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Approximate size in inches - 2.25 x 5

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BMT Brooklyn Manhattan Transit June 1, 1933 86th Street Line Ticket #00002 Rare
UNPUNCHED - EXCELLENT CONDITION - BMT TRANSIT ARCHIVE
Extremely rare early-issue specimen; likely the first clean ticket removed from the original conductor's book.
This is an excellent, uncirculated "Special Transfer" ticket from the B. & Q. T. Corp (Brooklyn and Queens Transit Corporation), a subsidiary of the BMT, issued on June 1, 1933.
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 was recently removed from a long-term archival collector’s binder and remains crisp and unpunched.
As seen in the photos, the top edge shows the authentic, uneven perforation where it was hand-separated from the conductor’s original transfer book—a true mark of its original, uncirculated state.
Collector Highlights
Serial Number: This is ticket #00002, representing the second ticket in the book for the 86th Street Line on that Thursday morning in 1933.
Special Transfer (A): This specific ticket was a "Special Transfer" valid for omnibus (bus) routes, including Kings Highway (B.5), Bay Parkway-Avenue "M" (B.6), and Ft. Hamilton Parkway.
Uncirculated Specimen: This ticket was never issued to a passenger, as evidenced by the lack of conductor punches in the time/date grids. It has been preserved for nearly a century in archival condition.
Historical Context
The 86th Street Line was a crucial East-West corridor in South Brooklyn, serving the Bensonhurst and Gravesend neighborhoods. In 1933, the system was in a state of flux as many old streetcar lines were beginning to integrate with "omnibus" (bus) services. This ticket captures that exact transition, specifically noting routes toward Coney Island and the Narrows. It represents the height of private transit operation in NYC before the city takeover in 1940.
Please visit our store to see the rest of this newly listed collection, featuring many more rare, low-numbered tickets from this historic era!