BMT Brooklyn Manhattan Jun 4, 1936 Sea Gate Line B. & Q. T. Corp. Ticket #00816
UNPUNCHED - EXCELLENT CONDITION - BMT TRANSIT ARCHIVE
Extremely rare uncirculated Special Transfer specimen featuring a clean 1936 issue date and documenting the legendary Norton's Point transit links in Southern Brooklyn.
This is a premier specimen from the Brooklyn and Queens Transit Corporation, issued during the height of the independent trolley era. This Special Transfer serves as a master historical document, capturing a specific operational link for the Sea Gate community and the world-famous Coney Island shoreline during the mid-1930s.
Ultimate Geographic Keyword Powerhouse: This specific ticket is a masterpiece of location-based data, explicitly listing iconic Brooklyn landmarks and transit hubs: Sea Gate, Stillwell Ave., Norton's Point Line, Norton's Point Shuttle Line, West 37th St., and McDonald Ave. (formerly Gravesend Ave.).
Rare Norton's Point Reference: The mention of the Norton's Point Line and its accompanying Shuttle Line makes this a highly specialized and rare variant. These lines provided the essential link to the private, gated community of Sea Gate at the western tip of the Coney Island peninsula.
Condition and Provenance
This item is part of a substantial, high-grade transit collection recently added to our store, featuring decades of curated New York City history. This ticket remains in excellent condition, appearing unpunched and uncirculated. The deep coral-toned paper is remarkably vivid, with sharp black typography and very clear red date and serial number stamping. The reverse shows small areas of archival tape residue from a previous collection display but remains otherwise clean and well-preserved.
Historical Context
The Sea Gate Line and the associated Norton's Point infrastructure were vital for the residents of Brooklyn's most exclusive seaside enclave. This 1936 transfer illustrates the complex web of trolley and shuttle service that connected the Stillwell Avenue terminal—the heart of Coney Island's transit network—with the residential reaches of West 37th Street. It serves as a primary source map for an era when these streetcars provided a scenic and essential commute along the Atlantic coast.
Please visit our store to see the rest of this newly listed collection, featuring many more rare and low-numbered tickets from this historic era!