5,700 pounds each, which were pulled down when one of the greatest acts of vandalism of modern times resulted in the "The Late, Great Pennsylvania Station" being demolished in the mid-1960s.

Fourteen (14) are known to have survived (per Dave M.):

Two are located on the Seventh Avenue side of the new sad excuse for a station building and one is at the Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art at 41 Cooper Square in downtown Manhattan.

Another stands in lonely splendor at the LIRR's north station plaza in Hicksville (Long Island), New York; the bulk of it's beak had been broken off and it was restored by the Hicksville Historical Society (unfortunately, however well intentioned, it is a really horrible job; the color and shape are all wrong and the poor bird looks positively deformed!):

Hicksville Illeagle 1/2/3 (26 Sep 01 photos by and © Copyright S. Berliner, III - 2001 - All rights reserved. I'll have to reshoot these.)

The inscription (in what appears to be high school Latin, and where a "V" is a "U") is translated as:

"A ROMAN EAGLE ONCE QUITE VRBAN
IS NOW IN HICKSVILLE QUITE SVBVRBAN".
Even more to the point, however, is the now-too-late warning:

"HEED THE PAST IN PLANNING THE FVTVRE".

What we SHOULD do is take up a collection to pay the Historical Society to have that excrescence knocked off and replaced professionally with an exact cast from another survivor!  I'll chip in; any takers?

In its OPINION LETTERS of the Friday, March 1, 2002 issue, Long Island's NEWSDAY published a letter from Dave Morrison, entitled "The Eagle Needs Fixing", that read (in part):

" - - - It is refreshing to know that there are people who recognize and admire art that is on display for public viewing.

My particular interest in the article was that the mosaic tile artwork inside the Hicksville railroad station waiting room was discussed at length and no mention was made of the Penn Station eagle sculpture that is almost immediately outside in the station plaza.

That piece of art was sculptured by Adolph Weinman for placement on the old Pennsylvania Station building.  In the mid-1960s the building was demolished, but the eagle was saved through the efforts of the late Hicksville High School teacher Samuel A. Goldberg and installed at the Hicksville Station.

It is wonderful that the eagle is still present, but sad that it is in need of repair.  The eagle's beak was damaged over the years.  Professional restoration is needed now to restore the eagle's original beauty.

Since the Long Island educational community (Hicksville High School) was responsible for obtaining and placing the eagle, why can't the same community (Nassau Community College or the C.W. Post Campus of Long Island University) take the lead to establish a project to restore this great piece of public art at Hicksville Station?"

Hear, hear!

Two of the Penn Station eagles are on the grounds of the U. S. Merchant Marine Academy at Kings Point (Long Island), New York; one is becoming seriously deteriorated.

Four are located on the Market Street Bridge in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

One is on the grounds of the Valley Forge Military Academy in Valley Forge, Pennsylvania.

One is on the grounds of Hampden-Sydney College in Virginia.

One is in Vinalhaven, Maine.

And one is at the Smithsonian Institution's National Zoological Park in Washington, DC.

A famous picture of one of them, dumped ignominously in the Jersey Meadows, has been published many times; of course, I can't find it just now!  There is, however, a great picture of several of them, on the ground, waiting for shipment from the demolition site, on page 17 in Lorraine B. Diehl's book, "The Late, Great Pennsylvania Station" (published by Four Walls Eight Windows, 39 West 14th Street, New York, New York  10011, 1985, ISBN 1-56858-060-6, LoC 96-21056).

Then, there are smaller eagles which graced Penn Station statuary groups, as noted below.

Other Pennsylvania Station Statuary (per Dave M.):

The only completely-assembled statuary group is in Kansas City, Missouri.  It is a tribute to the Eagle Scouts and is located in a park.  Rumor has it that it is destined to be placed at the Kansas City Union Station when the restoration is complete.

The full statuary group that was in Ringwood State Park, NJ, for many years has been taken by New Jersey Transit to a bus terminal in Newark, where it is being evaluated for restoration.  The two (smaller) eagles that are part of that statuary group will remain in Ringwood.

A figure of "Night" is in the Brooklyn Museum of Art.

A top half of a "Day" was recently discovered at a stone recycling plant in the Bronx.

The whereabouts of other portions of the "Day" and "Night" figures, as well as four of the smaller eagles which abutted them, are unknown.

The latest word (Mar 99) is that the "new" (third) Penn Station (to be built in the great McKim, Meade, and White James J. Farley Postal Building, will have a good bit of the available PRR eagles and statuary incorporated into it.  Let us pray!

Ah, but see the LIRR Historical Society page!

23 Sep 01 - Atop the west face of the old Post Office Building on Ninth Avenue, above what would be 32nd Street, I spotted a beautiful eagle; I'll have to see if there's one atop the east face (which will become the entrance to Penn Station).

Pennsy fans, see my Pennsylvania Railroad Page


RAILROAD EAGLE MISCELLANY

There are also other railroad eagles which will be documented here, hopefully soon.


The old Latin motto of the Magyar (Hungarian) side of my family is:

AQUILA NIL MAGNANIMIUS NIL MAJUS

which means:

"Nothing is as magnanimous nor as magnificent as the eagle"
[I figure an eagle can afford to be magnanimous!]

No wonder I like eagles!


More to follow (including photos)!


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